Amalaki Ekadashi 2029
Amalaki Ekadashi 2029 falls on Sunday, Sunday, February 25, 2029.
Exact date, puja muhurat & city-wise timings for Amalaki Ekadashi 2029
Key Information
Festival Date
Sunday, February 25, 2029
2029 Calendar Context
Weekday
Sunday
Vikram Samvat
2086
Shaka Samvat
1951
This year Amalaki Ekadashi falls on a Sunday, 10 days earlier than 2028 (2028-03-07) — typical lunar-calendar drift.
Falling on a Sunday gives the day a Surya emphasis — Sun-ruled rites and copper offerings carry extra weight.
The 2028 observance fell on Tuesday, 2028-03-07 — this year arrives 10 days earlier in the Gregorian calendar, the familiar 11-day shift of the unmodified lunar year.
Looking ahead to 2030, Amalaki Ekadashi will fall on Friday, 2030-03-15 (18 days later than this year). So planning ritual schedules across years means anchoring to the tithi rather than the Gregorian date.
Astronomical context for Amalaki Ekadashi 2029
On Sunday, February 25, 2029, sunrise in Delhi (the reference city for this page) falls at 06:50 IST and sunset at 18:18 IST — a daylight span of 11h 28m. Across the six pan-Indian cities tabulated below, sunrise on this date varies from 06:01 (Kolkata) at the eastern edge to 07:00 (Mumbai) in the west — a 59-minute difference that drives the city-by-city muhurat shift you see in the table.
For Amalaki Ekadashi 2029, the central rite of udaya tithi (sunrise) depends on the festival tithi being present during that window on 2029-02-25 — confirmed across 6 reference cities in this year's computation pass. Cities further east (Kolkata, Chennai) see the window open ~15-25 minutes before Delhi; cities west of Delhi (Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore) see it start later by a similar margin.
City-Wise Timings for Amalaki Ekadashi 2029
| City | Sunrise | Sunset |
|---|---|---|
| Delhi | 6:50 AM | 6:18 PM |
| Mumbai | 7:00 AM | 6:42 PM |
| Bangalore | 6:37 AM | 6:27 PM |
| Chennai | 6:27 AM | 6:17 PM |
| Kolkata | 6:01 AM | 5:38 PM |
| Pune | 6:56 AM | 6:39 PM |
Why This Date?
Amalaki Ekadashi follows the Udaya Tithi rule – the festival is observed on the day when the required tithi prevails at sunrise. This is the default Dharmasindhu convention for festivals without a special time-window requirement.
Deity
Lord Vishnu and Goddess Lakshmi (resident in the amla tree)
Legend & History
The amalaki (amla / Indian gooseberry) tree is said to have sprung from a tear of Lord Vishnu and is considered the tree most dear to Him — Lakshmi resides in it. King Chitrasena of Vidisha observed t… Read full legend →Show less ↑
The amalaki (amla / Indian gooseberry) tree is said to have sprung from a tear of Lord Vishnu and is considered the tree most dear to Him — Lakshmi resides in it. King Chitrasena of Vidisha observed this Ekadashi at the base of an amalaki tree, performing puja and circumambulation. A demon attacking the city was destroyed by the merit of his observance. The Brahmanda Purana preserves the mahatmya. Amalaki is also called Amla Navami / Amla Ekadashi.
How to Observe
Worship under or near an amla tree if possible. Offer water, milk, flowers, and tulsi to the tree base, then circumambulate it 108 times reciting the Vishnu mantra. Consume amla fruit in some form during the fast (it does not break the Ekadashi vow). At parana, break fast with amla. Donate amla saplings or fruits to others. The vrata combines Vishnu-puja with arboreal devotion.
Significance
Falls in Phalguna Shukla — the spring season — when amla trees fruit. The Lakshmi-in-amla association makes this ekadashi especially associated with wealth, family prosperity, and longevity. Holi falls a few days later; Amalaki Ekadashi is often the start of pre-Holi celebrations. Combines arboreal ecology (planting and worshipping trees) with Vishnu-Lakshmi devotion — a beautifully integrative ekadashi in the Hindu calendar.
Fasting
Ekadashi fast – no grains or beans. Amla fruit is the one permitted food. Break fast on Dwadashi morning with amla.
Looking for Amalaki Ekadashi 2030?
Amalaki Ekadashi 2030 Date & Muhurat