🌙 🇮🇳 Noida, India

Karva Chauth 2026 in Noida

Thursday, 29 October 2026 · Chaturthi

📅 Local timings in Noida

Calculating for your city…

Computed from Noida's coordinates — not IST

Karva Chauth 2026 in Noida, Uttar Pradesh falls on Thursday, 29 October 2026. Even within India, Noida's sunrise differs slightly from Delhi's, so the Puja and moonrise time, Choghadiya and Rahu Kaal fall at slightly different clock times than a generic all-India panchang. Every timing below is calculated for Noida itself.

In Noida's bustling sectors, Karva Chauth transforms the city's gleaming malls and residential colonies into spaces where women gather in elaborate silk dupattas, their hands lined with henna from local artists in the markets near Sector 18. The ancient ritual finds unexpected modern ground here, with families breaking their fasts together in glass-walled apartments overlooking the Yamuna, while simultaneously, smaller groups light diyas at the Hanuman temples tucked between shopping complexes, blending Noida's contemporary pulse with the festival's timeless devotion to marital bonds.

The meaning of Karva Chauth

Karva Chauth is one of the most cherished festivals observed by married Hindu women, falling on the fourth day (Chaturthi) of the Krishna Paksha in the month of Kartik. On this day, wives keep a strict nirjala fast, without food or water, from sunrise until the moon rises in the night sky, praying for the long life, health, and prosperity of their husbands.

The festival draws its name from the earthen pot (karva) used in the ritual puja, and the word chauth simply means "fourth." According to tradition, the fast is linked to stories of devoted wives, most famously Savitri and Queen Veervati, whose unwavering love and devotion protected their husbands from harm, even from death itself. These tales are recited aloud during the evening puja as a living part of the ritual.

Beyond its spiritual dimension, Karva Chauth is a celebration of the marital bond. Women dress in bridal finery, apply mehndi, and come together in community gatherings, making it as much a festival of sisterhood and joy as it is of devotion and prayer.

The muhurat — and why Noida differs

The auspicious window for the Karva Chauth puja falls during the evening hours of the Chaturthi tithi in Krishna Paksha of Kartik month, specifically in the pradosh kaal, the period after sunset when the puja is performed and the moon is awaited. The fast itself cannot be broken until the moon is clearly visible, which means the moonrise time is the single most important timing of the day. Unlike many festivals where a fixed IST window is broadly applied, Karva Chauth timing is acutely location-sensitive: moonrise varies by latitude and longitude, so the moon may appear meaningfully earlier or later depending on where you are, a difference of 30 to 60 minutes or more is common across different regions.

This is why a generic "moonrise at 8:15 PM IST" figure is only correct for one specific location and becomes unreliable for anyone living even a few hundred kilometres away, and entirely incorrect for those outside the subcontinent. The correct moonrise time, and therefore the precise moment the fast can be broken, must always be calculated for your exact local coordinates. The puja muhurat window is similarly anchored to local sunset rather than a fixed clock time, reinforcing why per-city timings are essential for observing this fast correctly.

How Karva Chauth is celebrated

The observance of Karva Chauth follows a series of time-honoured steps that unfold from early morning through to moonrise, each carrying its own significance.

  • Sargi before sunrise: The day begins before dawn when a mother-in-law offers her daughter-in-law a thali of food and sweets called sargi. This is the last meal eaten before the fast begins at sunrise.
  • Nirjala fast through the day: After consuming sargi, the woman observes a strict fast, no food and no water, until she sights the moon that evening. This complete abstinence is seen as a mark of devotion and discipline.
  • Bridal adornment: Women dress in red or bridal-coloured clothes, wear sindoor, bangles, and jewellery, and apply intricate mehndi on their hands, all symbols of a blessed marriage.
  • The community puja gathering: In the evening, women assemble in groups, often in a courtyard, garden, or neighbour's home, sitting in a circle around a thali holding the karva (small earthen or metal pot filled with water), diyas, sweets, and puja items.
  • Listening to the Karva Chauth Katha: A senior woman or a priest narrates the traditional story (katha) of the festival. The karva and puja thali are passed around the circle as women listen, completing seven rounds.
  • Moon sighting and arghya: Once the moon rises, women sight it through a sieve (chalni) and then look at their husband's face through the same sieve. Water is offered to the moon (arghya) using the karva as an act of reverence.
  • Breaking the fast: The husband offers water and the first morsel of food to his wife, formally ending her fast. This exchange is considered deeply auspicious and closes the day's observance.

Frequently asked questions

Can men also keep the Karva Chauth fast?

Traditionally the fast is kept by married women for their husbands' wellbeing, but in modern practice many husbands choose to fast alongside their wives as a gesture of solidarity and shared devotion, there is no religious prohibition on this.

What if the moon is not visible due to clouds?

If clouds obscure the moon, women wait patiently for even a brief sighting. In some traditions, sighting the moon's reflection in a vessel of water or through a gap in the clouds is accepted; the fast is not abandoned simply because of overcast skies.

Is the Karva Chauth fast compulsory for all married Hindu women?

The fast is a voluntary act of devotion rather than a religious obligation. It is widely observed across North and West Indian Hindu communities, but practice varies by region, family tradition, and personal choice.

Can a woman break her fast if she is unwell or pregnant?

Classical texts and most religious guidance hold that health must come first, a woman who is seriously ill, pregnant, or medically advised against fasting may break the fast or observe a modified version after consulting family elders or a pandit, without it being considered a violation of the tradition.

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