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Authentic pujas at renowned temples across India. Verified pandits, live streaming, prasad delivery. Choose from a curated catalogue of sacred rituals.
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Griha Pravesh, Satyanarayan Katha, Navratri, Rudrabhishek, and 4 more. Starting ₹1,100.
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Sampoorna vivah sanskar with 7 pheras. Hindu, Arya Samaj, South Indian, Sikh blends. Starting ₹11,000.
Showing 10 of 10 pujas

Rudrabhishek
Rudrabhishek is the ceremonial bathing of a Shiva linga performed while reciting the Shri Rudram and Chamakam hymns from the Krishna Yajurveda (Taittiriya Samhita 4.5 and 4.7). Composed of 11 anuvakas, the Shri Rudram invokes Rudra as Shiva — the auspicious one — and is traditionally chanted with Sanskrit svaras as the linga is bathed in eight liquids known together as Panchamrit Abhishek: Gangajal (Ganga water), milk, curd, ghee, honey, sugar-water, coconut water, and finally pure water. Devotees offer Bel patra (Aegle marmelos leaves) and Dhatura flowers — items considered most dear to Shiva according to the Shiva Purana, Vidyeshwara Samhita. Performed primarily on Mondays, Pradosham (13th tithi of every paksha), Maha Shivaratri, and during Shravan month, Rudrabhishek is undertaken to seek protection, dissolve negative karma, ease Mangal/Shani planetary afflictions in the natal chart, and cultivate inner steadiness. Our priests perform it traditionally from the Kashi Vishwanath sanctum tradition. The booking includes complete samagri, sankalp (intention-setting in your name and gotra), live abhishek with Sanskrit chanting, aarti, and a tamper-proof video of the entire ritual.

Ganesh Puja
Ganesh Puja invokes Lord Ganesha — Vighneshwara, the remover of obstacles, and Buddhipriya, lover of intellect — before any new venture, marriage, housewarming (griha pravesh), examinations, or business launch. The ritual follows the Shodashopachara (sixteen-step) sequence detailed in the Ganesha Purana and Mudgala Purana: avahana (invocation), asana (offering of seat), padya, arghya, achamana, snanam, vastra, yajnopavita, gandha (sandalwood), pushpa (red and yellow flowers), dhupa, deepa, naivedya (modak and laddoo), tambula (betel), pradakshina, and mantra-pushpanjali. The 21 Durva grass blades — a herb sacred to Ganesha — are offered with the 21 names from the Sankashtanasaka Stotra. Devotees recite the Ganapati Atharvashirsha 11 times during the puja for fulfilment of desires and removal of vighnas (obstacles). Auspicious dates include Ganesh Chaturthi, every Chaturthi tithi (4th lunar day), Wednesdays, and the start of any new endeavour. The booking covers full Shodashopachara, Sankalp in your name and gotra, recitation of 108 Ganesha names, aarti, and live HD video proof.

Satyanarayan Katha
Satyanarayan Katha is the recitation of five chapters from the Skanda Purana, Reva Khanda, in which Sage Suta narrates how Lord Vishnu, in his form as Satya (Truth) Narayan, fulfils the genuine vows of devotees. The katha is structured as five adhyayas: (1) the merits of the vrat as taught by Narada, (2) the story of the poor Brahmin and the woodcutter, (3) the merchant Sadhu Vaishya and his daughter Kalavati, (4) the king Tungadhwaja, and (5) the cowherds of Vana. Each chapter ends with the punishment for forgetting the offered prasad and the restoration of fortune upon remembrance — a teaching on the gravity of vows kept and broken. The puja is traditionally performed on Purnima (full moon), Sankashti, after housewarming, weddings, business launches, or upon fulfilment of a vow. The Banana-leaf mandap (chhatra) houses a kalash, Lord Satyanarayan murti, Tulsi, and panchamrit. Sapatashati panchamrit prasad — wheat flour, sugar, ghee, banana, and milk in equal parts — is offered. The booking covers complete katha narration in Hindi/Sanskrit, full sankalp, prasad preparation, and certified video.
Maha Mrityunjay Jaap
The Maha Mrityunjaya Mantra — "Om Tryambakam Yajamahe Sugandhim Pushtivardhanam, Urvarukamiva Bandhanan Mrityor Mukshiya Mamritat" — is one of the oldest and most sacred mantras in Hinduism, occurring in the Rigveda (7.59.12), Yajurveda (3.60), and Atharvaveda (14.1.17). Attributed to Sage Markandeya and Rishi Vasishtha, it addresses Tryambaka — the three-eyed Rudra/Shiva — invoking liberation from the bondage of mrityu (mortality, illness, accident) just as a ripe cucumber is freed from its vine. A complete anushthan involves 1,25,000 (sava lakh) repetitions, traditionally performed over multiple days; our 3-hour booking covers a structured 11,000 jaap (one round) which is the prescribed sankhya for ailment-relief, recovery from prolonged illness, removal of premature-death yogas in the natal chart (especially Markesh dasha), and protection from chronic Saturn-Rahu afflictions. Recitation is done with a Rudraksha mala, with sankalp in the patient/devotee's name, gotra, nakshatra, and rashi, followed by Havan with til (sesame), bilva, and ghee, concluding with aarti and prasad distribution. Full HD video proof is provided.

Lakshmi Puja
Lakshmi Puja invokes Goddess Mahalakshmi, consort of Lord Vishnu, who manifests in eight forms (Ashta Lakshmi): Adi, Dhana, Dhanya, Gaja, Santana, Veera, Vijaya, and Vidya Lakshmi — described in the Sri Suktam (Rigveda Khilani 5.87) and Lakshmi Tantra. The puja involves invocation of the Goddess into a kalash (water-pot) decorated with mango leaves and topped with a coconut, recitation of the Sri Suktam (16 hymns), Kanakadhara Stotram by Adi Shankaracharya, the Ashtalakshmi Stotram, and 108 chants of "Om Shreem Mahalakshmaye Namah". Traditionally performed on Diwali Amavasya (Lakshmi Pujan night), Akshaya Tritiya, Varalakshmi Vratam Friday in Shravan, and on Fridays generally. The Goddess is offered lotus flowers (her favourite), kheer, makhana, and yellow rice. Coins, account books, and new utensils are placed before her for blessing. The booking includes Shri Suktam recitation, Kanakadhara Stotram, full Shodashopachara puja, prasad, and verified video proof. Pairs well with Kuber Puja for business prosperity, debt removal, and stable cash-flow.

Navgraha Shanti Puja
Navgraha Shanti Puja is the comprehensive ritual to pacify the nine planetary deities — Surya (Sun), Chandra (Moon), Mangal (Mars), Budh (Mercury), Brihaspati (Jupiter), Shukra (Venus), Shani (Saturn), Rahu (north node), and Ketu (south node) — described in the Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra and Yajnavalkya Smriti. Each graha is invoked into its prescribed metal-yantra, dressed in its prescribed colour, fed its prescribed grain, and pacified with its prescribed beej mantra (108 times each, totalling 972 chants), wood-samidha for havan, and dakshina. This puja is recommended after a Vedic kundli analysis reveals dosha (Mangal/Shani/Kaal Sarp/Sade Sati), or as preventive shanti during sub-period (antardasha) transitions. Performed across 2 hours, it includes Sankalp in the devotee's name, gotra, nakshatra, and rashi; recitation of Navgraha Stotram (Vyasa); 108 beej-mantra chants per planet; havan with the nine prescribed samidhas; and concluding aarti. The booking includes full materials, certified Vedic priest, Navgraha yantra (which the devotee may install at home), and HD video. Best results when performed during Sankashti, Purnima, or one's own birth nakshatra.

Sunderkand Path
Sunderkand is the fifth and most beloved kanda (book) of Goswami Tulsidas's Ramcharitmanas (composed 1574 CE in Awadhi), narrating Hanuman's heroic journey across the ocean to Lanka, his discovery of Sita in the Ashok Vatika, the burning of Lanka, and his return to Lord Rama. Of the seven kandas, Sunderkand is the only one named for its inherent beauty (sundara) rather than for plot or place — and it is the only kanda traditionally read independently for results. Comprising 60 dohas, 504 chaupais, and 5 chhands, a complete recitation takes approximately 2.5 hours when chanted with proper laya and bhava. Tulsidas himself promised that those who recite Sunderkand "with love" gain courage in adversity, removal of fear, success in pending matters, deliverance from Sade Sati and Shani Dhaiya, marital harmony, and freedom from black-magic afflictions — for Hanuman is the kalyug-jagrut deity and Sunderkand is his charit. Traditionally performed on Tuesdays, Saturdays, on Hanuman Jayanti, and during the 41-day Mangalwar anushthan. The booking covers complete recitation, Hanuman aarti, prasad, and HD video.

Hanuman Chalisa Path
The Hanuman Chalisa is a 40-verse Awadhi devotional poem composed by Goswami Tulsidas (c. 1532-1623 CE), arguably the most-recited Hindu devotional text in the world today. The composition consists of 2 introductory dohas, 40 chaupais (the chalisa proper), and 1 concluding doha, totalling 43 verses. Each chaupai praises an aspect of Hanuman ji — his strength (verses 7, 25), wisdom (3, 22), devotion to Rama (8, 9), service to Sita (16), valour at Lanka (17-19), and his unique role as kaliyug ke sankat-mochan — the remover of distress in the present age. The Chalisa is famously cited in verse 36: "Sankat te Hanuman chhudave, mana, krama, vachan dhyana jo lave" — "Hanuman delivers from all distress one who remembers him in thought, deed, and word". A standard 11-paath anushthan takes 45 minutes and is recommended on Tuesdays, Saturdays, Hanuman Jayanti, during Sade Sati or Shani Dhaiya, before exams, court hearings, or any significant undertaking. The booking includes 11 paaths with proper laya, Bajrang Baan, Hanuman aarti, prasad of bundi laddoo, and certified HD video.

Ram Charit Manas Path
Ramcharitmanas — "the lake of the deeds of Rama" — is the magnum opus of Goswami Tulsidas, composed in Awadhi at Varanasi between 1574 and 1577 CE. Spanning seven kandas (Bal, Ayodhya, Aranya, Kishkindha, Sundar, Lanka, and Uttar), the work contains approximately 12,800 verses across 1073 dohas, 4608 chaupais, and 86 chhands. While a full Akhand Path requires 9 days (Navah-paray) of continuous recitation, our 4-hour booking covers a Sankshipt (abridged) Sampurna Path that recites the principal dohas and chaupais of all seven kandas with sankalp, mangalacharan, beej-mantra of each kanda, kanda-end aarti, and concluding pushpanjali. This puja is traditionally undertaken on Ram Navami, during Chaitra Navratri, on the anniversary of a deceased family member as paap-prayaschitta, before major life transitions, or as a 9-day household anushthan during Magha or Shravan. Tulsidas himself stated in the Bal Kanda that this Manas removes the threefold afflictions (taap-traya) and grants Rama-bhakti — the supreme goal. The booking includes full sankalp, abridged sampurna path, havan, aarti, prasad of fruits and panjiri, and HD video.
Pitru Dosh Nivaran Puja
Pitru Dosh Nivaran Puja relieves the karmic affliction (dosha) caused by unfulfilled obligations to departed ancestors — known as Pitru Rin (ancestral debt) and detailed in the Garuda Purana, Pretakanda. Astrologically, Pitru Dosh manifests when Surya (representing the father), the 9th house, or Rahu/Ketu in the natal chart fall under specific affliction patterns; symptomatically, it can present as repeated obstacles in marriage, childbirth difficulties, recurring family quarrels, ancestral property disputes, and unexplained career setbacks. The remedy combines Tarpan (water-libation with black sesame, barley, and kusha grass), Pinda Daan (offering of cooked-rice balls), Tripindi Shraddh (for three generations of forgotten ancestors), Brahmin bhojan, and havan with Pitru Sukta from the Rigveda Mandala 10.15. Traditionally performed at recognised tirthas — Gaya (the supreme tirtha for shraddh as per Vayu Purana), Trimbakeshwar, Pushkar, or the Ganga ghats of Varanasi — and timed to Pitru Paksha (15-day Krishna Paksha of Bhadrapada), the deceased's death-tithi, Mahalaya Amavasya, or solar/lunar eclipses. Our booking is performed at Gaya by qualified Gayawal pandas, covers full Tripindi Shraddh, Pinda Daan, brahmin bhojan, and HD video proof.