Rath Yatra 2026 Date — July 16 | Puri Chariot Festival Complete Guide

Once a year — and only once — Lord Jagannath steps outside the Puri temple and appears before everyone. On all other days, only Hindus can enter to see him. On Rath Yatra day, the Lord comes out to the street. All castes. All religions. All nationalities. Everyone stands on the same Grand Road and receives the same darshan. This is why the Jagannath Rath Yatra has been called the original festival of equality — a thousand years before the word existed as a political concept.

Please Subscribe on Youtube

💡 Quick Answer Rath Yatra 2026: July 16, 2026 (Thursday) Bahuda Yatra (Return / Ulto Rath): July 24, 2026 (Friday) Full Festival: July 16–25, 2026 (9 days) Location: Grand Road (Bada Danda), Puri, Odisha — Jagannath Temple to Gundicha Temple 3 Chariots: Nandighosha (Jagannath) | Taladhwaja (Balabhadra) | Devadalan (Subhadra) All religions welcome: Yes — everyone can participate

2026 Update: Rath Yatra 2026 main procession on July 16 (Thursday). Dwitiya Tithi begins 11:50 AM on July 15. Bahuda Yatra (return): July 24, 2026. Millions of devotees expected. Source: rathyatra.org + drikpanchang.com 2026.


Rath Yatra 2026 — Complete Date Schedule

Event Date 2026 Day
Snana Yatra (pre-Rath bathing festival) June 19, 2026 Friday
Rath Yatra (main) July 16, 2026 Thursday
Hera Panchami July 20, 2026 Monday
Suna Besha (gold adornment) July 22, 2026 Wednesday
Bahuda Yatra (return / Ulto Rath) July 24, 2026 Friday
Niladri Bije (final return to temple) July 25, 2026 Saturday

The Three Chariots — Everything You Need to Know

The three towering wooden chariots are rebuilt entirely from scratch every year using sacred wood. No metal nails. No modern tools in the traditional process.

Deity Chariot Name Height Wheels Horses Crest Symbol
Lord Jagannath Nandighosha 45 feet 16 4 white Garuda (eagle)
Lord Balabhadra Taladhwaja 45.6 feet 14 4 black Hanuman
Goddess Subhadra Devadalan 44.6 feet 12 4 red Lotus

Why built fresh every year: The chariots are considered the temporary abodes of the deities. After Rath Yatra, the wood is used for cooking in temple kitchens — nothing is wasted. New chariots, new devotion, every year.

Sequence on Grand Road: Balabhadra’s Taladhwaja goes first. Subhadra’s Devadalan second. Jagannath’s Nandighosha last — the most celebrated.


The Day-by-Day Festival

Day 1 (July 16) — Rath Yatra

The three chariots, loaded with the deities through the Pahandi procession, begin their 3 km journey from Jagannath Temple to Gundicha Temple along Grand Road.

  • Pahandi: The deities are carried out of the temple in a slow, ceremonial swaying motion. Starts around 5–6 AM.
  • Chhera Pahanra: The Gajapati King of Puri — despite being a king — descends from his palanquin and sweeps the chariot floor with a golden broom. The most moving moment: royalty serving God as a sweeper.
  • Chariot Pulling: Hundreds of thousands of devotees pull the massive chariots with thick ropes. Anyone can pull — no caste, no religion restriction.
  • The procession typically takes 8–10 hours to complete the 3 km.

Day 5 (July 20) — Hera Panchami

Goddess Lakshmi — Lord Jagannath’s consort — arrives at Gundicha Temple searching for her husband who has stayed away too long. She arrives angry, breaks a piece of the chariot in protest, and returns to the main temple. The deities then plan their return.

Day 7 (July 22) — Suna Besha

The deities are adorned entirely in gold ornaments on the chariots in front of the Lion’s Gate. One of the most spectacular visual moments of the entire festival.

Day 9 (July 24) — Bahuda Yatra (Ulto Rath)

The return procession — chariots pulled back from Gundicha Temple to Jagannath Temple. Same route, same energy, slightly smaller crowd than the main Rath Yatra.

Day 10 (July 25) — Niladri Bije

The final ceremony — deities return to their sanctum inside the temple. Goddess Lakshmi, still somewhat reluctant, is appeased with Rasagola (cheese balls) before she allows the Lord to re-enter. This is said to be the origin of Odisha’s famous rasagola tradition.


How to Watch Rath Yatra — Practical Guide

Best viewing spots on Grand Road:

Spot Position Crowd Level
Near Jagannath Temple Starting point — Pahandi visible Extreme
Mid Grand Road Best for chariot pulling Very high
Near Gundicha Temple Arrival point Very high
Elevated hotel balconies Aerial view of procession Book months in advance

Best time to arrive: 4:00 AM or earlier. By 7 AM, Grand Road is packed. Hotels within 500m of Grand Road book out months in advance.

Pro tip: Bahuda Yatra (July 24) is equally spiritual and significantly less crowded than the main Rath Yatra. If crowd management is a concern — plan for Bahuda instead.


Non-Hindus at Rath Yatra

Unlike the Jagannath Temple inner sanctum — which only allows Hindus — the Rath Yatra procession on Grand Road is open to everyone regardless of religion, nationality, or background.

International visitors, non-Hindu Indians, and foreigners regularly pull the ropes, walk alongside the chariots, and receive prasadam. This is explicitly a festival of universal inclusion — the Lord of the Universe comes out to meet everyone.


Where Else is Rath Yatra Celebrated in 2026?

Rath Yatra is not only at Puri. Major celebrations across India:

City Known For
Puri, Odisha Main — original — largest in the world
Ahmedabad, Gujarat Second largest — massive ISKCON + local celebration
Surat, Gujarat Grand procession, lakh+ attendance
Kolkata, West Bengal ISKCON Kolkata — famous Mahesh Rath Yatra nearby
ISKCON temples Every major city — same day, same scale within cities

The Trap — July 25 vs July 16

Several websites and calendar apps list Rath Yatra 2026 as July 25. This is incorrect.

Rath Yatra 2026: July 16 (Thursday) Bahuda Yatra: July 24 (Friday) Niladri Bije: July 25 (Saturday)

July 25 is Niladri Bije — the final ceremony when the deities re-enter the temple. Some apps miscalculate. The main Rath Yatra — when the chariots roll on Grand Road — is July 16.


How to Reach Puri for Rath Yatra

Mode Details
Train Puri Railway Station — 2 km from Jagannath Temple. Book months in advance — Rath Yatra trains sell out
Flight Bhubaneswar Airport (BBI) — 65 km from Puri. 1.5 hours by road
Car Bhubaneswar → Puri — 65 km, ~1.5 hours via NH 316
Bus OSRTC and private buses from Bhubaneswar, Kolkata, Visakhapatnam

Critical: Book train and hotel minimum 3–4 months before Rath Yatra. July is peak Odisha pilgrimage season.


Rath Yatra 2026 Checklist

Date confirmed: July 16, 2026 (Thursday) — not July 25 ☑ Bahuda Yatra: July 24 — same experience, fewer crowds ☑ Train/hotel booked — minimum 3 months in advance ☑ Grand Road viewing spot plan — arrive by 4 AM for good position ☑ Traditional modest attire — no shorts, sleeveless ☑ No photography inside temple complex ☑ Rope pulling — anyone can participate ☑ Non-Hindus welcome — no restriction on Grand Road ☑ Ahmedabad/ISKCON option — if Puri travel not possible ☑ Niladri Bije July 25 — Rasagola ceremony — beautiful finale


FAQ

Rath Yatra 2026 kab hai?

Puri Jagannath Rath Yatra 2026 is on July 16, 2026 (Thursday). The return procession — Bahuda Yatra (Ulto Rath) — is on July 24, 2026 (Friday). The full festival runs July 16–25, 2026.

Bahuda Yatra 2026 kab hai?

July 24, 2026 (Friday) — also called Ulto Rath Yatra or Return Car Festival. Lord Jagannath’s chariots return from Gundicha Temple to the main Jagannath Temple.

Teen chariots ke naam kya hain?

Lord Jagannath: Nandighosha (45 ft, 16 wheels) | Lord Balabhadra: Taladhwaja (45.6 ft, 14 wheels) | Goddess Subhadra: Devadalan (44.6 ft, 12 wheels).

Kya non-Hindus Rath Yatra mein participate kar sakte hain?

Yes — Rath Yatra on Grand Road is open to everyone regardless of religion, nationality or caste. Anyone can pull the chariot ropes. Only the inner temple sanctum restricts entry to Hindus.

Chhera Pahanra kya hota hai?

Chhera Pahanra is the ritual where the Gajapati King of Puri — despite being royalty — descends and sweeps the chariot floor with a golden broom as an act of supreme devotion and humility.

Puri Rath Yatra ke liye kab tak hotel book karein?

Book minimum 3–4 months in advance — by March–April 2026 for July. Hotels near Grand Road sell out first. Train tickets to Puri fill up even earlier.


Every year, the same three wooden chariots. The same Grand Road. The same chant — “Jai Jagannath!” — rising from millions of voices. And the same extraordinary sight: a king sweeping the floor, a Lord stepping outside his home, and everyone — absolutely everyone — standing together on the same street. Jai Jagannath!

Also Read:

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top