Ashadha Gupt Navratri 2026 start and end date: Check Ghat sthapna time, puja vidhi to please Nav Shaktees

Gupt Navratri 2026 Mai Kab Hai: Ashadha Gupt Navratri begins on July 15, 2026, for nine days of worship. This observance is called "Gupt" or hidden, focusing on ten Mahavidyas. Devotees quietly worship these tantric goddess forms for spiritual str...

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Gupt Navratri 2026 start date, Ghat Sthapna Time
Ashadha Gupt Navratri 2026 Date: Nine days of goddess worship are about to unfold in the middle of the monsoon, and most people won't even notice, because it isn't the Navratri they know. Ashadha Gupt Navratri 2026 begins on July 15, a Wednesday, and runs through July 22, with the fast-breaking ritual, or parana, following on July 23.

Unlike the widely celebrated Chaitra and Shardiya Navratri, this one is called "Gupt", hidden, for a reason. Alongside the nine forms of Goddess Durga, devotees quietly worship the ten Mahavidyas, a set of tantric goddess forms traditionally associated with secretive, high-intensity spiritual practice. Tradition holds that disciplined worship during these nine days brings the seeker special spiritual powers, strength and fulfilment of wishes. In earlier eras, this knowledge is even said to have stayed confined to sages and dedicated spiritual practitioners rather than the general public.

Gupt Navratri 2026 Dates: When Exactly Does It Start?

According to the Hindu calendar, Ashadha Shukla Paksha Pratipada, the first day of the bright lunar fortnight, falls on Wednesday, July 15, 2026, marking the start of the observance. The Pratipada tithi itself technically begins on July 14 at 3:12 pm and runs until July 15 at 11:50 am, which is why the puja formally kicks off on the 15th. The nine-day worship of the goddess continues through July 22, and devotees complete their vrat (fast) with the parana ritual on July 23.


Nine Days, Worship of Nine Goddesses in Gupt Navratri

Here's the twist that makes the 2026 calendar a little unusual: the third and fourth days of Navratri land on the same date this year. Below is the day-by-day breakdown of which form of the goddess is worshipped:

DateDayDeity Worshipped
July 15WednesdayMaa Shailputri (Ghatasthapana)
July 16ThursdayMaa Brahmacharini
July 17FridayMaa Chandraghanta and Maa Kushmanda (double puja, as Tritiya falls the same day)
July 18SaturdayMaa Skandamata
July 19SundayMaa Katyayani
July 20MondayMaa Kalratri
July 21TuesdayMaha Ashtami, Maa Mahagauri
July 22WednesdayMaa Siddhidatri, Sandhi Puja
July 23ThursdayNavratri Parana (fast-breaking)

Gupt Navratri 2026: Ghat Sthapna time

Timing matters a great deal in this ritual, and here the two sources consulted for this report differ slightly on the auspicious window for Ghatasthapana on July 15. One reading places the muhurat between 6:15 am and 10:43 am, while another pegs it between 5:33 am and 10:09 am. Either way, devotees are advised to complete the kalash sthapana within the early morning hours of July 15, since the Pratipada tithi lapses by late morning.

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Ashaadha Gupt Navratri Puja Vidhi

For readers planning to set up their own puja, the steps are fairly straightforward:

  • Clean the worship area at home thoroughly before starting.
  • Cover a wooden platform (chowki) with red or yellow cloth and place an idol or image of Goddess Durga on it.
  • Sow barley seeds in an earthen pot.
  • Fill a copper or clay kalash with water, and add betel nut, unbroken rice (akshat), durva grass, a coin and Ganga water.
  • Place mango leaves at the mouth of the kalash, then top it with a coconut wrapped in red cloth.
  • Position the kalash over the pot where the barley has been sown.
  • Invoke the goddess, light a lamp, and offer roli, akshat, flowers, fruits and naivedya (food offering).
  • Close the puja with a recitation of Durga Saptashati, Devi Kavach, or any mantra the devotee follows.

Why "Gupt" Navratri is significant

Religiously, Gupt Navratri is considered highly significant, with the belief that fasting and sadhana during this period fulfil devotees' wishes faster than usual. The ten Mahavidyas invoked during this window, Maa Kali, Maa Tara, Maa Tripura Sundari, Maa Bhuvaneshwari, Maa Chhinnamasta, Maa Tripura Bhairavi, Maa Dhumavati, Maa Bagalamukhi, Maa Matangi and Maa Kamala, are traditionally associated with intense, closely guarded spiritual practice, which is part of why this Navratri has stayed lower-profile than its more famous counterparts even today.
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