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Valarpirai Chaturthi

Valarpirai Chaturthi

வளர்பிறை சதுர்த்தி

Valarpirai Chaturthi is the monthly Shukla Paksha (waxing moon) Chaturthi dedicated to Lord Ganesha—ideal for worship, new beginnings, and family devotion, with dates aligned to Panchangam.

Valarpirai Chaturthi: 24 Jan 2034, 12.00 AM to 24 Jan 2034, 11.59 PM
In 2784 days 24-01-2034

Observance Dates & Timeline

Previous Valarpirai Chaturthi from today
21 days ago
20 May 2026 View day
Next Valarpirai Chaturthi from today
7 days to go
18 Jun 2026 View day

2034 Occurrences

Tue, 24 Jan 2034
Tuesday
2034
Pramadisha Thai 10
Valarpirai Chaturthi Starts: 24 Jan 2034, 12.00 AM | Ends: 24 Jan 2034, 11.59 PM
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Purva Bhadrapada - Pada 2
Wed, 22 Feb 2034
Wednesday
2034
Pramadisha Masi 10
Valarpirai Chaturthi Starts: 22 Feb 2034, 12.00 AM | Ends: 22 Feb 2034, 11.59 PM
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Revati - Pada 2
Thu, 23 Mar 2034
Thursday
2034
Pramadisha Panguni 9
Valarpirai Chaturthi Starts: 23 Mar 2034, 12.00 AM | Ends: 23 Mar 2034, 11.59 PM
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Bharani - Pada 1
Sat, 22 Apr 2034
Saturday
2034
Ananda Chithirai 9
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Rohini - Pada 4
Sun, 21 May 2034
Sunday
2034
Ananda Vaikasi 7
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Ardra - Pada 3
Tue, 20 Jun 2034
Tuesday
2034
Ananda Aani 5
Valarpirai Chaturthi Starts: 20 Jun 2034, 12.00 AM | Ends: 20 Jun 2034, 11.59 PM
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Ashlesha - Pada 2
Wed, 19 Jul 2034
Wednesday
2034
Ananda Aadi 3
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Purva Phalguni - Pada 1
Sat, 16 Sep 2034
Saturday
2034
Ananda Avani 31
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Swati - Pada 1
Mon, 16 Oct 2034
Monday
2034
Ananda Purattasi 30
Shukla Paksha Chaturthi Anuradha - Pada 2

Times and tithi lines follow the site Panchangam engine for that civil day when data exists.

Spiritual Festival Sequence

Tamil Nadu Spiritual Experience

What is Valarpirai Chaturthi?

After each Amavasai (new moon), the moon begins to wax—this fortnight is Shukla Paksha, known in Tamil as Valarpirai. The fourth lunar day in this phase is Chaturthi, celebrated as Valarpirai Chaturthi.

Lord Ganesha (Vinayagar, Pillaiyar) is especially honoured on Chaturthi. Devotees perform pooja at home and temples, offer Kozhukattai (Modak), garland the idol with Arukampul (Bermuda grass), and seek blessings for auspicious starts in education, work, and family life.

Waxing vs waning Chaturthi

Every lunar month has two Chaturthi tithis: one in the waxing fortnight and one in the waning fortnight. Valarpirai Chaturthi belongs to the waxing phase and is widely observed for Ganesha worship and positive beginnings.

The waning-fortnight Chaturthi is Sankatahara Chaturthi, famous for fasting and moon viewing to remove obstacles (sankata). Both are Ganesha days; the paksha and customs differ.

Worship and optional fasting

Families often perform abhishekam, lamp worship, and sweet offerings to Ganesha. Some observe a day fast and break it in the evening with a simple meal after pooja.

Temples hold special Chaturthi schedules. Om Muruga Calendar picks the observance date when Chaturthi tithi (index 3) is active at moonrise, consistent with other recurring festival pages.

Vinayagar Chaturthi month

The grand annual Vinayagar Chaturthi (Ganesh Chaturthi) in Avani/Aadi is listed on its own festival page. That year's main festival date is not duplicated here in the monthly Valarpirai list.

The remaining eleven months show Valarpirai Chaturthi dates computed from Panchangam for this page.

Internal Navigation

Related Festivals

Frequently Asked Questions

Usually eleven monthly dates on this page, because the annual Vinayagar Chaturthi day is shown separately on the Vinayagar Chaturthi festival page.

Valarpirai Chaturthi is waxing-moon Chaturthi after Amavasai. Sankatahara Chaturthi is waning-moon Chaturthi after Pournami, with emphasis on fasting and moon sighting.

Vinayagar Chaturthi is the major once-a-year festival (Avani/Aadi). Valarpirai Chaturthi is the recurring monthly waxing Chaturthi observance.

The day when Chaturthi tithi (index 3) is active at moonrise is selected; if two days qualify, the one with stronger tithi presence at moonrise is used.

Kozhukattai (Modak), Arukampul garland, red hibiscus, and Ganesha stotras are common in Tamil Nadu home and temple practice.