The Punjabi festival calendar (Nanakshahi / Bikrami). Punjabi festivals and vrats month by month, with the date and tithi timing of each observance.
Punjabi 2064 opens in September during Nanakshahi 596 of the Hindu calendar.
September 2064
Nanakshahi 596
Magh
Festivals & Vrats in September 2064
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Krishna Janmashtami
Tithi 6:24 PM, Sep 3 – 7:35 PM, Sep 4
The midnight birth of Lord Krishna.
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Goga Navami (Gogaji)
Tithi 7:33 PM, Sep 4 – 8:04 PM, Sep 5
On Bhadrapada Krishna Navami the folk snake-deity Gogaji (Goga Maharaj) is worshipped for protection from snakes; the great Gogamedi fair is held at his shrine in Rajasthan.
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Hartalika Teej (Kevda Trij) Vrat
Tithi 12:21 AM, Sep 13 – 8:44 PM, Sep 13
On Bhadrapada Shukla Tritiya, women keep a waterless fast and worship Shiva and Parvati for marital happiness, on the eve of Ganesh Chaturthi; in Gujarat it is kept as Kevda Trij.
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Vishwakarma Puja
Tithi 12:12 PM, Sep 16 – 10:47 AM, Sep 17
Vishwakarma, the divine architect, is worshipped by artisans, engineers and craftsmen on Kanya Sankranti.
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Shradh Paksha (Pitru Paksha)
Tithi 7:08 PM, Sep 25 – 9:35 PM, Sep 26
The fortnight of offerings to the ancestors.
Timings shown for New Delhi (IST) at sunrise — use the city box at the top to change it. Solar months begin by each tradition's own Sankranti rule (same-day, next-day, sunset or aparahna). Era years and lunar month names follow standard Vedic calculations and may differ slightly from regional almanacs around an Adhik Maas.
About the Punjabi Calendar
The Punjabi festival calendar (Nanakshahi / Bikrami). Punjabi festivals and vrats month by month, with the date and tithi timing of each observance.
Each day lists its tithi and paksha, the nakshatra, the weekday (vaar) and any festivals or vrats. Tap any day to see the full panchang for that date — tithi start and end times, nakshatra, yoga, karana, sunrise and sunset, and the inauspicious periods (Rahu Kalam, Yamaganda, Gulika Kalam). Use the month and year selectors to browse this year and the next.