Diwali 2026 falls on Sunday, November 8, 2026 — the Amavasya (new moon) of Kartik month in Vikram Samvat 2083. The 5-day festival runs from Friday, November 6 (Dhanteras) through Tuesday, November 10 (Bhai Dooj).
Because the main day lands on a Sunday in 2026, the preceding shopping peak (Dhanteras, Friday, November 6) and Choti Diwali (Saturday, November 7) compress into a single working-week build-up, followed by a weekend celebration.
This alignment affects holiday scheduling, compensatory off-day rules, bank closures, and shopping patterns in ways specific to 2026. This guide covers all of them.
Table of Contents
When Is Diwali 2026?
Diwali 2026 is on Sunday, November 8, 2026. The main observance — Lakshmi Puja — is performed on the Amavasya (new moon night) of the Kartik month in the Hindu lunar calendar, specifically in Vikram Samvat 2083.
The date changes every year because Diwali follows a lunisolar calendar. Kartik Amavasya, the 15th lunar day of the dark fortnight of Kartik, does not correspond to a fixed Gregorian date. The result is an annual shift that can range across a 3–4 week window in October and November.
The Full 5-Day Diwali 2026 Schedule: Friday, November 6 to Tuesday, November 10
| Day | Name | Date | Primary Observance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Dhanteras / Dhantrayodashi | Friday, November 6, 2026 | Gold and silver purchase, Lakshmi-Kubera puja, Yama Deepam |
| Day 2 | Naraka Chaturdashi / Choti Diwali | Saturday, November 7, 2026 | Abhyang snan (ritual oil bath), early fireworks, Krishna worship |
| Day 3 | Lakshmi Puja / Main Diwali | Sunday, November 8, 2026 | Lakshmi-Ganesh puja during Pradosh Kaal, diya lighting, fireworks |
| Day 4 | Govardhan Puja / Bali Pratipada | Monday, November 9, 2026 | Annakut (mountain of food offering), cow worship; Gujarati New Year begins |
| Day 5 | Bhai Dooj / Yama Dwitiya | Tuesday, November 10, 2026 | Brother-sister ceremony; tilak, gifts, shared meal |
Why Diwali Falls on a Different Date Each Year
Diwali is determined by the Kartik Amavasya (new moon) in the Hindu lunisolar calendar, not a fixed Gregorian date. The Hindu calendar adds an intercalary (extra) month approximately every 2.5 years to synchronise lunar and solar cycles.
Because of this mechanism, the Gregorian equivalent of Kartik Amavasya shifts by 10–19 days annually, producing a floating date between mid-October and mid-November.
The tithi (lunar day) calculation used in most Indian panchangs determines the exact start and end times of Amavasya, which is why muhurat windows differ by city and geographic coordinate.
Diwali 2026 Bank Holidays, Compensatory Off & School Closures
Because November 8, 2026, falls on a Sunday, the gazetted holiday carries specific compensatory implications for government employees, banks, and corporate workers.
India — Central Government, Banks & Schools
| Sector | Holiday Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Central Government Offices | Sunday, November 8, 2026 | Gazetted public holiday; Sunday means no additional compensatory day is mandated at the central level unless notified |
| Reserve Bank of India (RBI) | November 8–10, 2026 | Banks typically observe Diwali (Lakshmi Puja), Govardhan Puja, and Bhai Dooj as consecutive holidays |
| Public Sector Banks | November 8–10, 2026 | State-specific; verify with individual bank branches |
| State Government Offices | November 8–10, 2026 | Many states extend closures through Govardhan Puja (Monday, November 9) and Bhai Dooj (Tuesday, November 10) |
| Schools — Central Board | November 8–10, 2026 (minimum) | Diwali school break typically begins earlier; state boards vary |
| Corporate India (private sector) | November 9–10, 2026 (common) | Many private employers grant compensatory off on Monday, November 9, since the gazetted holiday falls on a non-working day |
The “compensatory off” on Monday, November 9, is not mandated at the central government level when Diwali falls on a Sunday — it depends on state government notifications and individual employer policies.
Workers in Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Rajasthan frequently receive an extended break through Govardhan Puja, which is an official holiday in multiple states.
United States, United Kingdom & Canada
Diwali is not a federal holiday in the United States or a national public holiday in the United Kingdom. Recognition varies by state and school district.
| Country | Recognition Status | Notable Jurisdictions |
|---|---|---|
| USA | Not a federal holiday | New York City Public Schools (closed); California (state holiday effective 2026); Pennsylvania (state holiday); New Jersey (Edison, Woodbridge, South Brunswick school districts closed) |
| UK | Not a national public holiday | Leicester, Harrow, Brent — schools use “occasional day” provision to close; Avanti Schools Trust and Khalsa Primary School observe it as a non-instructional day |
| Canada | Not a statutory holiday | Peel District School Board and Toronto District School Board designate Diwali as a significant faith day (excused absences); York Region District School Board designates it a “Diamond Day” |
| Singapore | Public holiday | Since November 8 is a Sunday, the public holiday is observed on Monday, November 9, 2026 — all schools are closed |
Lakshmi Puja Muhurat 2026 — Auspicious Timings for Sunday, November 8
Diwali 2026 Lakshmi Puja Muhurat Window
The primary Lakshmi Puja muhurat on Sunday, November 8, 2026, falls during Pradosh Kaal, with the Vrishabha Lagna (Taurus ascendant) window considered most auspicious.
Approximate timings for a central Indian latitude reference point (exact timings shift by 1–30 minutes depending on your city’s coordinates):
| Muhurat Name | Approximate Window | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Pradosh Kaal (overall window) | 5:25 PM – 8:34 PM | Post-sunset window; traditional period for Lakshmi Puja |
| Vrishabha Lagna (Taurus ascendant) | 5:32 PM – 7:28 PM | Considered most auspicious for Lakshmi worship; Vrishabha is ruled by Venus, the planet of wealth |
| Amavasya Tithi | Begins approximately 11:27 AM, November 8 — ends approximately 12:31 AM, November 9 | Entire main Diwali day; puja performed after sunset |
What is Pradosh Kaal and Why Does it Govern Diwali Puja
Pradosh Kaal is the twilight period beginning immediately after sunset, lasting approximately 2.5 prahar (roughly 3 hours). It is considered the most auspicious window for Lakshmi Puja on Diwali because it coincides with the active hour of Goddess Lakshmi’s movement through homes, symbolised by lit diyas placed at thresholds and windows.
Within Pradosh Kaal, the Vrishabha Lagna window carries additional weight. Vrishabha (Taurus) is the zodiac sign ruled by Venus (Shukra), which governs wealth, material abundance, and beauty.
Performing the Lakshmi Puja during Vrishabha Lagna is believed to strengthen the goddess’s association with the household for the coming year.
Lakshmi Puja is not performed during the daytime on Amavasya. It must occur after the first diya is lit at sunset.
Step-by-Step Lakshmi Puja Vidhi for Diwali 2026
The following sequence applies to a standard home Lakshmi-Ganesh puja. Variations exist by region and family tradition.
- Purify and clean the space. Sweep and mop the puja area and main entrance. Place a fresh rangoli pattern at the threshold.
- Prepare the puja thali. Items required: idol or image of Lakshmi and Ganesh, fresh flowers (marigold, lotus if available), rice grains, a clay diya filled with sesame or mustard oil, incense sticks (agarbatti), sindoor (vermillion), mauli (red thread), roli (sacred powder), coins or silver items, mithai (sweets for prasad), a kalash (copper pot with water and mango leaves).
- Light the first diya facing east. All subsequent diyas are lit from this flame. Diyas are placed at the main entrance, windows, roof terrace or balcony, and around the puja space.
- Invoke Ganesha first. Lakshmi Puja begins with Ganesh Puja — he is always worshipped first in the Hindu ritual sequence.
- Perform Lakshmi Puja. Offer flowers, rice, and sweets. Recite the Lakshmi Aarti (Jai Lakshmi Mata). Sprinkle water from the kalash around the idol.
- Perform the aarti. Move the aarti thali (lit camphor or diya) clockwise in front of the idol, 3 times for each deity.
- Distribute prasad. Mithai, particularly ladoo and besan sweets, is distributed to all household members and guests.
Chopda Pujan 2026 — Business Ledger Worship for Traders and Business Owners
Chopda Pujan is a ritual specific to Marwari, Gujarati, and Maharashtrian business communities in which account books, financial ledgers, and business tools are consecrated during the same Pradosh Kaal window as Lakshmi Puja.
The word “chopda” (चोपड़ा) refers to accounting ledgers or books of accounts. New books are opened on this day for the Hindu financial year. The ritual involves:
- Placing new account books (or, in modern practice, a laptop or software login screen) on the puja altar
- Worshipping Lakshmi alongside Saraswati (goddess of knowledge) and Kubera (god of wealth)
- Writing “Shubh Labh” (auspicious profit) and a swastika on the opening pages of new ledgers
- Reciting a short invocation for business prosperity in the coming year
This practice is observed on the same evening as Lakshmi Puja, typically around 6:00–7:30 PM during Vrishabha Lagna. It is mandatory in traditional trading communities in Gujarat and Rajasthan, where it marks the start of the new financial year (Gujarati New Year falls on Govardhan Puja, Monday, November 9, 2026).
Dhanteras 2026 — Friday, November 6: The Shopping Day
What is Dhanteras, and Why Does it fall on a Workday in 2026
Dhanteras (Dhantrayodashi) is the first day of the Diwali festival, observed on the 13th lunar day (trayodashi) of the dark fortnight of Kartik. In 2026, it falls on a Friday, November 6 — a working day in India and most diaspora countries.
This creates a specific shopping and logistics pattern not present in years when Dhanteras falls on a Saturday or Sunday. Millions of working professionals will transition directly from office to shopping on Friday evening, concentrating consumer footfall in the 6:00 PM – 10:00 PM window.
The name “Dhanteras” derives from “Dhan” (wealth) and “Teras” (13th). It commemorates two mythological events: the emergence of Lord Dhanvantari (physician of the gods) from the cosmic ocean carrying a pot of amrit (nectar), and Goddess Lakshmi’s appearance during Samudra Manthan.
Purchasing gold, silver, utensils, or electronics on this day is considered an act of welcoming Dhanvantari and Lakshmi’s blessings into the home.
What is not purchased on Dhanteras: Iron, steel objects, and sharp implements are traditionally avoided. Glass items and black-coloured goods are also considered inauspicious purchases on this day in many regional traditions.
Dhanteras 2026 Auspicious Purchase Window
The traditional Pradosh Kaal window on Friday, November 6, 2026, begins approximately at 5:30 PM (local time, central India reference). Most jewellers, electronics retailers, and financial institutions structure their Dhanteras offers around this window.
Commonly purchased items and their symbolic significance:
| Item | Symbolic Meaning | Common Form |
|---|---|---|
| Gold | Wealth and Lakshmi’s grace | Coins, chains, rings |
| Silver | Prosperity and purity | Diyas, coins, utensils |
| New utensils (bronze/brass) | Nourishment and household abundance | Pots, glasses, thalis |
| Electronics | Contemporary extension of “new tools for the year” | Smartphones, laptops, appliances |
| New vehicle | Marked with a tilak and worshipped before first use | Cars, two-wheelers |
Yama Deepam, a lamp lit facing south on Dhanteras evening, is a lesser-known but important ritual. It is offered to Yama, the god of death, for the protection of family members from untimely death. This practice is observed in North and Central India.
Friday Dhanteras 2026: Practical Shopping Strategy
Because Dhanteras falls on a Friday in 2026, the after-work shopping window (approximately 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM IST) will be the most congested period in physical jewellery markets, electronics stores, and shopping malls.
| Shopping Approach | Advantage | Consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Online (Amazon, Flipkart, Myntra) | Flash sales begin 12:01 AM; prices visible in advance | Delivery must be pre-arranged; many buyers prefer physical gold purchase |
| In-store, early morning (before 10:00 AM) | Low crowds; time to compare weights and purity | Limited festive atmosphere |
| In-store, after 6:00 PM | Full festive experience; most offers active | Maximum crowd density |
| Pre-purchased online with in-store pickup | Combines price advantage with physical delivery | Requires advance planning by October 30 |
Diwali 2026 Decoration Ideas — Home, Office & Eco-Friendly
Rangoli Designs for Diwali 2026
Rangoli is a threshold art form made on the floor at the entrance of homes to welcome Goddess Lakshmi. It is created using coloured rice flour, dry pigment powders, flower petals, or sand. In South Indian traditions, it is called kolam (Tamil Nadu) or muggulu (Andhra Pradesh and Telangana) and typically uses rice flour in geometric dot-grid patterns.
For Diwali 2026, the following categories apply:
- Flower rangoli: Marigold and rose petals arranged on bare floor or pressed into a base pattern; no powder required; fully biodegradable
- Geometric/mandala rangoli: Circular multi-layer designs; intermediate to advanced difficulty; typical diameter 2–4 feet
- Diya-themed rangoli: Central diya motif surrounded by concentric petals; suitable for apartments with limited floor space
- Quick rangoli for beginners: Dot-based patterns are completable in under 10 minutes; stencils are available commercially
- Kolam (South India): Dot-grid geometric patterns using rice flour; a continuous loop tradition that leaves no gaps for negative energy to enter
Chemical rangoli powders (synthetic pigments) are a growing concern in urban settings. Natural alternatives include turmeric (yellow), sindoor (red/orange), white rice flour, dry blue water hyacinth petals, and crushed dried marigolds.
Diya Decoration — Clay, Electric & Designer Options
A diya (दीया) is a small clay oil lamp, filled with sesame or mustard oil and a cotton wick, considered the central symbol of Diwali.
| Diya Type | Material | Burn Duration | Environmental Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional clay diya | Terracotta, handmade | 4–6 hours (depending on oil volume) | Fully biodegradable |
| Designer painted diya | Terracotta with acrylic or enamel decoration | 4–6 hours | Pigment type determines biodegradability |
| Electric diya | Plastic or resin, LED bulb | Indefinite (reusable) | Eliminates smoke; safe near children and pets |
| Wax diya | Beeswax or soy wax moulded in clay shape | 3–5 hours | Lower soot than paraffin |
| Floating diya | Terracotta or wax; designed for water bowls | 2–4 hours | Used in water feature displays |
Akash Kandil, Toran & Smart Home Diwali Setup
Akash Kandil (sky lantern) is a decorative hanging lamp suspended from balconies or ceilings. Traditional versions are made from bamboo frames covered in decorative paper; modern versions use fabric and LED string lights inside. They are not fire lanterns (Chinese-style sky lanterns released into the air are not the same as Akash Kandil).
Toran is a door hanging affixed to the main entrance lintel. Traditional materials include fresh marigold flowers and mango leaves threaded on a cotton string. Fabric torans with embroidery are a year-round alternative, though fresh marigold torans are specific to Diwali and Dussehra.
Smart home Diwali setup is an emerging.
Practical applications:
- Philips Hue, Govee, or Syska smart bulbs can be programmed to shift from white (daytime) to warm amber (puja time) at the exact Pradosh Kaal start time (approximately 5:25 PM on November 8)
- Smart plugs can automate string light timing for the full 5-day period
- Voice assistants (Google Home, Amazon Echo) can set alarms for each day’s puja muhurat window
- Apartment-safe alternatives: Window rangoli vinyl stickers, battery-operated LED diya clusters, and adhesive toran strips avoid fire risk and landlord restrictions in rental properties
Diwali 2026 Gift Ideas — By Budget, Recipient & Occasion
Budget Gift Guide for Diwali 2026
The following matrix presents gift tiers by expenditure range in both Indian Rupee and approximate USD equivalent, paired with recipient type.
| Budget (INR) | Budget (USD approx.) | Gift Options | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under ₹500 | Under $6 | Clay diyas, incense sets (Zed Black, Cycle Brand), small mithai boxes, dry fruit packs (50g) | Neighbours, acquaintances, return gifts for guests |
| ₹500 – ₹2,000 | $6 – $24 | Dry fruit presentation boxes, puja starter kits, rangoli sets with 12–16 colour powders, artisanal candle sets | Colleagues, extended family |
| ₹2,000 – ₹5,000 | $24 – $60 | Silver-plated pooja coins (5–10g), curated hampers (sweets + dry fruits), premium essential oil diyas | Close friends, managers, relatives |
| ₹5,000 – ₹15,000 | $60 – $180 | Silver coins (10–20g, BIS-hallmarked), premium kaju katli boxes, Fabindia / Nykaa / Forest Essentials skincare hampers | Close family, important clients |
| ₹15,000 and above | $180+ | 24-karat gold coins (1g–2g), silk sarees (Kanjivaram, Banarasi), premium electronics (earbuds, smartwatches) | Immediate family, senior clients, business partners |
Corporate Diwali Gifting 2026 — Etiquette, Timing & Volume Orders
Corporate Diwali gifting operates on a procurement timeline that must begin no later than Monday, October 5, 2026, for delivery before Dhanteras (Friday, November 6).
Key considerations for 2026:
- Order placement deadline: October 5–15, 2026, for customised (branded/engraved) orders; October 20 for standard hampers
- Customisation options: Laser-engraved silver coins, company-branded mithai tins, eco-hampers with personalised cards
- Per-employee budget range in corporate India: ₹500–₹2,000 for general staff; ₹5,000–₹15,000 for senior management
- Diwali bonus (ex-gratia): Not legally mandated in India under the Payment of Bonus Act unless the employer’s bonus scheme specifically includes it. The Payment of Bonus Act, 1965, mandates annual bonuses based on profit, not festival dates. However, industry custom in sectors such as FMCG, financial services, and manufacturing treats a Diwali ex gratia as a standard practice
What corporate Diwali gifts are not: Alcohol is not an appropriate corporate gift in contexts where recipients may be teetotal (common in traditional business families). Leather goods are inappropriate for vegetarian recipients. Always confirm dietary preferences before including food items in a personalised hamper.
Traditional vs. Unique Diwali Gifts — What the 2026 Recipient Actually Wants
The most common Reddit-flagged pain point in Diwali gifting is generic mithai boxes that recipients cannot consume before they expire. A 1-kilogram assorted mithai box from a standard sweet shop carries a shelf life of approximately 3–7 days at room temperature.
Alternatives that address this gap:
| Category | Example | Why It Performs Better |
|---|---|---|
| Experience gifts | Spa voucher, cooking class, museum membership | Avoids perishability; memorable |
| Subscription boxes | Spice boxes (e.g., Slurrp Farm, Rage Coffee), artisanal tea sets | Monthly reminder of the gift; supports small brands |
| Artisanal / craft-made items | Dhokra brass figurines (Chhattisgarh), Warli painted diyas (Maharashtra), blue pottery items (Jaipur) | Unique, supports Indian artisans, non-perishable |
| Digital or virtual gifts | OTT subscriptions (Netflix, Hotstar), online class credits | Appropriate for diaspora recipients or cross-border gifting |
Diwali return gifts (tokens given to guests who visit during the 5-day festival) are a separate category. These are typically low-cost (₹50–₹300), functional, and small. Common options: miniature diyas, incense pouches, dried flower sachets, small candles.
Diwali 2026 Recipes — Traditional Sweets, Snacks & Faral
Top 10 Traditional Diwali Sweets
Each requires readily available ingredients across India and most Indian diaspora grocery stores.
| Sweet | Regional Origin | Key Ingredients | Prep Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kaju katli | North India (national) | Cashews, sugar, ghee, silver vark | 30–40 minutes |
| Besan ladoo | Pan-India | Chickpea flour (besan), ghee, powdered sugar, cardamom | 20–25 minutes |
| Gulab jamun | Mughal-origin, pan-India | Khoya (reduced milk solids), all-purpose flour, sugar syrup | 45 minutes (includes soaking) |
| Jalebi | North and West India | All-purpose flour, yoghurt batter, saffron sugar syrup | 30 minutes |
| Barfi (milk-based) | Pan-India | Full-fat milk powder or khoya, sugar, cardamom; variants include coconut, chocolate, pistachio | 25–35 minutes |
| Motichoor ladoo | Rajasthan, UP | Fine boondi (fried gram flour droplets), sugar syrup, saffron | 45 minutes |
| Halwa (sooji / gajar) | Pan-India | Semolina or grated carrot, ghee, milk, sugar, cashews | 20–30 minutes |
| Kheer | Pan-India | Full-fat milk, basmati rice, sugar, cardamom, saffron | 45–60 minutes |
| Rasgulla | West Bengal, Odisha | Chhena (fresh cottage cheese), sugar syrup | 30–40 minutes (plus cooling) |
| Chakli / Murukku | Maharashtra / South India | Rice flour, urad dal flour, butter or sesame seeds | 30 minutes |
Diwali Faral — Maharashtra’s Festive Snack Platter
Faral (फराळ) is the traditional Maharashtrian Diwali snack platter assembled over 3–5 days before the festival and exchanged with neighbours in decorative boxes.
The standard faral includes:
- Chakli: Deep-fried spiral rice flour savoury
- Chivda: Flattened rice (poha) mixed with peanuts, curry leaves, turmeric, and sugar
- Shankarpali: Sweet or savoury diamond-shaped fried dough biscuits made from all-purpose flour, ghee, and sugar
- Karanji: Crescent-shaped deep-fried pastry stuffed with sweetened grated coconut and poppy seeds
- Ladoo: Specifically, besan or rava ladoo for the Maharashtrian tradition
- Anarase: Deep-fried rice and jaggery discs; a distinctly Maharashtrian preparation almost absent from North Indian Diwali menus
The tradition of boxing and exchanging faral among neighbours functions as a social bonding mechanism. A standard faral box contains 5–7 items and weighs approximately 400–800 grams.
This practice is documented in Pune, Mumbai, Nashik, and Nagpur, as well as in Maharashtrian diaspora communities in the USA, UK, and Australia.
Vegan & Allergy-Friendly Diwali Sweets for 2026
The primary barrier to vegan Diwali sweets is ghee (clarified butter) and khoya (reduced whole milk), which appear in the majority of traditional recipes. These can be substituted without significant flavour loss in most cases.
| Traditional Ingredient | Vegan Substitute | Performance Note |
|---|---|---|
| Ghee | Refined coconut oil or vegan butter (e.g., Violife) | Coconut oil performs best in ladoo; slightly different flavour profile |
| Khoya (mawa) | Cashew cream or coconut milk reduced to paste | Texture is slightly less dense; suitable for barfi |
| Milk (in kheer) | Full-fat coconut milk or oat milk | Coconut milk produces closest texture; oat milk is lighter |
| Silver vark (on kaju katli) | Edible rice paper leaf (gold or plain) | Provides equivalent visual finish; no animal product |
Nut allergy considerations: Kaju katli (cashews), motichoor ladoo (often contains cashew or almond), and most dry fruit hampers present an allergy risk. Chakli, chivda, shankarpali, and sooji halwa are typically tree-nut-free but require ingredient verification for cross-contamination.
Quick Diwali Sweets: Under 30 Minutes for Busy Professionals
Five preparations are complete in under 30 minutes:
- No-cook coconut ladoo: Desiccated coconut, condensed milk, cardamom — mix, roll, refrigerate 10 minutes. Total time: 15 minutes.
- Instant gulab jamun: MTR or Gits gulab jamun mix, water, frying oil, sugar syrup — box-to-table time is 20–25 minutes.
- Chocolate barfi: Milk powder, cocoa, condensed milk, ghee — microwave in 3-minute intervals, set in a greased tray. Total time: 20 minutes.
- Date and nut ladoo: Medjool dates (pitted), mixed nuts, cardamom — blend and roll. No cooking required. Total time: 10 minutes. Vegan-compatible.
- Sooji halwa: Semolina roasted in ghee, water, sugar, cardamom — 15 minutes stovetop.
Diwali 2026 Outfits — Women, Men & Kids
Diwali 2026 Outfit Guide for Women
Outfit selection for Diwali 2026 should account for the day-specific occasion across the 5-day period, not a single event.
The most formal attire belongs to the main Diwali night (Sunday, November 8); Dhanteras (Friday, November 6) is a transition from work to evening puja, requiring versatile Indo-western styling.
| Day | Occasion | Recommended Attire | Colour Palette 2026 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Friday, November 6 (Dhanteras) | Work-to-puja transition | Salwar kameez with statement jewellery; structured kurta with wide-leg trousers | Deep emerald, rust orange, ivory |
| Saturday, November 7 (Choti Diwali) | Family gathering; casual | Printed cotton kurta, kurti with palazzo | Mustard, turquoise, coral |
| Sunday, November 8 (Main Diwali) | Puja and celebration | Silk saree, embroidered lehenga choli, Anarkali with dupatta | Gold, deep red (crimson), royal blue |
| Monday, November 9 (Govardhan Puja) | Morning puja; afternoon family visits | Semi-formal kurta set, linen saree | Saffron, marigold yellow |
| Tuesday, November 10 (Bhai Dooj) | Family ceremony | Festive kurti, casual ethnic | Pastel pink, mint green |
Gold jewellery (22-karat or gold-filled) is considered auspicious on the main Diwali night. Oxidised silver and kundan sets are common alternatives.
Diwali 2026 Kurta, Nehru Jacket & Sherwani Guide for Men
For men, the occasion-to-attire mapping follows a similar logic:
- Main Diwali night (Sunday, November 8): Sherwani (formal, for home puja and extended family celebration) or embroidered kurta with churidar and a Nehru jacket
- Dhanteras and Choti Diwali (Friday–Saturday): Cotton or linen kurta-pyjama; Nehru jacket optional
- Govardhan Puja and Bhai Dooj (Monday–Tuesday): Simple kurta with palazzo or dhoti-style pants
- Footwear: Kolhapuri chappals (flat leather sandals from Kolhapur, Maharashtra) and mojaris (embroidered pointed-toe shoes from Rajasthan) are the standard festive footwear for men and women across both formal and casual occasions
Diwali Mehndi Designs for 2026
Mehndi (henna) is applied on Choti Diwali (Saturday, November 7) or the days leading up to the main festival. The colour darkens over 6–12 hours; full colour appears within 24 hours of application.
- Arabic mehndi: Bold, flowing floral motifs; less dense; faster to apply (30–45 minutes for both hands); popular among younger diaspora communities
- Indian traditional mehndi: Dense interlocking floral and paisley motifs covering the entire palm and fingers; 60–90 minutes for both hands
- Quick mehndi designs: Finger-tip or wrist cuffs; suitable for busy professionals; 15–20 minutes
- Diwali nail art 2026 trends: Gold foil pressed designs, diya motifs on accent nails, rangoli mandala nail art using fine brush or stamping plates
Diwali 2026 Around the World — Global Celebrations & Events
Diwali 2026 in India — Regional Traditions by State
Diwali is not celebrated uniformly across India. The mythological basis, ritual sequence, and regional names differ significantly by state.
| Region | Local Name | Primary Mythological Basis | Key Ritual Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| North India (Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar) | Diwali | Rama’s return to Ayodhya after 14 years of exile (Ramayana) | Lakshmi Puja; large public displays; Ramnagar Ramlila culminates on Diwali |
| West Bengal, Odisha | Kali Puja (same night as Diwali) | Worship of Goddess Kali, not Lakshmi | Kali idol installed in pandals; midnight puja; distinct from Lakshmi Puja tradition |
| South India (Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh) | Deepavali | Naraka Chaturdashi — Krishna’s defeat of the demon Narakasura | Abhyang snan (oil bath) at dawn on Day 2 is the primary observance; crackers at dawn, not evening |
| Maharashtra | Diwali | Combined Lakshmi Puja and Bali Pratipada traditions | Abhyang snan, Lakshmi Puja, faral exchange; Govardhan Puja observed as Bali Pratipada |
| Gujarat | Diwali / Gujarati New Year | Bali Pratipada (Day 4) marks Gujarati New Year | Chopda Pujan is mandatory for business community; Gujarati New Year begins Monday, November 9, 2026 |
| Punjab and Sikh-majority areas | Bandi Chhor Divas | Release of Guru Hargobind Ji from Gwalior Fort (1619 CE) | Gurdwaras illuminated; separate theological basis from Hindu Diwali |
| Jain communities (pan-India) | Diwali (Mahavira Nirvana Day) | Nirvana (liberation) of Tirthankara Mahavira | The 24th Tirthankara attained nirvana on Kartik Amavasya; Jains observe it as a spiritual rather than commercial festival |
Diwali 2026 vs. Kali Puja 2026 — Why West Bengal Celebrates Differently
In 2026, both Kali Puja and Diwali fall on the same night — Sunday, November 8 — because both are observed on Kartik Amavasya.
The distinction is theological:
- Diwali (North Indian tradition): Worship of Goddess Lakshmi for prosperity; symbolises Rama’s return to Ayodhya; Treta Yuga narrative
- Kali Puja (West Bengal / Odisha): Worship of Goddess Kali, the fierce form of Durga; symbolises the destruction of evil forces; connected to Tantric traditions
In Kolkata, pandals (temporary structures) are erected for large Kali idols, similar to Durga Puja infrastructure. Midnight puja is the norm for Kali Puja, whereas Lakshmi Puja is performed during Pradosh Kaal (5:25 PM – 8:34 PM).
A household in West Bengal celebrating both traditions on November 8, 2026, would perform Lakshmi Puja at sunset and Kali Puja at or near midnight.
Diwali 2026 in the UK, USA, Canada & Australia
| Country | Official Status | Key Community Hubs | Notable Events |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK | Not a national public holiday | Leicester (largest Diwali celebration outside India), Birmingham, London (Trafalgar Square, Wembley) | Leicester Diwali attracts 35,000–60,000 visitors annually; Trafalgar Square event typically draws 30,000+ |
| USA | Not a federal holiday; California state holiday from 2026 | New Jersey (Edison, Iselin), Houston (Texas), Chicago, New York (Jackson Heights, Queens) | Community events across South Asian diaspora hubs; New York Diwali celebrations at Times Square and Governors Island |
| Canada | Not a statutory holiday | Brampton and Mississauga (Ontario), Toronto, Surrey and Vancouver (British Columbia) | Diwali Mela events in Brampton; Toronto’s Diwali parade through Gerrard India Bazaar |
| Australia | Not a public holiday | Sydney (Parramatta, Harris Park), Melbourne (Melbourne CBD Diwali Festival) | Federation Square Melbourne event; Parramatta Diwali festival attracts 30,000+ attendees |
| Ghana / West Africa | No official recognition | Accra (Osu, Cantonments); Takoradi Indian community | Small-scale community celebrations among Indian expatriate and business communities; Indian High Commission events |
| Singapore | Public holiday | National; observed Monday, November 9, 2026 | Little India (Serangoon Road) decorated from mid-October; full public holiday |
Bandi Chhor Divas 2026 — Diwali in the Sikh Tradition
Bandi Chhor Divas (ਬੰਦੀ ਛੋੜ ਦਿਵਸ) commemorates the release of the sixth Sikh Guru, Guru Hargobind Ji, from Gwalior Fort on Kartik Amavasya in 1619 CE, after 52 Hindu kings imprisoned with him were also freed.
Bandi Chhor Divas and Diwali coincide on the same night — Sunday, November 8, 2026 — but the theological basis is distinct:
- Sikhs illuminate the Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib) in Amritsar with lights and fireworks to commemorate Guru Hargobind Ji’s release, not Rama’s return to Ayodhya
- The celebration at the Golden Temple on Kartik Amavasya already predates the Sikh narrative: historical records indicate the gurdwara was lit to welcome Guru Hargobind Ji, and the two traditions became overlapping rather than identical
- Bandi Chhor Divas is not a renaming of Diwali — it is a separate historical event that shares the same calendar date
For non-Sikh visitors, the Golden Temple in Amritsar during Bandi Chhor Divas (Sunday, November 8, 2026) is one of the most visually significant events in the Diwali period, with the temple complex illuminated from early evening.
Eco-Friendly & Safe Diwali 2026 — Green Celebrations, Pet Safety & Air Quality
Fireworks & Crackers in 2026 — Rules, Bans & Safe Alternatives
The Supreme Court of India’s 2018 order (Arjun Gopal v. Union of India) restricts firecracker use to “green crackers” approved by the CSIR (Council of Scientific and Industrial Research) and limits permitted hours to 8:00 PM – 10:00 PM on Diwali night.
As of early 2026, this framework remains in effect, subject to state-level updates and court orders closer to November. Key points for 2026:
| Jurisdiction | Status | Time Restriction | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delhi NCR | High restriction; AQI history of “Severe” category in November | 8:00 PM – 10:00 PM | Enforcement varies by year; DPCC monitors real-time AQI |
| Mumbai (MCGM) | Moderate restriction | 8:00 PM – 10:00 PM | Maharashtra Pollution Control Board guidelines apply |
| Bengaluru | Moderate restriction | 8:00 PM – 10:00 PM | KSPCB guidelines |
| Chennai | Low traditional cracker use (Deepavali at dawn tradition) | 6:00 AM – 7:00 AM and 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM | Varies by year’s TNPCB directives |
| UK | Subject to local noise ordinance | Typically 11:00 PM on bonfire night; Diwali celebrations may apply for extensions | Individual councils grant event licences |
| USA | Subject to municipal and county ordinances | Varies; typically 10:00 PM – 11:00 PM in residential zones | Fireworks laws vary by state; California has one of the strictest regimes |
Green crackers approved by CSIR produce 30% less particulate matter than conventional crackers, emit no sulfur dioxide, and use potassium nitrate as an oxidiser instead of barium nitrate. They are identifiable by a “green cracker” logo printed on the packaging.
Delhi AQI context: In November 2023, Delhi’s Air Quality Index reached the “Severe” category (401+) during the post-Diwali period, with PM2.5 levels exceeding 450 µg/m³. The 24-hour WHO guideline for PM2.5 is 15 µg/m³. This data, from the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), contextualises why metropolitan restrictions exist.
Pet-Friendly Diwali 2026 — Protecting Dogs and Cats
Fireworks produce sound at approximately 150–175 decibels at close range. Dogs can hear frequencies up to 65,000 Hz (humans: up to 20,000 Hz), making them significantly more sensitive to high-frequency cracker sounds. Cats are similarly affected.
Practical measures for Diwali 2026, specifically the peak firework window (8:00 PM – 10:00 PM on Sunday, November 8):
- Create a designated safe room: an interior room with minimal window exposure; add a white noise machine or play calming music at 60–70 decibels to mask external cracker sounds
- Do not leave pets unattended outdoors between 7:00 PM and 11:00 PM on November 6, 7, 8, and 9
- Rangoli powder hazard: Synthetic rangoli powders (zinc oxide, lead oxide compounds in some cheaper powders) are toxic if ingested by pets. Use natural alternatives (turmeric, rice flour) in areas accessible to animals
- Pheromone-based calming products: Adaptil (for dogs) and Feliway (for cats) are veterinarian-endorsed diffusers that release synthetic calming pheromones. These should be installed 48–72 hours before the festival begins for maximum effect
- Thundershirts (compression wraps) reduce anxiety in approximately 80% of dogs, based on a 2014 study published in the Journal of Veterinary Behavior
10 Practical Eco-Swaps for Diwali 2026
The following substitutions reduce environmental impact without eliminating the core festival experience:
- Single-use clay diyas → reusable electric LED diyas (lifespan: 3–5 years with proper storage)
- Paraffin candles → soy or beeswax candles (lower soot output; paraffin releases toluene and benzene when burned)
- Plastic toran → fresh marigold and mango leaf toran (fully biodegradable within 7 days)
- Synthetic rangoli powder → natural rice flour, turmeric, or dry flower petals (non-toxic; biodegradable)
- Imported mithai box packaging → local artisan sweets in banana leaf or recycled paper wrapping
- Single-use LED strip lights → solar-powered LED fairy lights (minimal grid electricity draw; rechargeable)
- Standard crackers → CSIR-certified green crackers (30% lower particulate emission)
- Plastic gift bags → jute or fabric (potli) bags (reusable; traditional aesthetic)
- Bubble wrap in hamper packaging → shredded newspaper or natural jute packing grass
- Single-use décor → dedicated festive storage boxes (reuse the same decoration items year over year, significantly reducing annual plastic waste)
Diwali 2026 Activities — Party Games, Kids’ Crafts & Long Weekend Travel
Diwali Party Games for All Ages
The following games are suitable for home gatherings and office Diwali celebrations. Each requires minimal advance preparation.
| Game | Participants | Setup Required | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diya decorating contest | 4–20 | Plain clay diyas, acrylic paints, brushes | Judged on creativity; completed diyas given as prizes |
| Rangoli competition | Teams of 2–3 | Coloured rice flour or dry pigment, floor space | Timed (20–30 minutes); judged on symmetry and design |
| Diwali trivia quiz | 6–30 | Question set, buzzers or hand-raise scoring | Cover mythology, history, and regional traditions |
| Antakshari | 6–20 | None | Hindi film songs; competitive team format |
| Tambola (Diwali housie / bingo) | 10–50 | Printed tickets, number caller, token set | Diwali-themed prizes in each row/full house |
| Mithai tasting game | 4–12 | Assorted sweets, blindfolds | Participants identify sweets by taste; regional varieties add difficulty |
Diwali 2026 Crafts for Kids
The following activities are appropriate for children aged 4–12 and are specifically useful for diaspora parents teaching Diwali traditions in non-Indian contexts.
- Paper diya making: Cut oval shapes from yellow/orange card stock, fold the edge upward, and draw a flame. Introduces the diya symbol without fire
- Potato stamp rangoli: Halved potatoes carved with simple patterns (circle, star, lotus petal) used with food-safe paint on paper
- Paper kandil (lantern): Folded and cut A4 paper lanterns strung with thread; basic origami level
- Diwali greeting card: Crayon or watercolour drawing of diyas, rangoli, or Lakshmi’s footprints (auspicious motif placed at entrances)
- Felt toran: Pre-cut felt shapes (mango leaves, marigold flowers, bells) threaded on ribbon; reusable; suitable for apartment-friendly decoration
These activities function as cultural transmission tools for children born outside India who may have limited direct exposure to festival traditions.
Diwali 2026 Long Weekend Travel Guide — Friday, November 6 to Tuesday, November 10
The Sunday placement of Diwali 2026 creates a natural 5-day holiday window (Friday–Tuesday) when combined with the gazetted Govardhan Puja and Bhai Dooj holidays.
For domestic Indian travellers, this is one of the longest consecutive holiday clusters in the November calendar.
| Destination | Distance from Delhi | Primary Diwali Attraction | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh | 823 km (approx. 12 hours by train) | Dev Deepawali on the ghats (November 20–21 in 2026); Diwali itself is celebrated across all 84 ghats with lakhs of diyas | Cultural immersion; photography |
| Jaipur, Rajasthan | 280 km (4.5 hours by road) | Amber Fort illuminated; Hawa Mahal lit by diyas; massive Dhanteras bazaars in the old city | Heritage + shopping |
| Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh | 630 km (9 hours by train) | Deepotsav — Uttar Pradesh government’s official illumination event on the Saryu river ghats; 2024 edition used 2.2 million diyas (Guinness World Record) | Large-scale festival event |
| Amritsar, Punjab | 450 km from Delhi | Golden Temple illumination for Bandi Chhor Divas (November 8) | Spiritual and historical significance |
| Udaipur, Rajasthan | 660 km from Delhi | City Palace illuminated; Lake Pichola boat rides with diya floats | Luxury and heritage travel |
Booking window: For Diwali travel in India, accommodation in Varanasi, Ayodhya, and Jaipur is typically sold out 6–8 weeks ahead of the festival. For 2026, reservation by mid-September is advisable.
Diwali 2026 Wishes, Messages & Greetings
Diwali 2026 Wishes by Relationship Type
The following messages are structured for direct use. Copy any message as-is or adapt the bracketed fields.
For immediate family (warm, traditional):
- “May Goddess Lakshmi bless your home with health, prosperity, and peace this Diwali 2026. Shubh Deepavali.”
- “This festival of lights is brighter with you. Wishing you and our family a joyful and blessed Diwali on Sunday, November 8.”
For close friends (conversational):
- “Happy Diwali! May your home be full of diyas, your table full of mithai, and your heart full of everything you’ve been working toward.”
- “Shubh Deepavali! Wishing you the kind of Diwali that smells like fresh flowers, tastes like kaju katli, and feels like a Sunday you didn’t have to earn.”
For colleagues and professional contacts (formal):
- “Wishing you and your family a prosperous and joyful Diwali 2026. May the new year of Vikram Samvat 2083 bring growth and good health.”
- “Happy Deepavali. May this festival mark the beginning of an auspicious and successful year ahead.”
For non-Hindu recipients or inclusive messaging:
- “Wishing everyone celebrating Diwali, Bandi Chhor Divas, or Deepavali this November 8 a festival filled with light and warmth.”
- “Happy Diwali to all who celebrate. The Festival of Lights is a reminder that every small act of kindness is its own kind of illumination.”
For social media (short-form, under 15 words):
- “Happy Diwali 2026. Light wins. 🪔”
- “Shubh Deepavali. May your year be as bright as a thousand diyas.”
What to Say to Someone on Diwali — Etiquette for Non-Hindu Observers
The standard greeting is “Happy Diwali” or “Shubh Deepavali.” Both are universally understood and welcomed. “Shubh Deepavali” (शुभ दीपावली) translates to “auspicious Deepavali.” Neither form requires the speaker to be Hindu.
Non-Hindu recipients of a “Happy Diwali” greeting from a colleague or friend: the greeting is socially appropriate and does not require a reciprocal religious observance. Responding with “Thank you, happy Diwali to you as well” — or simply “Thank you” — is fully accepted.
Common questions answered:
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Is it appropriate for non-Hindus to say “Happy Diwali”? | Yes. The greeting is a cultural goodwill expression, not a religious statement. |
| Can I wish a Sikh colleague “Happy Diwali”? | Sikhs celebrate Bandi Chhor Divas on the same day. “Happy Bandi Chhor Divas” is more precise, but “Happy Diwali” is generally accepted without offence. |
| What if I’m unsure whether someone celebrates? | “To those celebrating Diwali this November 8 — happy Festival of Lights” is an inclusive phrasing that does not assume observance. |
| Is it appropriate for a non-Indian employer to organise Diwali celebrations? | Yes, provided the event is framed as cultural celebration rather than religious observance, is optional, and does not substitute or compete with mandatory team activities. |
Diwali 2026 — Frequently Asked Questions
When is Diwali 2026?
Diwali 2026 is on Sunday, November 8, 2026. The main day — Lakshmi Puja — is observed on the Amavasya (new moon) of the Kartik month in the Hindu lunisolar calendar (Vikram Samvat 2083). The 5-day festival runs from Friday, November 6 (Dhanteras) to Tuesday, November 10 (Bhai Dooj).
What Are the 5 Days of Diwali 2026?
The 5 days of Diwali 2026, in order: Dhanteras / Dhantrayodashi (Friday, November 6), Naraka Chaturdashi / Choti Diwali (Saturday, November 7), Lakshmi Puja / Main Diwali (Sunday, November 8), Govardhan Puja / Bali Pratipada (Monday, November 9), Bhai Dooj / Yama Dwitiya (Tuesday, November 10).
Is Diwali 2026 a Public Holiday in India?
Yes. November 8, 2026, is a gazetted public holiday across India. Because it falls on a Sunday, a compensatory holiday on Monday, November 9 (Govardhan Puja) depends on state government notifications and individual employer policies. Banks typically observe November 8–10 as consecutive Diwali holidays per the RBI state-wise holiday calendar.
What Is the Difference Between Diwali and Deepavali?
Diwali and Deepavali are the same festival — two regional pronunciations. “Diwali” (दिवाली) is the North Indian (Hindi, Punjabi) pronunciation; “Deepavali” (தீபாவளி in Tamil; దీపావళి in Telugu) is the South Indian and Sri Lankan name. Both derive from the Sanskrit “Deepavali,” meaning “row of lamps” (deepa = lamp; avali = row).
Can Non-Hindus Celebrate Diwali?
Yes. Diwali is observed by Hindus, Sikhs (as Bandi Chhor Divas), and Jains (as Mahavira Nirvana Day). Beyond these religious communities, it is widely participated in as a cultural festival by people of all backgrounds. Joining a Diwali celebration, exchanging sweets, or wishing someone “Happy Diwali” is standard and welcomed. The festival is not exclusive to any single community.
Why Do Diyas Have Special Significance on Diwali?
Diyas represent multiple symbolic layers simultaneously in Diwali observance. In the Ramayana narrative, diyas were lit across Ayodhya to guide Rama and Sita’s return from 14 years of exile — the original mythological association. In Lakshmi Puja theology, a lit diya at the threshold and entrance is understood to attract the goddess into the home. The light of a diya is also interpreted as a metaphor for individual consciousness (atman) — each lamp represents one soul. In practical ritual terms, the first diya lit in a home on Diwali evening is considered sacred and must not be extinguished until after aarti is complete.
Why Does Diwali Fall on Sunday in 2026?
The Hindu calendar is lunisolar, and Kartik Amavasya — the new moon of the Kartik month — determines Diwali’s date. The Gregorian day of the week on which this falls has no ritual significance; it is determined by the calendar arithmetic of when the new moon aligns with the Kartik month in any given year. In 2026, this alignment produces Sunday, November 8. In 2027, the equivalent date will shift again according to the lunar cycle.
Plan Your Diwali 2026 — Key Dates & Next Steps
Core facts for 2026:
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Main Diwali date | Sunday, November 8, 2026 |
| 5-day festival window | Friday, November 6 – Tuesday, November 10, 2026 |
| Lakshmi Puja muhurat | Pradosh Kaal: approx. 5:25 PM – 8:34 PM; Vrishabha Lagna: approx. 5:32 PM – 7:28 PM |
| Dhanteras (shopping day) | Friday, November 6 — after-work shopping peak 6:00 PM – 10:00 PM |
| Bank closures (India) | November 8–10, 2026 (subject to state-wise RBI list) |
| Corporate gift order deadline | October 5–15, 2026 for customised orders |
| Travel booking window | September 2026 for Diwali destination travel |
| Gujarati New Year | Monday, November 9, 2026 (Bali Pratipada) |
Action checklist by date:
- By September 15, 2026: Book travel to Varanasi, Jaipur, Ayodhya, or Amritsar; accommodation fills 6–8 weeks before the festival
- By October 5, 2026: Place customised corporate gift orders; allow 4–6 weeks for engraving, branding, and delivery
- By October 20, 2026: Order online gifts and hampers; standard delivery to most Indian cities requires 7–10 days
- By November 1, 2026: Prepare puja items (kalash, idols, flowers, diyas, puja thali ingredients); procure rangoli powders and decoration materials
- November 6 (Dhanteras): Gold and silver purchase; Yama Deepam lighting in the evening
- November 7 (Choti Diwali): Abhyang snan at dawn; mehndi application; early fireworks in the evening
- November 8 (Main Diwali): Lakshmi Puja begins at Pradosh Kaal (approx. 5:25 PM); diya lighting; Chopda Pujan for business owners during Vrishabha Lagna
- November 9 (Govardhan Puja / Gujarati New Year): Annakut offering; new financial year begins for Gujarati and Marwari business communities
- November 10 (Bhai Dooj): Brother-sister ceremony; tilak and gift exchange
Muhurat timings and official holiday notifications are updated by relevant state governments and panchang authorities in October. Verify city-specific puja times with DrikPanchang.com or your local priest closer to November 8, 2026.





