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  7. 2030
Showing dates for
India (default)
Festival in India, Asia/Kolkata baseline

Diwali / Lakshmi PujaIndia

दीपावली

The festival of lights — the Amavasya night when Lakshmi visits homes lit with lamps.

Next observance · IndiaSaturday, October 26, 2030
Festival window in India (Asia/Kolkata)
Amavasya begins
Sat, Oct 26, 4:40 AM
Amavasya ends
Sun, Oct 27, 1:45 AM
Sunrise
Sat, Oct 26, 6:29 AM
Sunset
Sat, Oct 26, 5:54 PM

The tithi window is the period during which this festival's defining lunar phase is active. Times are in India local clock.

Pradosha kaal · India
5:52 PM – 8:16 PM

The auspicious window from sunset for ~2h24m — when this festival's puja is traditionally performed.

← View all years for Diwali / Lakshmi Puja

Quick facts

Deity
Lakshmi (with Ganesha)
Lunar month (Purnimanta)
Kartika
Paksha
Krishna (waning)
Tithi
15th
Duration
1 day (within a 5-day cluster: Dhanteras → Bhai Dooj)
Regions
Pan-India

Significance

Diwali marks the new-moon night of Kartika month, the darkest night of the lunar year. Lighting lamps symbolises inner illumination and the welcome of Lakshmi, goddess of prosperity. In the Ramayana tradition it commemorates Rama's return to Ayodhya after 14 years of exile; in the Mahabharata tradition, the Pandavas' return after their exile.

Astrological observance rule

Observed when Amavasya tithi is present during Pradosha Kala (the 2h24m window after sunset). The pradosha rule means Diwali's date can shift by one day across cities depending on local sunset, especially in years where Amavasya straddles the sunset boundary.

Rituals & observance

  • Clean and decorate the home; light diyas at thresholds and windows
  • Lakshmi-Ganesha puja during Pradosha Kala (after sunset)
  • Exchange sweets and gifts
  • Light fireworks (regional)

Dates by year in India

Computed for India (Asia/Kolkata) using local sunrise, sunset and astronomical positions.

  • November 12, 2023Sunday
  • October 31, 2024Thursday
  • October 20, 2025Monday
  • November 8, 2026Sunday
  • October 29, 2027Friday
  • October 17, 2028Tuesday
  • November 5, 2029Monday
  • October 26, 2030Saturday
  • November 14, 2031Friday

Frequently asked

Why does Diwali fall on different Gregorian dates each year?▾
Diwali is tied to the lunar calendar — specifically Kartika Krishna Amavasya. The Hindu lunar year is shorter than the solar year, so Diwali shifts by ~10-11 days earlier each Gregorian year, then jumps forward when an adhik maas (intercalary month) is added.
Why do some cities observe Diwali on different days?▾
Diwali requires Amavasya to be present during Pradosha Kala (after sunset). Because sunset varies by longitude, two cities can see Amavasya end before pradosha in one and after in the other — leading to a one-day difference in observance.

Related festivals in India

DhanterasNaraka ChaturdashiGovardhan PujaBhai DoojKartik Purnima / Dev Diwali
November 2, 2032
Tuesday
  • October 22, 2033Saturday