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Karwa Chauth 2026

Kartika Krishna Chaturthi — the moonrise fast of wives for husbands

📍 Bangalore, India
2026
Karwa Chauth · 2026
📍 Bangalore, India
October 29, 2026
Kartika Krishna Chaturthi — the moonrise fast of wives for husbands
Timings · Bangalore
Fast (Upavaas)
Oct/29/2026 06:13:33
ends Oct/29/2026 20:50:10
Puja Muhurta
Oct/29/2026 17:53:26
ends Oct/29/2026 19:07:28
Moonrise (Chandrodaya)
Oct/29/2026 20:50:10
About

Karwa Chauth

Karwa Chauth falls on the fourth day of Kartika's dark fortnight and is one of the most emotionally resonant festivals in North Indian Hindu tradition — a day when married women observe a complete nirjala fast (no food, no water) from before sunrise until the moon rises and is sighted, praying for the long life, health, and prosperity of their husbands.

The word karwa refers to an earthen pot (karwa) used in the puja ritual, and chauth means the fourth day. In the evening, women dress in bridal finery — red or pink sarees, full jewellery, sindoor, and mehndi — and gather in groups to perform the Karwa Chauth puja: the Karwa Chauth vrat katha (story) is recited, thali (plates with diya, sindoor, sweets, and a sieve) are passed around, and women look at the moon through a fine-mesh sieve and then at their husbands' faces.

The origins are rooted in several Puranic stories. The most famous tells of Veervati, a young queen whose brothers, unable to bear seeing her fasting, tricked her with a false moonrise using a mirror behind a tree. She broke her fast, and her husband immediately fell gravely ill. Realising the deception, she re-observed the fast until the real moon rose, and her husband recovered. The lesson: the fast must be kept until the actual moonrise — no shortcuts.

In modern India, Karwa Chauth has become a major cultural event, with jewellers, saree shops, and mehndi artists booked weeks in advance. Many husbands now fast alongside their wives in a gesture of solidarity.

करक चतुर्थी व्रतं देव्या: सौभाग्यदायिनी। पत्युरायुष्यवृद्ध्यर्थं स्त्रीभि: कार्यं सुव्रतम्।।
"The Karaka Chaturthi vrat of the goddess grants auspiciousness. Women of good vows should observe it for the growth of their husbands' longevity."
— Karwa Chauth Vrat Katha (traditional)
Tradition & Practice
🌙
Moonrise Fast
The fast runs from before sunrise to moonrise — no food, no water. The moon must be physically sighted (through a sieve) before the fast can be broken. Moonrise time varies significantly by city.
🪔
Thali Puja
The Karwa Chauth thali holds a diya, karwa (earthen pot), sindoor, sweets, and a sieve. Women pass the thali around the circle clockwise, listening to the vrat katha and singing together.
🌕
Sieve and Moon
After moonrise, women view the moon through a fine-mesh sieve (chalni), then turn the sieve to look at their husband through it — a ritual of auspiciousness linking the moon, the sieve, and marital vision.
💄
Bridal Finery
Women dress in their finest on Karwa Chauth — often in red or pink (bridal colours), with full gold jewellery, sindoor, and elaborate mehndi applied the night before. It is effectively a reliving of the wedding day.
📖
Veervati's Story
The Karwa Chauth katha of Veervati — tricked into breaking her fast prematurely by brothers showing a false moon — is the essential narrative. Its ending teaches: the authentic fast, completed fully, restores life.
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Modern Practice
Many husbands now observe Karwa Chauth alongside their wives — a quiet cultural shift from the traditional one-sided fast. When he fasts too, the breaking of the fast becomes a shared ritual.
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