

Rishikesh sits where the Ganga steps out of the Himalayas and into the plains. Every evening, and again at dawn, the town’s ghats fill with priests, sadhus, students and visitors for the Ganga Aarti — a ritual of lamps, bells and chanting offered to the river as a living goddess.
There are two main ghats where the aarti is performed publicly in Rishikesh. Parmarth Niketan is an ashram on the west bank of the Ganga, known for a peaceful, deeply structured aarti led by resident students of the Vedic school. Triveni Ghat is the larger public ghat in town — louder, busier, lit up with dozens of floating diyas and the steady pulse of drums and conch shells.
This experience is for guests who want to see the aarti properly — not rush in at the last minute, lose their place to the crowd, and leave before it finishes. We drive you down, settle you in good time at the ghat that best suits your evening, and bring you back.
Both ghats offer the same core ritual, with different moods.
Small oil lamps set into leaf boats and released onto the river at dusk — a slow drift of light carried downstream by the current.
RitualVedic chants, kirtans and devotional songs sung collectively around the fire offering to Agni, the god of fire.
MusicMulti-tiered brass lamps lit and circled before the river, a choreography that has been performed here for generations.
CeremonyLocals, pilgrims, sadhus, yoga students from around the world — one of the few public spaces where all of them sit together.
CommunityA typical itinerary for the evening aarti. Actual timings shift with the season.
If you’re at our Rishikesh retreat, Himalayan Ganga Retreat, we simply drive you from the property in the late afternoon. Guests coming from Pahadi House Mussoorie start earlier — it’s roughly a 2–3 hour drive down via Dehradun, with a chai stop along the way.
An easy stroll through the lanes near Ram Jhula, past temples, bookshops and ashrams, while your escort talks you through what you’ll see.
We arrive early so you get a clear view without jostling. Your escort helps you settle in and explains the sequence of the ritual.
Bells, conch, bhajans, the lighting of the lamps, and the offering of fire and flowers to the river. The whole ceremony lasts around 30 to 60 minutes depending on the ghat.
A few minutes by the water once the crowd clears, then a light dinner at a local café on Swarg Ashram road if you wish.
Back to Pahadi House Mussoorie, or to your Rishikesh stay if you’re basing there for the night.
We’ll help you pick the one that suits you — or combine them across two evenings.
A calm, well-timed evening at the ghats — transport, context and a reserved seat. Complimentary for guests of Himalayan Ganga Retreat.
A few things to plan separately.
A glimpse of the experience.










Small courtesies that help you and everyone around you enjoy the evening.
Send us your dates and we’ll confirm the ghat, the timings for that evening, and the pick-up — so all you have to do is show up.