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September 2025

Mysuru Dasara 2025 – Nada Habba of Karnataka

Imagine the Magic

Imagine standing beside the illuminated grandeur of Mysuru Palace, awe-struck as 100,000 lights flicker against the autumn sky. You hear the gentle drumbeats echo from Chamundi Hill, mingling with laughter and the scent of spicy Mysuru Pak carried by the breeze. At this moment, you realize: Dasara isn’t just a festival – it’s Karnataka’s heart, beating for all its people.

What Makes Mysuru Dasara So Special?

The Story Behind Nada Habba – Karnataka’s State Festival

Dasara – “Nada Habba” or State Festival – stands as the luminous crown jewel in Karnataka’s cultural calendar. While Mysuru stuns with its royal grandeur, illuminated palaces, and grand elephant processions, Dasara’s heartbeat pulses in every region, celebrated in a tapestry of native customs, devotion and color.

Mysuru Dasara: The Royal Canvas

In Mysuru, Dasara is royal. The city transforms with palace lights, vibrant parades and cultural performances honoring Goddess Chamundeshwari’s triumph over Mahishasura. It’s a festival sewn into the city’s very identity, rooted in centuries old rituals started by the Vijayanagara Empire and later refined by the Wodeyars. The entire state feels Mysuru’s pull, but each region adds its own verse to this song of victory and togetherness.

Mangaluru’s Sharada Devi – Coastal Splendor and Community

Travel to the coast and you’ll experience the enchanting Mangaluru Dasara, distinguished by the worship of Goddess Sharada Devi. Here, temples across the city – including the resplendent Kudroli Gokarnanatheshwara Temple and ancient Mangaladevi Temple – bring communities together as beautiful clay idols of Sharada Devi, Mahaganapathi  and Navadurgas are installed adorned  and worshipped with devotion.

The Sharada Mahotsava is a century old tradition in Mangaluru.. The goddess’s arrival is marked with music, dance, lights, and processions. For nine nights, her idol is lovingly decorated, each day symbolizing a different form, from Saraswati to Lakshmi to Kali. The festival blooms with local flavor – vibrant “Pili Nalike” or  “Hulivesha” (tiger dance), folk art, melodious bhajans, and city streets bathed in lanterns, culminating in a magnificent procession and the lakeside immersion of the goddess, a moment both somber and sublime.

Madikeri’s Mantapas – Hillside Miracle

In Madikeri, the western hill town, Dasara is famed for its grand “Mantapas” – floats depicting epic stories, crafted by dedicated local communities. As dusk falls, these illuminated floats weave through winding streets, accompanied by drummers, dancers, and cheering crowds. The entire town participates, showcasing devotion, creativity, and local unity.

Chamarajanagar’s Village Parades

In Chamarajanagar and its surrounding villages, Dasara is rooted in earthy traditions – a blend of folk rituals, rural processions, and temple fairs. Community dances, Bonfire nights, and local tales make the celebration intimate and heartfelt, linking generations to their ancestral soil.

Srirangapatna’s Riverside Rituals

Srirangapatna, an island town along the sacred Cauvery, marks Dasara with riverside rituals and temple carnivals, blending royal heritage with spiritual fervor. Devotees gather for processions honoring goddess Ranganayaki and Sri Ranganatha, and the town resounds with musical performances, fairs, and age old traditions.

A Symphony of Traditions

From Gokarnanatheshwara Temple’s grand tableaux in Mangaluru to hills of Madikeri, riversides of Srirangapatna, and main streets of Chamarajanagar, Dasara in Karnataka is a tapestry woven with diversity:

  • Processions of Sharada Devi in Mangaluru: Uniting the city’s many communities in reverence and festivity.
  • Elaborate Mantapas in Madikeri: Nightlong pageants telling stories from mythology.
  • Folk dances, Ayudha Puja, and Bombe Habba: Practiced in homes and hamlets statewide, celebrating tools, tradition, and the goddess in every form.

Dasara doesn’t belong to a single city – it thrives wherever Karnataka’s heart beats. This is the true meaning of Nada Habba: a festival as grand as Mysuru’s palace and as intimate as a family puja; a celebration that honors the state’s unity, plurality, and timeless spirit.

Real Voices: Traveler Stories & Local Testimonials

“The first time I saw the Jumbo Savari, I felt I was part of history,” shares Shruthi, a folk artist from Mysuru.
“Preparing for homestay guests during Dasara is like welcoming family from afar,” says Meena, a homestay owner in Coorg, whose eco-lodge trains local women and hosts coffee tours.

“The palace lights up like a galaxy—that’s the moment every Mysorean waits for,” beams Anil, an auto-driver who guides visitors to the best food stalls.

Dasara 2025: Dates, Schedule & Must – Experience Events

Tentative Dates: September 22nd – October 2nd, 2025

  • Grand Opening at Chamundi Hill: Sacred pooja, with the Wodeyar family leading the tradition.
  • Jumbo Savari: The legendary royal procession, ending in Banni Mantapa, symbolizing victory and renewal.
  • Palace Illumination: Over a lakh bulbs lighting up Mysuru each night—best viewed post dusk.
  • Yuva Dasara: A fusion of classical music, folk dance, and trending talent on open-air stages.
  • Dasara Exhibition: From crafts and local spices to QR-coded heritage trails and tech fairs for modern explorers.
  • Torchlight Parade: Watch the city come alive in military splendor and fireworks on the finale.
  • Eco Experiences: Plantation walks in Coorg, birding in Bandipur, night safaris, and coastal kayaking sessions in Gokarna.

Travel Guide: How To Plan Your Dasara Journey

Getting There

  • Road: 3.5 hours from Bengaluru—scenic drive, hire eco-taxis or shared buses.
  • Rail: Multiple daily trains from BLR, Chennai, Mangaluru.
  • Air: Mysuru’s domestic airport or Bengaluru airport for international travelers.

Accommodation

  • Book early—over 1 million visitors attend each year!
  • Choose eco-certified homestays, city hotels, or rural retreats.
  • Public transport is your best friend on parade days (city roads are festival runways).
  • Arrive by 6:30 pm for palace illumination; sunset marks the start of magic.

Food, Shopping & Culture

  • Street Food Tour: Try Mysuru Pak, Maddur Vada, Akki Rotti at Dasara stalls.
  • Crafts & Shopping: Authentic silk saris, sandalwood carvings, Channapatna toys.
  • Festival Cuisine: Vegetarian thalis at local eateries, homemade sweets in homestays.
  • Artisan Stories: Meet local weavers, doll-makers, and eco-entrepreneurs.

Hashtags for sharing:
#MysuruDasara2025 #NadaHabba #JumboSavari #RoyalKarnataka #DasaraEverywhere #BommaiKolu #TransformWithKarnataka

Social Media:

  • Tag your photos and stories—best submissions get featured.
  • Follow @Karnatakaworld for live event updates.
  • Join interactive polls—share your favorite Dasara memories!

Dasara Wisdom & Legends

  • Legends of Chamundeshwari, Mahishasura, and the first palace illumination.
  • Quotes from mahouts, musicians, tour guides, and travelers.
  • Anecdotes about traditions from different districts—Madikeri’s mantapa processions, Udupi’s folk performances, Chamarajanagar’s rural fairs.

FAQs: Your Dasara Preparation Guide

  • Event schedules, entry passes, hotel booking links
  • Packing, weather, and public safety tips
  • Accessibility: wheelchair routes, guides for seniors
  • Emergency contacts & health protocols

Ready to experience the transformative wonder of Karnataka’s greatest festival?
Plan your Dasara visit now—book local, travel responsibly, and let your journeys shape the future of Karnataka!

Book Tours & Hotels | Official Event Page
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Are you ready to be part of Karnataka’s transformation?
Support local communities, choose sustainable travel, and experience a festival that truly matters.

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