Hinduism
Diwali is 143 days away.
| Year | Date | Month/day |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Sunday, November 8, 2026 | November 8 |
| 2027 | Friday, October 29, 2027 | October 29 |
| 2028 | Tuesday, October 17, 2028 | October 17 |
| 2029 | Monday, November 5, 2029 | November 5 |
| 2030 | Saturday, October 26, 2030 | October 26 |
| 2031 | Thursday, November 13, 2031 | November 13 |
| 2032 | Monday, November 1, 2032 | November 1 |
| 2033 | Saturday, October 22, 2033 | October 22 |
| 2034 | Friday, November 10, 2034 | November 10 |
| 2035 | Tuesday, October 30, 2035 | October 30 |
Diwali, also called Deepavali, is widely known as the Festival of Lights. It is one of the most important Hindu festivals and is also marked by Jains, Sikhs, and some Buddhist communities. The main observance is associated with the new moon of the Hindu month Kartika, usually falling in October or November in the Gregorian calendar. Families often clean and decorate homes, light diyas or lamps, share sweets, gather for prayers, and visit relatives. Meanings vary by region and tradition, but common themes include light over darkness, knowledge over ignorance, and renewal at the turning of the year. This page uses the date already published in timekit's religious holidays calendar, so regional panchang and local observance may differ by a day.
Calendar note: From the local Vikram calendar festival table; shown as a 5-day Diwali span.