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Monday, March 27, 2028 · 703 days away
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Simhastha Kumbh Mela Ujjain 2028
Event overview
62-day mega religious gathering on the Shipra river in Ujjain — held once every 12 years; 14 crore pilgrims expected.
Opening of the Simhastha Kumbh Mela 2028 at Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh — one of four Kumbh Melas held in rotation across India. The 62-day pilgrimage begins on 27 March 2028 on the banks of the Shipra river, with Madhya Pradesh authorities anticipating upwards of 14 crore pilgrims over the course of the event.
The Kumbh rotates between Prayagraj, Haridwar, Nashik and Ujjain, each held once every 12 years based on Jupiter's zodiac position. Ujjain's Simhastha is tied to the conjunction of Jupiter entering Simha (Leo) and the sun entering Mesha (Aries), an alignment that falls in April–May 2028. The previous Ujjain Simhastha, held in 2016, drew an estimated 7.5 crore visitors over 47 days and cost Madhya Pradesh roughly ₹3,400 crore in infrastructure, according to state accounts.
For 2028 the Madhya Pradesh government has announced a planned outlay exceeding ₹15,000 crore for Ujjain upgrades, including a dedicated Simhastha township, ghat expansion along the Shipra, a 20 km ring road, a Shipra rejuvenation plan and an upgraded Ujjain–Indore rail and highway corridor. Three shahi snan (royal bath) days are scheduled: Chaitra Purnima on 9 April, Vaishakh Amavasya on 23 April and Vaishakh Purnima on 8 May 2028. Akharas — including the Juna, Niranjani, Mahanirvani and Ahwan — will march to the ghats in ceremonial processions. The Ujjain Simhastha 2028 portal (simhastha.org.in) is the official source of dates and logistics. Ujjain itself is one of India's seven sacred Moksha-puri cities and home to the Mahakaleshwar Jyotirlinga, one of twelve jyotirlingas, which drives baseline tourist flow well above the Simhastha footprint. The city's permanent population is roughly 6 lakh; peak Simhastha occupancy in 2016 pushed transient density to more than 50 times that figure on the opening shahi snan day.
27 March 2028 is the astrologically determined start of Ujjain's 2028 Simhastha, fixed by the Simha–Mesha Jupiter–Sun alignment. The date locks in 62 days of concentrated pilgrimage and tourism during the Indian spring, a window that drives Madhya Pradesh's state tourism revenue for the year. It also forces completion of the ₹15,000-crore infrastructure programme, with implications for Ujjain's long-term urban form. Jupiter takes approximately 11.86 Earth years to complete one solar revolution, which is the mechanic that produces the 12-year Simhastha cadence; the next Ujjain Simhastha would fall in 2040.
Ujjain has hosted the Simhastha Kumbh continuously on its present 12-year cadence since at least the 18th century, with Maratha-era administrative records detailing akhara zoning and ghat allocations. The 2004 Simhastha marked the first large deployment of CCTV and motorised policing on the ghats, and 2016 saw the first integrated command-and-control centre run jointly by state police, the Indian Meteorological Department and district health authorities. The 2028 edition will be the first Ujjain Simhastha after the 2025 Prayagraj Maha Kumbh, which set new national benchmarks for crowd throughput — more than 66 crore visitor-entries over 45 days — and generated operational playbooks now being ported to the Shipra's bank.
The mela anchors the next wave of shahi snans: Simhastha first shahi snan, second shahi snan and third shahi snan. It follows Prayagraj Magh Mela 2027.
When exactly is Simhastha Kumbh Ujjain 2028? 27 March to 27 May 2028, a 62-day window set by the Simha–Mesha astrological alignment, with the three shahi snan days concentrating peak crowd pressure.
Is the mela confirmed or expected? Confirmed; preparation is underway with state budget commitments, central-ministry coordination and a published calendar on the simhastha.org.in portal.
Who is responsible for Simhastha? The Madhya Pradesh government through the Ujjain Mela Authority and the Ujjain municipal administration, with central-sector support from Indian Railways, the IMD and the NDRF.
Where can I read the official announcement? simhastha.org.in, Madhya Pradesh tourism portals, and Government of Madhya Pradesh press releases, with routine bulletins from the Ujjain District Information Office during the mela window.
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