Nirjala Ekadashi falls on Thursday, June 25, 2026. It is the strictest of all 24 Ekadashi fasts — nirjala means "without water," and the vrat is observed without food and without water from sunrise on Ekadashi until parana (breaking the fast) after sunrise the next morning, Friday, June 26. Scriptures hold that this single fast carries the merit of all 24 Ekadashis of the year — which is exactly why it is taken so seriously, and why the rules matter.
This guide covers the vrat rules, the four recognised types of Ekadashi fasting, what you can eat if a fully waterless fast is not possible for you, the katha of Bhima behind this Ekadashi, and how to do parana correctly.
When is Nirjala Ekadashi in 2026?
| Detail | Timing (IST) |
|---|---|
| Fast day | Thursday, 25 June 2026 |
| Ekadashi tithi begins | 6:12 PM, Wednesday 24 June |
| Ekadashi tithi ends | 8:09 PM, Thursday 25 June |
| Parana (break fast) | Morning of Friday, 26 June, after sunrise |
The fast follows the day whose sunrise falls within Ekadashi tithi — that is June 25 this year. Per Drik Panchang, most cities in the US and UK also observe on June 25 in 2026, but tithi boundaries shift with local sunrise, so confirm with a panchang set to your city before taking sankalp.
In 2026, Nirjala Ekadashi arrives in the Shukla Paksha of Jyeshtha — deep summer in North India. Fasting without water in the year's hottest stretch is precisely the point: it is the hardest vrat of the calendar, offered to Lord Vishnu.
Live muhurat for your city, diaspora dates, and the prescribed Vishnu archana:
Nirjala Ekadashi 2026 — festival page →What are the rules of Nirjala Ekadashi vrat?
- Begin the night before (June 24): eat a simple, sattvik dinner without grains; many families skip dinner entirely so no grain remains in the body when the fast begins.
- Take sankalp at sunrise on June 25: after bathing, make the formal vow before Lord Vishnu stating your intention to observe the vrat. The fast runs sunrise to next sunrise — roughly 24 hours.
- No food, no water: the defining rule of Nirjala. Even achaman (ritual sips) is kept symbolic.
- Worship Vishnu through the day: offer tulsi, light a deepak, recite the Vishnu Sahasranama or chant Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya. Many devotees stay up for jagran.
- Give daan: charity is not an add-on to this vrat — it is central to it (more below).
- Avoid: rice and all grains (even for family members in many households), onion and garlic, tamasic food, anger and harsh speech.
Who should not attempt the waterless fast: children, elderly devotees, pregnant or nursing mothers, and anyone with a medical condition such as diabetes, blood pressure, or kidney issues. Tradition itself provides gentler forms of the same vrat — that is what the four fasting types are for.
The four types of Ekadashi fasting
Religious texts recognise four levels of Ekadashi fasting. You choose at sankalp, according to your strength — observing a gentler form with full devotion is considered far better than breaking a harsher vow midway.
| Type | What it means | Who it suits |
|---|---|---|
| Nirjala / Jalahar | No food; Jalahar permits only water, Nirjala not even that | The traditional observance for this Ekadashi, for those in full health |
| Ksheerbhoji | Milk and milk-based items only | Those who need some sustenance |
| Phalahari | Fruits only — mango, banana, grapes, almonds | A common middle path |
| Naktabhoji | One grain-free meal before sunset | Elderly, unwell, or first-time observers |
What can you eat if you cannot fast without water?
If you observe a phalahari or naktabhoji version of the vrat, the usual Ekadashi food rules apply.
Allowed:
- Water, milk, curd
- Fruits — mango, banana, grapes, pomegranate
- Dry fruits and nuts
- Sabudana (khichdi or kheer)
- Singhada (water chestnut) flour and shakarkandi (sweet potato)
- Potatoes and groundnuts, with rock salt (sendha namak)
Avoid:
- All grains and cereals — rice, wheat, atta, poha, suji
- Pulses and beans
- Regular salt in many traditions
- Onion, garlic, and anything tamasic
- Kuttu (buckwheat) and samak (barnyard millet) — Navratri staples, but debatable for Ekadashi; stricter traditions avoid these pseudo-grains on this day
The simple test many families use: if it comes from a grain or lentil, it waits until parana.
Nirjala Ekadashi Katha: why it is called Bhimseni Ekadashi
The katha comes from the Padma Purana. Among the five Pandavas, four brothers and Draupadi observed every Ekadashi of the year. Bhima — the strongest of them, and famously the hungriest — could not. His appetite made even one day without food unbearable, and he carried the guilt of dishonouring Lord Vishnu's vrat.
Bhima took his dilemma to Maharishi Vyasa. The sage offered him a pact: observe just one Ekadashi a year — the Jyeshtha Shukla Ekadashi, without food or even water — and it would carry the punya of all 24.
One waterless day in the fiercest heat of the year, in exchange for a year of devotion. Bhima accepted, and the vrat has been called Bhimseni Ekadashi or Pandava Ekadashi ever since.
— Padma Purana tradition
The katha is why this Ekadashi is considered the great equaliser: it was prescribed for the devotee who found fasting hardest, not easiest.
How to break the fast: parana rules
Parana is done on Friday morning, June 26, after sunrise — never on Ekadashi day itself.
- Break the fast within Dwadashi tithi, in the morning hours (Pratahkal) if possible. Letting Dwadashi lapse without parana is considered a lapse in the vrat.
- Avoid breaking the fast during Hari Vasara — the first quarter of Dwadashi tithi. Check the panchang for June 26 in your city for the exact window.
- Break gently: a sip of water with tulsi, charanamrita, or fruit — then a simple sattvik meal.
- If the fast breaks accidentally mid-vrat, tradition prescribes seeking forgiveness from Vishnu, not abandoning the vrat: bathe, offer puja, chant Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya, and complete the day with extra daan.
Tithi, sunrise, and Hari Vasara timings for any date and city:
Open the daily panchang →Daan on Nirjala Ekadashi: the other half of the vrat
On Nirjala Ekadashi, what you give is weighed alongside what you give up. The traditional daan list is built around relief from the June heat:
- Jal kalash — a water pot, ideally with a fruit placed on top, given to a brahmin or someone in need
- Sharbat, buttermilk or water distributed to passers-by (pyau)
- Hand fans, umbrellas, footwear — protection from the sun
- Anna-daan and gau seva — feeding the hungry and caring for cows, considered especially meritorious on this day
If you are observing from a city or abroad and cannot organise daan yourself, gau seva performed in your name at a verified gaushala is the traditional equivalent — many devotees pair the vrat with seva this way.
Gau seva on Nirjala Ekadashi, performed in your name with sankalp:
Book Gau Seva →Frequently asked questions
Can we drink water on Nirjala Ekadashi?
In the strict nirjala form — no, that is the defining feature of this vrat. But tradition explicitly permits gentler forms (jalahar, phalahari, naktabhoji) chosen at sankalp. A vrat with water observed sincerely is better than a broken nirjala vow.
Is the fast on the same date in the US and UK?
In 2026, yes for most cities — June 25, per Drik Panchang. But because the fast day depends on which sunrise falls within Ekadashi tithi, always confirm against a panchang set to your city before sankalp.
What if I am on medication?
Take it. Medicines do not break the spirit of the vrat, and tradition exempts the unwell from nirjala entirely — observe phalahari or naktabhoji instead.
When is the next major Ekadashi?
Devshayani Ekadashi on July 25, 2026 — it begins Chaturmas, the four sacred months when Vishnu rests. Guru Purnima follows on July 29.
Next on the calendar — Chaturmas begins:
Devshayani Ekadashi 2026 →One day without water, in exchange for a year of merit — that is the bargain Vyasa offered Bhima, and the one this vrat still offers. Take sankalp according to your strength, keep the daan generous, and do the parana on time on June 26.