Why this guide
India's festival calendar is rich but largely lunar and regional, which makes exact dates shift every year and vary by state: most travel guides either skip this complexity or bury it in confusing detail. This guide gives you the planning framework without claiming false precision on dates.
Major festivals & what they involve
These are some of the most significant celebrations travelers are likely to encounter, though regional and local festivals run year-round.
- Diwali: the festival of lights, marked by lamps, fireworks and family gatherings, typically falling in autumn
- Holi: the festival of colors, with public color-throwing and water play, typically falling in early spring
- Navratri/Durga Puja: multi-day celebrations of the divine feminine, with elaborate processions and pandals especially prominent in eastern India
- Eid celebrations: major Islamic festivals observed widely, with community gatherings and festive meals
- Regional harvest festivals: celebrated under different names across states, often involving specific foods, dances and rituals
- Republic Day and Independence Day: national civic holidays with parades and public events in major cities
Most Hindu festival dates follow the lunar calendar and shift each year: always confirm exact dates for your travel year closer to booking.
What changes during festival season
- Hotel and train availability tightens significantly around major festivals: book well ahead
- Many businesses, government offices and some tourist sites close or operate reduced hours on major festival days
- Cities can feel both more vibrant and more crowded: processions and gatherings may affect traffic and walkability
- Prices for accommodation and transport often rise in the days immediately around big festivals
- Some festivals (like Holi) involve public participation that affects what you wear and how you move around that day
- Air quality and noise levels can increase during fireworks-heavy festivals like Diwali
Booking around festivals
- Decide early whether you want to experience a festival directly or avoid the crowds: both are valid trip designs
- If attending, book accommodation in the festival city itself months ahead, not just for the festival day but the days around it
- If avoiding crowds, consider a region not central to that particular festival's celebrations
- Build flexibility into transport bookings around festival dates, as schedules can be disrupted or in higher demand
- Ask your hotel about any festival-specific events or closures that might affect your planned activities
- Check the lunar-calendar-based date for your specific travel year before finalizing any festival-timed trip