Once in 12 Years  ·  Sacred River Festival  ·  2026

Yamuna Pushkaralu

యమునా పుష్కరాలు  ·  2026

"The Yamuna does not just flow — she forgives. And for twelve days every twelve years, she forgives everything."

June 2, 2026
✦   Adi Pushkaram   ✦
Anthya · June 13
Countdown to Adi Pushkaram
Live
Days Remaining
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Festival Duration
12 Sacred Days
Occurs Every
12 Years
Jupiter enters
Cancer (Karka Rashi)
Best Ghat
Vishram Ghat, Mathura
Snan Timing
4:30 AM – 7:00 AM
Next Pushkaralu
Godavari 2027
Scroll to explore
12
Sacred Days
12
Years Between
12
Holy Rivers
2026
Year of Yamuna
Punya Earned
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Sacred Knowledge

What is Yamuna
Pushkaralu?

There is a festival that happens once every twelve years. Not because a government declared it, not because a religious institution organised it — but because the sky itself makes it happen. When Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, moves into Cancer (Karka Rashi), something stirs in the Yamuna. Pilgrims who cannot explain why they feel drawn still pack their bags and travel hundreds of miles. That is Yamuna Pushkaralu.

The word "Pushkara" comes from Sanskrit. At its root, it means one who nourishes, one who gives life. Ancient texts describe Pushkara as a divine sage of extraordinary spiritual power — one who descends into a different sacred river each time Jupiter moves through a new zodiac sign. When Pushkara enters a river, that water carries a charge that it simply doesn't carry at other times. Not metaphorically. Literally, according to every text that describes this phenomenon.

For the Yamuna, that zodiac sign is Cancer. And in 2026, for the first time since 2014, Jupiter is crossing into Cancer. From June 2 to June 13, the Yamuna becomes something more than a river.

Twelve Pushkaralu happen over twelve years — one for each of the twelve sacred rivers of India, one for each of the twelve zodiac signs. The cycle is perfect, almost deliberately so. When the Yamuna's turn comes, it is said that all the other rivers, all the deities, all the tirthas of the country gather invisibly in the Yamuna's waters. Bathing in her during these twelve days is equivalent, the texts say, to bathing in all rivers at once.

June 2 – 13, 2026
Jupiter enters Cancer
Once in 12 Years
12 Sacred Days
Yamuna Devi Blessed
Read the Full Story   →
Sacred River Goddess
Yamuna Devi — Daughter of Surya, Sister of Yama, Beloved of Krishna
Sacred Calendar

2026 Dates & Schedule

Most Auspicious Day
Adi Pushkaram
June 2, 2026 · Arrive before 4:30 AM

The twelve days of Yamuna Pushkaralu open on June 2 and close on June 13. Every single day carries spiritual merit — but two days rise above the rest: the very first day (Adi Pushkaram) and the very last day (Anthya Pushkaram). Plan your yatra around one of these two if you can only attend once.

Festival Opens
June 2, 2026 — Adi Pushkaram
Festival Closes
June 13, 2026 — Anthya Pushkaram
Jupiter Transit
Enters Cancer (Karka Rashi)
Best Snan Time
4:30 AM – 7:00 AM daily
Ekadashi
June 12 — extra auspicious
Next Yamuna Pushkaralu
2038 only
Critical Advice
If you are attending on June 2 (Adi Pushkaram), arrive at the ghat before 4 AM. Crowds at Vishram Ghat, Mathura peak between 5 AM and 8 AM. By 9 AM the ghat is so packed that reaching the water's edge becomes very difficult. Early arrival is not optional — it is essential.
Full Day-by-Day Schedule   →
01
Day 1 — Adi Pushkaram
June 2, 2026
Shukla Pratipada, Jyeshtha Masam
ఆది పుష్కరం — Jupiter enters Karka Rashi
The most sacred day of the entire twelve-year Pushkara cycle. The moment Jupiter crosses into Cancer is the moment the Yamuna's Pushkara period begins. Pilgrims who bathe on this day are believed to earn punya equivalent to performing a hundred yagnas. This is the day for Pitru Tarpan, Nadi Pinda Pradaan, and the holiest snan of your life. Arrive at the ghat before sunrise — the brahma muhurta hour (4:30 to 6 AM) carries maximum power. Millions attend on this day across all Yamuna ghats combined.
Most Auspicious
2–4
Days 2 to 4
June 3 – 5
Dwitiya · Tritiya · Chaturthi
ద్వితీయ · తృతీయ · చతుర్థి
These three days carry nearly the same merit as Adi Pushkaram. If you cannot reach on June 2, these days are an excellent alternative with slightly lower crowd levels. Day 3 (Tritiya) is especially good for Nadi Pinda Pradaan for three generations of ancestors. Day 4 (Chaturthi) is associated with Lord Ganesha and is considered auspicious for beginning new endeavours after the ritual snan.
Highly Auspicious
5–8
Days 5 to 8 — Mid-Festival
June 6 – 9
Panchami through Ashtami
పంచమి నుండి అష్టమి
The heart of the festival. Crowds are more manageable on these days, making them ideal for families travelling with children or elderly relatives. Saptami (June 8) is connected to Surya Deva — the Sun God who is Yamuna's father. Bathing on Saptami and reciting the Yamuna Ashtakam at sunrise is considered especially powerful for family wellbeing and ancestral blessings. Evening aarti at Vishram Ghat and Keshi Ghat during this period is extraordinary — thousands of diyas float on the river after sunset.
Good Days
9–11
Days 9 to 11 — Closing Phase
June 10 – 12
Navami · Dashami · Ekadashi
నవమి · దశమి · ఏకాదశి
Ekadashi (June 12) is particularly significant. Devotees who observe the Ekadashi fast and bathe in the Yamuna on this day are believed to receive blessings that address even the most stubborn ancestral karmas. Spiritual discourses, bhajan programs, and kathakaalakshepam events intensify at all major ghat areas during these final days. Many pilgrims who could not come earlier make a special effort to attend on Ekadashi.
Auspicious
12
Day 12 — Anthya Pushkaram
June 13, 2026
Dwadashi, Jyeshtha Masam
అంత్య పుష్కరం · The Sacred Window Closes
The final day. The second most auspicious day of the entire Pushkara period, carrying merit second only to Adi Pushkaram on June 2. This is your last opportunity to bathe in the blessed Yamuna for the next twelve years. The emotional weight of this day is unlike any other — millions of devotees who know they may not be alive for the next cycle, who have made this yatra as an act of completion, gather together for one final sacred dip. The window closes on June 13. The next Yamuna Pushkaralu will not come until 2038.
2nd Most Auspicious
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ॐ   ✦   The Sacred Cycle   ✦   ॐ
The 12-Year Cycle

All 12 Pushkaralu Rivers

Jupiter takes 12 years to complete one orbit. Each year, it blesses a different sacred river of India. 2026 is the Yamuna's year.
01
♈ Aries · Mesha Rashi
Ganga
గంగా నది
Zodiac: Aries
Last: April 2023
02
♉ Taurus · Vrishabha Rashi
Narmada
నర్మదా నది
Zodiac: Taurus
Last: May 2024
03
♊ Gemini · Mithuna Rashi
Saraswati
సరస్వతీ నది
Zodiac: Gemini
Last: May 2025
2026 ✦
04
♋ Cancer · Karka Rashi
Yamuna
యమునా నది
Zodiac: Cancer
⚡ June 2–13, 2026
05
♌ Leo · Simha Rashi
Godavari
గోదావరి నది
Zodiac: Leo
Next: 2027
06
♍ Virgo · Kanya Rashi
Krishna
కృష్ణా నది
Zodiac: Virgo
Next: 2028
07
♎ Libra · Tula Rashi
Kaveri
కావేరి నది
Zodiac: Libra
Next: 2029
08
♏ Scorpio · Vrishchika
Tambraparni
తామ్రపర్ణి నది
Zodiac: Scorpio
Next: 2030
09
♐ Sagittarius · Dhanu
Brahmaputra
బ్రహ్మపుత్రా నది
Zodiac: Sagittarius
Next: 2031
10
♑ Capricorn · Makara
Tungabhadra
తుంగభద్రా నది
Zodiac: Capricorn
Next: 2032
11
♒ Aquarius · Kumbha
Sindhu
సింధు నది
Zodiac: Aquarius
Last: Nov 2021
12
♓ Pisces · Meena Rashi
Pranahita
ప్రాణహిత నది
Zodiac: Pisces
Last: Apr 2022

← Drag or swipe to explore all 12 rivers →

The twelve Pushkaralu rivers are not chosen arbitrarily. Each river corresponds to one of the twelve zodiac signs in Vedic astrology. As Jupiter — the planet associated with dharma, wisdom, and spiritual growth — completes its twelve-year orbit, it spends approximately one year in each sign. During that year, the river associated with that sign is considered to be at its highest spiritual potency.

After the Yamuna's Pushkara in 2026, it will be Godavari's turn in 2027. Then the Krishna river in 2028, Kaveri in 2029, and so on. The cycle never breaks. Learn about all 12 rivers in detail →

Sacred Locations

Ghats to Visit in 2026

The Yamuna flows for 1,376 kilometres from Yamunotri in the Himalayas to Prayagraj where she merges with the Ganga. During Pushkaralu, every ghat along her entire length becomes sacred. But these six — each for different reasons — matter most.

01
Vishram Ghat
Mathura, Uttar Pradesh
The most important ghat for Yamuna Pushkaralu, without question. Vishram means rest — and this is where Lord Krishna rested after defeating the tyrant Kansa. Every pilgrimage to Mathura begins and ends here. For Pushkaralu, Vishram Ghat sees the largest gatherings. Government facilities are best organised here. Arrive before 4 AM on June 2 to secure a good spot on the steps.
Highest Significance
02
Keshi Ghat
Vrindavan, UP
Where Krishna killed the demon Keshi. Evening Aarti here is extraordinary — more intimate than Mathura.
Best Evening Aarti
03
Triveni Sangam
Prayagraj, UP
Where Yamuna meets the Ganga and the invisible Saraswati. Most sacred confluence in India.
Sacred Confluence
04
Dakpatthar Ghat
Yamuna Nagar, Haryana
Calm, clean, upstream. Best choice for senior citizens and families wanting a peaceful snan.
Senior Friendly
05
Yamunotri
Uttarakhand Himalayas
Sacred source of the Yamuna. 14 km trek from Janki Chatti — ultimate pilgrimage for the able.
Sacred Source
06
Delhi Yamuna Ghats
Delhi & Noida
Official government-organized Pushkaralu sites. Convenient for Delhi-NCR residents with full facilities throughout all 12 days.
Urban Access

Each ghat has its own character, its own crowd level, its own water quality, and its own best time to visit. If you're travelling from South India, Vishram Ghat in Mathura is the natural first choice. If you have elderly parents or very young children, Dakpatthar Ghat in Yamuna Nagar offers a calmer, safer, and cleaner experience with no compromise on sanctity. Read the complete ghat guide with travel directions →

Why This Festival Matters

The Spiritual Significance of Yamuna Pushkaralu

You do not need to take our word for it. The Skanda Purana, the Padma Purana, and the Matsya Purana all describe what happens during Pushkara days in unambiguous terms. Here is what the texts say — and what millions of devotees across generations have experienced.

🌊
The Sacred Bath — What Really Happens

The Padma Purana states directly: a bath in the Yamuna during Pushkara days cleanses the sins of seven lifetimes — not just the present one, but the accumulated karma from six previous births and the inheritance of one future birth as well. This is not folklore. This is scripture, repeated across multiple texts.

The mechanism, as ancient astrologers understood it, is this: during Pushkara, the gravitational and energetic influence of Jupiter — which the Vedas associate with dharma, wisdom, and divine grace — is channelled directly through the water. The river becomes, in a sense, a physical receptor of cosmic grace.

You don't need to believe in any of this to feel the difference. Everyone who has stood at a ghat at 5 AM with 50,000 other people, all facing the rising sun, all chanting together, all performing the same ancient gesture of offering water back to the river — everyone agrees that something happens that cannot be explained by any ordinary measure.

🙏
Pitru Karma — The Duty to Our Ancestors

One of the most important dimensions of Yamuna Pushkaralu is what it does for our ancestors. Hindu tradition holds that the souls of departed family members continue their journey beyond death — and that certain karmas, left unresolved at the time of death, can hold a soul back in its progress. This is what Pitru Dosha refers to.

The Yamuna has a unique relationship with Yama — the God of Death — who is her brother. It is said that Yama promised his sister that anyone who bathes in her waters will be freed from the fear of his domain. During Pushkaralu, this promise is amplified: the Pitru Tarpan and Pinda Pradaan performed on the Yamuna's banks during these twelve days carries the power to release ancestral souls from even the most difficult karmic situations.

Families who have experienced unexplained problems — health issues that persist without clear cause, financial blocks that don't respond to effort, relationship difficulties that seem to come from nowhere — often find that performing Pitru Karma at Yamuna Pushkaralu brings a noticeable shift.

🔱
The Yamuna and Lord Krishna — A Unique Bond

No other sacred river in India has the relationship with a deity that the Yamuna has with Krishna. The Ganga is associated with Shiva, the Saraswati with knowledge, the Kaveri with the south — but the Yamuna lived her entire association with the most beloved avatar of Vishnu during his earthly life.

Krishna was born on the Yamuna's banks in Mathura. As an infant he crossed the Yamuna in the famous story of Vasudeva carrying him through the flood. He grew up on her banks in Vrindavan — the Rasa Leela, the lifting of Govardhan, the defeat of Kaliya the serpent — all happened here. The Yamuna witnessed every chapter of his divine childhood and youth.

For Vaishnavas — followers of Vishnu and his avatars — bathing in the Yamuna during Pushkaralu is not just a spiritual act. It is a homecoming. It is stepping into the same water that Krishna played in as a child. That sentiment, felt by millions of devotees, adds a dimension of bhakti to Yamuna Pushkaralu that is simply not present in any other Pushkara festival in quite the same way.

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Sacred Practices

Rituals & Puja Guide

There are five core rituals associated with Yamuna Pushkaralu. Each one serves a different spiritual purpose. You do not need to perform all five — even completing the snan alone carries immense benefit. But understanding what each ritual is for helps you decide which ones matter most for your family situation.

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Pushkara Snan — The Sacred Bath
The central ritual around which everything else revolves. The timing matters enormously — brahma muhurta (approximately 4:30 AM to 6:00 AM) is when the spiritual potency of the snan is at its highest. Before entering the water, stand at the ghat's edge facing east or north, close your eyes, and take your sankalpa: silently state your full name, your gotra (ancestral lineage), your father's name, and the purpose of your bath — for yourself, for your ancestors, for a specific family member. Then enter the river and submerge completely three times. No soap, no shampoo, nothing chemical. Just the water and your prayer.
Full snan guide with mantras →
🙏
Pitru Tarpan — Offering to Ancestors
Standing in the river (or at the river's edge holding a vessel of river water), you offer water mixed with black sesame seeds (kala til) in the direction of the sun, chanting the names and gotras of your departed family members. The merit of tarpan is multiplied during Pushkaralu beyond ordinary days — texts say that one offering during Pushkara equals a thousand ordinary tarpans. A local priest at any major ghat can guide you through the proper chants if you are unfamiliar with the procedure. This is the one ritual that most Telugu and South Indian families come specifically to perform.
Pitru Tarpan step-by-step guide →
🍚
Nadi Pinda Pradaan — For Ancestral Souls
A more elaborate ritual than tarpan, intended specifically for ancestors who died without completing their dharmic duties, who died in difficult circumstances, or for families carrying the burden of Pitru Dosha. Rice or wheat pindas (balls) are prepared, consecrated, and offered at the river's edge with specific mantras. This ritual requires a qualified priest. Book in advance — demand is extremely high on June 2 and June 13. Most major ghats will have pandit seva registration counters during the festival period.
How to arrange Nadi Pinda Pradaan →
🪔
Yamuna Aarti — Evening Fire Offering
Every evening during the twelve days, a grand aarti is performed at the major ghats — most spectacularly at Vishram Ghat in Mathura and Keshi Ghat in Vrindavan. Rows of priests in white robes stand at the water's edge holding large brass lamps with multiple flames, swinging them in choreographed arcs while the crowd chants. Thousands of small clay lamps are set afloat on the river simultaneously. If you attend only one event during your entire Pushkaralu visit, let it be the evening aarti — it is one of the most visually and spiritually overwhelming experiences India has to offer.
Aarti timings at each ghat →
🌾
Annadanam — Feeding the Pilgrims
Offering food to others during a sacred festival is considered one of the highest acts of dharma in Hindu tradition. During Yamuna Pushkaralu, organizations and individuals run free food stalls (annadanam stalls) at all major ghats throughout the twelve days. Participating in annadanam — even by contributing a small amount to fund someone else's effort — is considered to multiply the punya of your entire yatra. If you are attending the festival, consider spending half an hour serving food at an annadanam stall. The experience of feeding a stranger on sacred ground is one that stays with you.

One important practical note: on June 2 and June 13, priests at the ghats are in extremely high demand. If you need a priest for Pitru Tarpan, Pinda Pradaan, or any other ritual requiring pandit seva, contact the temple or ghat authorities at Mathura at least 2-3 weeks in advance to arrange and confirm. Walking up on the day and expecting to find an available priest immediately is very difficult — and the good priests will be fully booked from the early morning hours.

Pilgrim Checklist
What to Bring
Clean cotton or silk clothing for snan — synthetic fabrics are discouraged as they are considered impure and also tend to cling uncomfortably when wet
A complete dry change of clothes sealed in a waterproof bag — the June heat means wet clothes become uncomfortable within minutes
Small copper or brass vessel (lota) for water offerings — steel is acceptable but copper is traditional
Black sesame seeds (kala til) — available at every market near the ghat, very inexpensive, essential for tarpan
Kusha grass if available — used to hold water during tarpan, sold by vendors at most ghats during festival
Marigold flowers and a small packet of incense sticks for offerings at the river
Cash in small denominations for priest dakshina, flower sellers, and prasad — card machines at ghats are unreliable
Sealed bottled drinking water — you must not drink Yamuna river water directly under any circumstances
ORS (Oral Rehydration Salts) packets — June temperatures in Mathura can reach 42°C and the combination of heat and crowd exertion causes dehydration quickly
Strapped sandals or footwear that ties firmly to your feet — ghat steps become extremely slippery when wet and loose sandals cause accidents
ID document (Aadhaar card or voter ID) sealed in a waterproof pouch close to your body — not in a bag that can be separated from you in a crowd
Mobile phone fully charged with your family's contact numbers saved — agree on a meeting point at the ghat before you separate
Pitru
Ancestral Healing

Pitru Dosha & Yamuna Pushkaralu

If you ask most Telugu or Tamil families why they travel specifically to Yamuna Pushkaralu rather than performing regular Pitru rituals at home or at a nearby temple — the answer is Pitru Dosha. And while the phrase is sometimes used loosely, what it refers to is a genuine and well-documented phenomenon in Vedic astrology: the presence of specific planetary configurations in a birth chart that indicate unresolved ancestral karma.

Pitru Dosha is not a punishment. It is more accurately understood as an inheritance — like how a family business can inherit both its founder's vision and its founder's debts. The karma of previous generations does not simply disappear when those people die. It passes, at varying intensities, to the next generation. And the generation after that. This is not superstition. Every major branch of Vedic philosophy — Advaita Vedanta, Vishishtadvaita, Dvaita — acknowledges the reality of ancestral karma transmission.

The Yamuna's special relationship with Yama makes her uniquely powerful for Pitru karma work. And Pushkaralu, which multiplies the river's spiritual potency many times over, is when this work is most effective. The three rituals most commonly recommended for Pitru Dosha relief during Yamuna Pushkaralu are Nadi Pinda Pradaan (for ancestors without proper last rites), Pitru Tarpan (for all ancestors), and Yamuna Snan with a specific Pitru-mukti sankalpa.

For families with persistent health issues — that don't respond to medical treatment and seem to run through generations, Pitru Karma at Yamuna Pushkaralu is specifically recommended in the Skanda Purana.
For ancestral souls who died in difficult circumstances — accidents, suicides, deaths far from home without proper last rites — Nadi Pinda Pradaan at the Yamuna is considered especially effective.
For couples facing difficulty conceiving — when astrologers identify Pitru Dosha as a contributing factor, performing Tarpan and Pinda at Yamuna Pushkaralu has a long tradition of recommendation.
For family members whose Asti Visarjan was not performed in a sacred river — the Yamuna during Pushkaralu provides a sanctified opportunity to complete this duty even years later.
For general ancestral blessings and family wellbeing — even without specific Pitru Dosha indicators, performing Tarpan and Snan benefits every member of the family tree, both living and departed.
Who Should Perform Pitru Karma at Yamuna Pushkaralu?

Any person whose horoscope shows the Sun or Moon conjunct or aspected by Rahu, Ketu, or Saturn in the 9th house (the house of father and dharma) is traditionally said to carry Pitru Dosha. However, a horoscope reading is not a prerequisite for performing these rituals. The texts are clear: anyone with living or deceased parents, grandparents, or other ancestors — which is everyone — can and should perform Pitru Tarpan during Pushkaralu.

The practice is particularly important for the eldest son in the family, who traditionally carries the primary responsibility for ancestral rites. But it is open to all members of the family regardless of gender. Women, who historically were sometimes discouraged from performing these rites by local custom, are absolutely permitted by the core scriptural texts to perform Pitru Tarpan.

If a family member who has passed away had specific wishes — to have their ashes immersed in the Yamuna, to have prayers said at Mathura or Vrindavan — Yamuna Pushkaralu is the ideal time to fulfil those wishes, as the spiritual potency of the action is multiplied beyond what it would be at any ordinary time.

Complete Pitru Dosha relief guide →
Plan Your Journey

Yamuna Yatra Travel Guide

For pilgrims travelling from Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka or Tamil Nadu, Mathura is the primary destination for Yamuna Pushkaralu. The journey is straightforward — well-connected by train from all major South Indian cities — but requires advance planning, especially for June 2026 when demand for trains and hotels near the ghats will be exceptionally high.

Book Immediately
Train tickets and accommodation near Mathura's ghats for June 2–13, 2026 will sell out months in advance. If you are reading this in early 2026, book now — not next week, not next month. Every week of delay increases the probability that you will not find acceptable accommodation near the ghats.
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By Train from South India
Mathura Junction (station code: MTJ) is on the Delhi-Agra main line and is extremely well-connected. From Hyderabad, the most popular option is the Dakshin Express (Train 12721/12722) which runs directly to Mathura Junction in approximately 20-22 hours. From Vijayawada, the Rajdhani Express to New Delhi and then a short train to Mathura is the fastest route. From Tirupati and Chennai, multiple overnight trains connect via Secunderabad or Vijayawada. Book via the IRCTC website or app — Tatkal quota opens 1 day before departure but regular quota should be booked 120 days in advance (the maximum allowed window).
✈️
By Air
The nearest major airports are Agra Airport (AGR) — 58 km from Mathura — and Indira Gandhi International Airport, Delhi (DEL) — approximately 145 km from Mathura. From Hyderabad (HYD), IndiGo, Air India and SpiceJet operate direct flights to both Delhi and Agra. Travel time from Delhi airport to Mathura by taxi or cab is approximately 2 hours via the Yamuna Expressway. From Agra airport to Mathura is about 45 minutes. Air travel is faster but significantly more expensive — best suited for those with limited travel time who need to reach on June 2 specifically.
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By Bus
APSRTC operates Rajdhani and Volvo AC sleeper buses from Hyderabad to Delhi. The journey takes approximately 20-24 hours depending on the route. Private operators like Orange Travels, VRL Travels and SRS Travels also operate this route. From Delhi's ISBT Kashmere Gate, frequent UP Roadways and private buses connect to Mathura in 2-3 hours. This is the most economical option and is well-suited for budget pilgrims and group travels from small towns in AP and Telangana that may not have direct train connections.

Once you reach Mathura, your ghat area accommodation will largely determine your Pushkaralu experience. The ideal is to stay within walking distance of Vishram Ghat — this means the area around Masani Chauraha, Bengali Ghat Road, and the inner lanes near Holi Gate. Hotels in this zone tend to be smaller, less air-conditioned, but incomparably convenient. A 5-minute walk to the ghat at 4 AM is infinitely better than a 30-minute auto ride through festival crowds.

For those who prefer modern hotel facilities — hot water, AC, reliable WiFi — the area around Mathura Cantt Railway Station and the National Highway 19 stretch offers better hotels at the cost of a longer journey to the ghat. Factor in 20-30 minutes of travel time during peak festival hours when autos and taxis are in very high demand.

Budget accommodation is available through dharamshalas maintained by Mathura's temples and religious trusts. ISKCON Vrindavan (approximately 12 km from Mathura) offers very clean, disciplined accommodation with vegetarian food at reasonable rates — an excellent option for families and devotees who prefer a spiritual environment around the stay itself.

Expense ItemBudget Range (Per Person)
Train tickets — Hyderabad to Mathura Junction (round trip, 3AC)₹1,400 – ₹3,200
Accommodation near ghat — 2 nights (budget guesthouse to mid-range hotel)₹600 – ₹2,500 per night
Vegetarian meals — all 3 days (thali restaurants and dhabas near ghats)₹200 – ₹500 per day
Local transport within Mathura (autos and cycle rickshaws)₹300 – ₹800 total
Ritual items — flowers, sesame seeds, puja samagri, diya lamps₹200 – ₹500
Priest dakshina for Tarpan and Pinda Pradaan (if applicable)₹500 – ₹3,000
Miscellaneous — prasad, donations, porter if needed₹200 – ₹500
Total estimated cost — 3-day yatra for one person₹3,400 – ₹11,000
01
Safety in Large Crowds
Before you go to the ghat, designate a specific meeting point — a landmark, a temple gate, a tea stall — where your group will gather if separated. Large festival crowds can become disorienting very quickly. Keep children held firmly by the hand or in a carrier at all times near the water's edge. Ghat steps are slippery.
02
Timing Your Visit by Day
If you can only attend on June 2 (Adi Pushkaram), arrive at the ghat before 4 AM. The crowds peak between 6 AM and 10 AM. By 10 AM access to the water becomes very difficult. Evenings (5:30 PM to 8 PM) are slightly less crowded and the aarti makes them worthwhile. For Days 3 through 10, mornings remain the best time but crowds are more manageable after 8 AM.
03
Health Precautions for June Heat
Mathura in June is hot — genuinely hot. Temperatures regularly exceed 40°C by mid-morning. Carry ORS packets (not just water — the salt-sugar balance matters for true hydration). Wear a light cotton head covering. Avoid standing in direct sun for extended periods between 10 AM and 4 PM. If you have blood pressure conditions or heart issues, discuss this trip with your doctor before travelling.
04
For Senior Citizens
Mathura's Vishram Ghat has steep, sometimes slippery stone steps. If your parents or grandparents have difficulty with stairs or balance, Dakpatthar Ghat in Yamuna Nagar (Haryana) is the strongly recommended alternative — shallow, well-maintained steps, calm water, manageable crowds, and excellent water quality since it is upstream. The sanctity is equal; the safety is far superior.
Complete Travel Guide with Itineraries → Share with Family View All Ghats →
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Available Languages

Read in Your Language

This complete guide is available in three languages. Each version is written natively — not translated — in the natural speaking style of that language's community.

🇬🇧
English
Current Language
For NRIs, non-Telugu/Hindi speakers, and pilgrims who prefer English. Written in warm, informative style — like a knowledgeable Indian-American explaining the festival to family.
తె
Telugu
యమునా పుష్కరాలు గైడ్
AP and Telangana devotees — your primary audience. Written in native Telugu the way an elder would explain this festival to younger family members. Includes Telugu calendar references.
हि
Hindi
यमुना पुष्करालु मार्गदर्शिका
For North India pilgrims — Mathura, Delhi, UP, and Haryana audiences. Written in respectful Hindi with Braj cultural references, the way a Mathura pandit's family would explain the festival.