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Yugadi — Hindu New Year 2032

Ugadi · Gudi Padwa · Chetichand — Chaitra Shukla Pratipada

📍 Bangalore, India
2032
Yugadi — Hindu New Year · 2032
📍 Bangalore, India
April 11, 2032
Ugadi · Gudi Padwa · Chetichand — Chaitra Shukla Pratipada
Timings · Bangalore
Sunrise
Apr/13/2032 06:10:13
Sunset
Apr/13/2032 18:31:13
Moonrise
Apr/13/2032 06:54:24
Moonset
Apr/13/2032 19:49:03
About

Yugadi — Hindu New Year

Yugadi — known as Ugadi in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, Gudi Padwa in Maharashtra, and Chetichand among the Sindhi community — marks the first day of the Hindu lunar calendar's bright fortnight of Chaitra. According to the Brahma Purana, this was the very day on which Lord Brahma commenced the creation of the universe, making it not just a New Year but a cosmic anniversary. The word Yugadi itself derives from yuga (age/era) and adi (beginning) — the dawn of a new cycle of time.

On this morning, households are cleaned, mango leaves are strung across doorways (torana), and women draw intricate kolam/rangoli at the entrance. In Karnataka and Andhra, the priest or eldest member of the family reads aloud the Panchanga Shravanam — the annual almanac for the incoming year — detailing the year's name (samvatsara), the ruling planet, expected rains, harvests, and advice for each rashi. Listening to this reading is itself considered an auspicious act that bestows the merit of a sacred pilgrimage.

The most iconic element of Yugadi is the Ugadi Pachadi — a dish made of exactly six flavours: neem flowers (bitterness/sorrow), jaggery (sweetness/happiness), raw mango pieces (surprise/new beginnings), tamarind (sourness/disgust), green pepper (sharpness/anger), and salt (fear). Together, they symbolise the full spectrum of life's experiences that the new year will bring. Eating the pachadi reminds the devotee to accept all of life — joy and sorrow, gain and loss — with equanimity and grace.

चैत्रे मासि जगद्ब्रह्मा ससर्ज प्रथमेऽहनि। शुक्लपक्षे समग्रे तु तदा सूर्योदये सति॥
Caitre māsi jagad brahmā sasarja prathame'hani, śuklapakṣe samagre tu tadā sūryodaye sati.
"In the month of Chaitra on the first auspicious day of the bright fortnight, with the sun having risen, Brahma created the universe."
— Brahma Purana
Tradition & Practice
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The 6 Tastes of Life (Ugadi Pachadi)
Ugadi Pachadi is a unique ritual dish combining six flavours in a single bowl: neem flowers for bitterness (sorrow), jaggery for sweetness (happiness), raw green mango for sourness (surprise), tamarind for astringency (disgust), pepper for pungency (anger), and salt for saltiness (fear). Consuming all six in one sitting is a philosophical act — an acceptance that the coming year will bring the full range of human emotion.
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Panchanga Shravanam
The reading of the Panchanga (almanac) for the new year is central to Yugadi. The year receives a name from a cycle of 60 samvatsaras; the presiding planet (adhipati), its effect on rainfall, agriculture, health, and public affairs are all declared. Listening to this reading while seated facing east, after a bath and worship, is said to grant the merit of visiting 60 sacred rivers.
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Gudi Padwa (Maharashtra)
In Maharashtra, the same day is celebrated as Gudi Padwa. A gudi — a bright silk cloth tied to the top of a bamboo pole along with a copper or silver pot and neem leaves — is erected outside the home facing the sun. It symbolises victory, prosperity, and the flag of Brahma hoisted at creation. Families prepare puran poli (sweet lentil flatbread) and shrikhand as festive foods.
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Chetichand (Sindhi New Year)
The Sindhi community celebrates Chetichand on the same Chaitra Shukla Pratipada as the birth anniversary of Jhulelal, their patron deity of the Indus river. Jhulelal is revered as an avatar of Varuna (the god of water) who protected Sindhis from religious persecution. Processions are taken out, the Jhulelal image is carried to water bodies, and the day is marked by fasting and community feasts.
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Regional Specialties
Across the regions that celebrate Yugadi, distinct foods signal the new year: Karnataka prepares obbattu (puran poli), Andhra makes bobbatlu and raw mango rice, Telangana celebrates with tamarind rice. Mango trees, which blossom in spring, feature prominently — their leaves at the door and raw fruit in the pachadi. The fragrance of mango blossoms and the call of the cuckoo (koyal) are traditional signs that Yugadi has arrived.
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New Year Vrat and Tradition
Devotees observe a partial fast on Yugadi, eating only fruit and the ritual pachadi until the main meal in the afternoon. The day begins before sunrise with a ceremonial oil bath (abhyanga snanam), followed by prayers and the offering of neem leaves and flowers to the family deity. New clothes are worn, elders are touched for blessings, and the year is formally inaugurated by consuming the pachadi and hearing the panchanga.
Gowri Panchangam
Day
Uthi Good 06:10:13 – 07:42:51
Amridha Best 07:42:51 – 09:15:28
Rogam Evil 09:15:28 – 10:48:06
Labham Gain 10:48:06 – 12:20:43
Dhanam Wealth 12:20:43 – 13:53:20
Sugam Good 13:53:20 – 15:25:58
Soram Bad 15:25:58 – 16:58:35
Visham Bad 16:58:35 – 18:31:13
Night
Dhanam Wealth 18:31:13 – 19:58:31
Sugam Good 19:58:31 – 21:25:49
Soram Bad 21:25:49 – 22:53:07
Visham Bad 22:53:07 – 24:20:25
Uthi Good 24:20:25 – 01:47:43
Amridha Best 01:47:43 – 03:15:01
Rogam Evil 03:15:01 – 04:42:19
Labham Gain 04:42:19 – 06:09:37
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