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Tulsi Vivah 2025: Complete Guide — Date, Muhurat & Rituals

Everything you need to know about the sacred wedding of Tulsi and Shaligrama — the legends, the date & muhurat for 2025, step-by-step puja, aarti, rangoli ideas, mantras and practical tips to celebrate at home.

Quick Summary

Tulsi Vivah (Tulasi Kalyanam) marks the symbolic marriage of the Tulsi (holy basil) plant to Lord Vishnu (Shaligrama/Krishna). It ends the monsoon-fast (Chaturmas) and opens the Hindu wedding season. In 2025 this annual rite falls on Sunday, 2 November 2025 (Kartik Shukla Dwadashi).


Tulsi Vivah 2025 – Key Details

🌿 Tulsi Vivah 2025 — Key Details
What Tulsi Vivah (Tulasi Kalyanam)
Date (2025) Sunday, 2 November 2025
Dwadashi tithi Begins 07:31 AM on 02 Nov 2025 — Ends 05:07 AM on 03 Nov 2025
(Regional Panchang adjustments may apply)
Associated day Day after Dev Uthani (Prabodhini) Ekadashi — end of Chaturmas
Typical duration 1 day — main ceremony in the evening (or in auspicious muhurat)
Why it matters Marks Lord Vishnu’s awakening; auspicious time for weddings & rites; brings blessings, prosperity, and marital harmony.

Introduction: What is Tulsi Vivah?

Tulsi Vivah 2025

Tulsi Vivah — also called Tulasi Kalyanam — is a centuries-old Hindu ritual in which the sacred Tulsi plant is ceremonially married to Lord Vishnu in his stone form (Shaligrama) or as an image of Krishna/Vishnu. The rite marks the end of Chaturmas (the four-month monsoon period when auspicious ceremonies are avoided) and announces the start of the wedding season.

Though simple in form, Tulsi Vivah is rich in symbolism: devotion (bhakti) married to divinity (dharma), household purity, and the blessing of prosperity and happy married life.

Legend and Origin

The festival is woven into several Puranic stories — most commonly the tale of Vrinda and her husband Jalandhara as told in texts like the Skanda Purana, Padma Purana and Shiva Purana.

Vrinda and her husband Jalandhara

Vrinda’s chastity gave Jalandhara invincibility; when gods could not defeat him, Vishnu used a ruse that led to Vrinda’s curse and self-immolation. Vrinda was then incarnated as the Tulsi plant, and Vishnu—blessed by her devotion—promised to marry her in his next manifestation (as Shaligrama).

Tulsi Vivah commemorates that celestial wedding: the goddess Tulsi united with Vishnu, bringing spiritual merit to devotees who celebrate the union with sincerity.

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Tulsi Vivah 2025 — Date, Tithi & Muhurat

🌿 Tulsi Vivah 2025 — Date, Tithi & Muhurat
Date Sunday, 2 November 2025
(Kartik Shukla Dwadashi)
Dwadashi tithi begins 07:31 AM on 2 Nov 2025
Dwadashi tithi ends 05:07 AM on 3 Nov 2025
Commonly chosen muhurat windows Morning: 09:00–11:30 AM IST
Evening: 05:00–07:30 PM IST
(Consult your local panchang/priests for city-specific adjustments)

If you searched “when is Tulsi Vivah 2025?” — the answer is 2 November 2025, with the Dwadashi tithi spanning the morning of 2 Nov into the early hours of 3 Nov (regionally adjusted).


Religious significance — Why Households Observe it?

Tulsi is considered a manifestation of Lakshmi or a goddess of devotion; Shaligrama represents Vishnu.

Vishnu Lakshmi

Their wedding symbolises:

  • Renewal of auspicious time after Chaturmas — the calendar restarts for weddings and rites
  • Spiritual merit equal to performing a kanyadān (giving away of a daughter)
  • Household purification — protection from negative forces; prosperity and harmony in married life
  • Particular importance for unmarried girls seeking suitable matches (folk belief)
  • Tulsi Vivah puja vidhi — step-by-step (home version)

Tulsi Vivah Ritual Protocol

Below is a concise, easy to follow ritual protocol you can perform at home. Adapt for temples or community ceremonies.

Cleanse & prep: Wake early, take a bath and clean the courtyard/puja area. Sweep and decorate the Tulsi vrindavan (brick pedestal) and the puja space.

Mandap & rangoli: Create a simple mandap or canopy around the Tulsi using banana/mango leaves, marigold garlands and a rangoli base (see rangoli ideas below).

Dress Tulsi as bride: Gently wash the plant with Ganga/holy water, apply a light tika (kumkum), drape a small sari/dupatta around the main stem or pot, and adorn with garlands, bangles and a paper face (optional).

Place the groom: Place a Shaligrama, picture or small murti of Krishna/Vishnu/Balarama dressed as a groom to the right of the Tulsi.

Abhishek & alankara: Perform abhishek (light bathing) of both Tulsi and Shaligrama with water, milk (optional), and wipe. Dress the groom in a small dhoti and the bride in red/yellow cloth; add flowers and sandal paste.

Mangalashtakam & mantras: Recite marriage mantras, Mangalashtakam and Tulsi katha — chant core mantras (examples below).
Symbolic rituals: Exchange garlands, tie a sacred thread (mauli) linking Tulsi to Shaligrama and perform seven circumambulations (symbolic ‘saat pheras’).

Prasad & aarti: Offer panchamrit, sweets (laddoo, kheer), jaggery, sugarcane pieces, water chestnuts. Conclude with aarti and distribute prasad.

Tulsi Vivah Aarti & Mantras

Common aarti lines: you can use short aarti verses in regional language or these simple lines while circling the lamp:
“Jai Tulsi Mata, Jai Tulsi Mata” — a simple devotional refrain used in many homes.

Generic Vishnu aarti line: “Om Jai Jagdish Hare…” (if you sing the Jagdish aarti tune for the Shaligrama).

Tulsi Vivah Simple Mantras

Simple mantras to include in the ritual (chant with devotion; repeat 3–11 times each):

  • “Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya” — a core Vishnu mantra suitable for this rite.
  • “Om Shri Tulsi Devi Namah” — simple salutation to Tulsi Devi (used in many households).

Note: regional communities have their own canonical Tulsi Vivah aartis and full kirtans — ask your temple priest or local pandit for the complete text or tune if you prefer the traditional version.

Tulsi Vivah Rangoli & Decoration Ideas

Rangoli adds colour and ceremonial focus around the Tulsi vrindavan. Simple ideas that look elegant:

amazing tulsi vivah rangoli
tulsi vivah rangoli with tulsi plant and coconut kalash
tulsi vivah rangoli with peacock feather and tulsi plant
tulsi vivah rangoli with sugarcane and tulsi plant in the middle and diyas

Prasad, food and what to offer

tulsi vivah sweets prasad

Typical offerings at Tulsi Vivah:

  • Panchamrit (milk, curd, ghee, honey and jaggery) — offered as abhishek or prasad
  • Sweets: laddoos, thekua, kheer, sweet pongal or jaggery-based mithai
  • Fruits, dry fruits and sugarcane pieces

Note: rice is traditionally not offered to Shaligrama — prefer sesame or white sandalwood in some communities.

Regional observances — little differences

Tulsi Vivah is pan-Indian but local customs vary:

  • North India: full wedding style with shehnai, family gatherings and processions.
  • Maharashtra & Gujarat: sugarcane mandaps, turmeric decorations, community events in housing societies.
  • South India: Vaishnavite homes and temples perform Vishnu Sahasranama, Tulasi Ashtottara and include pongal/curd rice in prasad.

Beliefs, benefits & folk outcomes

Why do households observe Tulsi Vivah?

Common beliefs held by devotees include:

  • Removes obstacles to marriage and invites timely weddings for eligible daughters
  • Brings prosperity, peace and marital harmony — Tulsi is associated with Lakshmi’s blessings
  • Purifies household energies and is said to grant punya (spiritual merit) comparable to larger rituals when performed sincerely

Practical tips — How to Celebrate Tulsi Vivah at Home?

  • Confirm the local muhurat with your family priest or trusted panchang (city timings vary).
  • Keep the ceremony simple if elders or limited space: a short aarti, garland exchange and prasad distribution blesses the house equally.
  • Invite neighbours — community ceremonies strengthen social bonds.
  • Prefer eco-friendly rangoli colours and biodegradable decorations for Tulsi’s wellbeing.

Street FAQs — Quick Answers

Q: When is Tulsi Vivah 2025?

A: It falls on 2 November 2025 (Kartik Shukla Dwadashi). Check your local panchang for small regional adjustments to muhurat.

Q: What is Dev Uthani Ekadashi?

A: Dev Uthani (Prabodhini) Ekadashi marks Lord Vishnu’s awakening from his four-month slumber (Chaturmas). Tulsi Vivah is performed on the following Dwadashi.

Q: What is a good muhurat for Tulsi Vivah 2025?

A: Common windows are morning (09:00–11:30 AM) and evening (05:00–07:30 PM) IST — but always verify locally.

Q: Which mantras and aarti are used?

A: Devotees chant Vishnu mantras such as Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya, sing Mangalashtakam and perform a short aarti to Tulsi and Shaligrama.

Q: Can I perform Tulsi Vivah alone at home?

A: Yes — Tulsi Vivah can be performed privately; many householder families perform a modest home ceremony with just the family present.

Samay’s Voice

Tulsi Vivah is a beautiful, earthy ritual — half folklore, half family rite. Whether you host a community mandap or light a single lamp at your Tulsi pot, the festival reconnects the household to a rhythm older than calendars: devotion, renewal and gratitude.

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Organic cow dung diya
  • Invite elders to narrate the Tulsi katha — oral storytelling keeps the meaning alive.
  • Use organic cow-dung lamps (eco-friendly) and natural rangoli colours to respect Tulsi’s sanctity.
  • If you have a small child, involve them in garland making — the memory becomes a family tradition.

Sources & further reading

Tradition & scriptures: Skanda Purana, Padma Purana, Shiva Purana. Community practice and contemporary panchang inputs (local priests and astrological muhurat calculations) inform timings and region-wise customs. This guide synthesises classical legends and common household practice to create a practical, evergreen reference for Tulsi Vivah.

Disclosure:

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Vikas Solanke
Vikas Solankehttps://samaytimes.com
Vikas Solanke is the Editor-in-Chief of SamayTimes. Based in Hubli, Karnataka, he leads with one mission — to deliver real news, with difference. Known for his sharp insights, fearless journalism, and rational patriotism, Vikas blends clarity, truth, and integrity in every story he tells.

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