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Festival · Nepal

The Festival Calendar of Nepal

A month-by-month guide to Nepal's 12 great festivals, from Dashain and Tihar to Holi, Indra Jatra, Losar and Chhath.

Nepal packs an extraordinary number of festivals into its year, blending Hindu, Buddhist, Newar and Tibetan traditions across the seasons. This festival calendar collects twelve deep-dive guides so you can plan a trip around the celebrations — and understand what you are watching when you arrive. For a quick at-a-glance overview, see our festivals of Nepal summary; the guides below go far deeper into meaning, timing and where to be.

The short answer

The two unmissable national festivals are Dashain (Sep–Oct) and Tihar (Oct–Nov). For sheer colour, time your trip for Holi (Feb–Mar). Kathmandu's grandest street festival is Indra Jatra (Sep), while spring belongs to Bisket Jatra in Bhaktapur and Buddha Jayanti.

Festivals by season

Autumn is the festival heartland: Teej opens the season, followed by Indra Jatra, the giant family festival of Dashain, the lights of Tihar and the brotherhood ritual of Chhath Parva in the Terai. Winter brings the harvest festival of Maghe Sankranti in January and Losar, the Tibetan and Sherpa new year, in February. Spring is for Holi, Bisket Jatra's chariot pulling and Buddha Jayanti. The monsoon months hold Gai Jatra, the cow festival that honours the dead, and Janai Purnima, the sacred-thread full moon.

How to use these guides

Each guide explains what the festival celebrates, when it falls (with both lunar month and a rough Gregorian window), how and where it is observed, what you will actually see as a traveller, and practical tips. Pair them with our best time to visit Nepal guide to line up your dates, and read our Nepal culture and etiquette notes so you join in respectfully — dress modestly at temple events, ask before photographing rituals, and accept tika or prasad with your right hand.

The twelve festivals

Browse the full deep-dive guides for Dashain, Tihar, Holi, Indra Jatra, Teej, Bisket Jatra, Gai Jatra, Buddha Jayanti, Maghe Sankranti, Losar, Chhath Parva and Janai Purnima below. Together they span the whole Nepali year, so wherever your trip falls, there is almost certainly a festival within reach.

Our top picks

Frequently asked questions

What are the biggest festivals in Nepal?+

Dashain (15 days in Sep–Oct) and Tihar (five days in Oct–Nov) are the two largest national festivals. Holi, Indra Jatra, Teej, Buddha Jayanti and Chhath are also widely celebrated, while Losar and Bisket Jatra are important regional festivals.

Why do Nepali festival dates change every year?+

Most festivals follow the lunar calendar (Bikram Sambat or the Tibetan and Newar calendars), so their Gregorian dates shift by a couple of weeks each year. Always confirm exact dates close to your travel time.

Which festival should I plan my trip around?+

For colour and crowds, time your visit for Holi in February or March. For the most atmospheric travel, autumn brings Dashain, Tihar and Indra Jatra. Spring suits Bisket Jatra and Buddha Jayanti.

Do festivals disrupt travel in Nepal?+

Yes, especially Dashain and Tihar, when banks, offices and many shops close and transport sells out as people travel home. Book buses, flights and rooms well ahead, but enjoy the festive atmosphere.

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