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  4. Janmashtami 2026

Countdown

Janmashtami 2026

Friday, September 4, 2026 · 132 days away

IndiaHindu festivalsscheduled

Countdown

Janmashtami 2026

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Event overview

Hindu festival celebrating the birth of Lord Krishna, observed at midnight. Falls on Friday September 4, 2026. Midnight prayers, fasting, dahi handi pot-breaking competitions (especially Maharashtra), Raslila performances, decorating Krishna jhulas.

Date
2026-09-04
Country / jurisdiction
India
Region
India
Category
Hindu festivals
Status
scheduled

What this countdown tracks

Janmashtami 2026 – the Hindu festival celebrating the birth of Lord Krishna at midnight on the eighth night of the dark fortnight of Bhadrapada – falls on Friday September 4, 2026. Observed by Hindus across India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Fiji, Mauritius, Trinidad, and the global Indian diaspora.

About Janmashtami

Janmashtami (also called Krishna Janmashtami, Gokulashtami, or Krishnashtami) commemorates the birth of Lord Krishna, the eighth avatar of Vishnu. The Bhagavata Purana places the moment at midnight in the prison cell of Mathura, where Krishna's parents Devaki and Vasudeva were held by Devaki's brother, the demon king Kamsa. A prophecy had told Kamsa that Devaki's eighth child would kill him; he had killed her first six newborns and was waiting for the eighth. On the night Krishna was born, the prison doors flew open, the guards fell asleep, and Vasudeva was able to carry the baby across the flooded Yamuna to safety in Gokul, where Krishna grew up among the cowherds.

The Krishna of the festival's stories is layered: the divine baby (bal Krishna), the playful child butter-thief (makhan chor), the adolescent flautist who summoned cowherd women (gopis) to dance the rasa lila by moonlight, the hero of the Mahabharata, and finally the philosopher-warrior who delivered the Bhagavad Gita on the battlefield of Kurukshetra. Janmashtami leans toward the first three of these – the baby and the mischievous child – and the rituals reflect that.

The festival is observed with particular intensity in the Braj region around Mathura and Vrindavan (Krishna's birthplace and childhood home), in Nathdwara in Rajasthan, in Dwarka in Gujarat (Krishna's later kingdom), in Puri in Odisha, and in the Iskcon temple network worldwide.

How it's observed

Janmashtami's central ritual is the midnight birth (Nishita) puja. Devotees fast through the day, often a complete dry fast, and gather at temples and homes for an evening of bhajans (devotional songs), abhishekam (ceremonial bathing of the Krishna idol with milk, curd, ghee, honey, and water), and recitations of the Bhagavata Purana's tenth canto, which narrates Krishna's birth. At midnight – the moment of Krishna's birth – the ceremonial swing (jhula) holding the baby Krishna idol is rocked, conch shells are blown, and the fast is broken with prasad of butter, sweets, and panchamrit.

The day's most photographed ritual is the Dahi Handi (curd pot) celebration in Maharashtra, especially Mumbai and Pune. Earthen pots filled with curd and butter are strung high above the streets – sometimes thirty or forty feet up – and teams of young men called Govindas form human pyramids to break them, reenacting the young Krishna's pot-stealing pranks. Cash prizes for the winning team can run into lakhs of rupees, and the largest Dahi Handi events in Mumbai – held on the day after Janmashtami, observed as Nandotsav – draw lakhs of spectators.

In Vrindavan and Mathura, temples stay open through the night; the Banke Bihari, Sri Krishna Janmasthan, and ISKCON Mayapur temples host elaborate jhulan (cradle) ceremonies, abhishekam streams that begin at midnight, and Raslila enactments by costumed performers.

Why this date specifically

Janmashtami falls on the eighth day (Ashtami) of the dark fortnight (Krishna Paksha) of the Hindu lunisolar month of Bhadrapada – the lunar moment said to coincide with Krishna's birth. The puja is performed at midnight, when the moon is in the Rohini nakshatra (the lunar mansion under which Krishna was born). In 2026, Bhadrapada Krishna Ashtami occurs on September 4 in Indian Standard Time, with the Nishita muhurat in the late evening. Some traditions (particularly the Vaishnava sampradayas) observe the festival on whichever day Ashtami coincides with Rohini nakshatra, which can occasionally cause the date to shift by a day in different regional panchangs.

What to watch for / notable observances in 2026

  • September 4 – Krishna Janmashtami; midnight puja and abhishekam at all major Krishna temples
  • Vrindavan and Mathura – all-night jhulan celebrations at Banke Bihari and Krishna Janmasthan
  • ISKCON temples worldwide – live-streamed midnight abhishekam at Mayapur, Vrindavan, Mumbai, and London
  • September 5 – Nandotsav and major Dahi Handi events across Mumbai and Pune
  • Mahagovinda Dahi Handi in Mumbai's Dadar – traditionally one of the city's largest
  • Public holiday in most Indian states; observed widely across the diaspora
  • Restricted holiday at the central level under the Government of India

Related festivals to track

In 2026, Janmashtami precedes Ganesh Chaturthi 2026 (September 14) and the larger autumn arc into Navratri 2026, Dussehra 2026, and Diwali 2026. The family overview is at the Hindu festival hub.

FAQ

When is Janmashtami in 2026? Friday September 4, 2026 – with the Nishita (midnight) puja celebrating Krishna's birth.

How is Janmashtami observed? Through day-long fasting, midnight puja and abhishekam, bhajans, jhulan rocking of the baby Krishna, and Dahi Handi human-pyramid pot-breaking the next day.

Is Janmashtami a public holiday? Yes, in most Indian states; it is a restricted holiday at the Government of India level.

What is the typical greeting? "Happy Janmashtami" or "Jai Shri Krishna"; "Hare Krishna" in ISKCON-influenced communities.

Source

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janmashtami

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