Houston · USA
Dhanteras 2029in Houston
Exact puja times & muhurta computed for Houston coordinates (29.76°N, -95.37°E)
Key Timings
Festival Date
Saturday, November 3, 2029
Dhanteras Puja (Pradosh Kaal)
18:50 – 20:16
Sunrise
07:36
Sunset
18:33
Why This Date?
Pradosh (Evening) Rule: Observed when the Trayodashi tithi prevails during Pradosh Kaal (sunset to ~96 minutes after). Dhanvantari and Kubera are worshipped at dusk, and new purchases (gold, utensils) are consecrated.
Tithi Determination Rule
The tithi must prevail during Pradosh Kaal (evening twilight). This is the primary rule for festivals like Diwali and Dhanteras.
Source: Dharmasindhu & Nirnayasindhu – classical Kala-Vyapti system
Puja Vidhi
Materials Required
- New gold/silver item or metal utensil
- Diyas (earthen lamps)(13)
- Dhatura flowers and fruits
- Coins (old and new)
- Kumkum (vermilion)
Puja Steps
- 1
Purchase of Metals
Before the puja, purchase a new gold or silver item, or at minimum a steel/brass utensil. This purchase symbolizes invit...
- 2
Home Cleaning & Preparation
Clean the entire home, especially the puja area and main entrance. Spread a clean cloth on the puja platform. Place the ...
- 3
Achamana & Sankalpa
Sip water three times for purification. Take the sankalpa by holding water and akshat in the right hand, stating the pur...
Phala (Benefits)
Protection from untimely death (apamrityu nivaran), bestowal of good health by Dhanvantari, attraction of wealth and prosperity by Lakshmi, auspicious beginning of the Diwali festivities, and purification of all metals and valuables in the home
Calculation Proof – Transparent Audit Trail
Deity
Lord Dhanvantari, Goddess Lakshmi, Lord Kubera
Legend & History
Dhanteras — Dhana-trayodashi, the thirteenth tithi of the dark fortnight of Kartika — opens the five-day Diwali festival. The word breaks into dhana (wealth, in the wider Vedic sense of all that nouri… Read full legend →Show less ↑
Dhanteras — Dhana-trayodashi, the thirteenth tithi of the dark fortnight of Kartika — opens the five-day Diwali festival. The word breaks into dhana (wealth, in the wider Vedic sense of all that nourishes the household — health, knowledge, gold, food, herbs) and trayodashi (the thirteenth tithi). The day is not, as it is sometimes popularly read, only a shopping day; the Puranas anchor it on two distinct mythological events whose conjunction at this Krishna-Trayodashi gives the day its particular shape.
The first event is the emergence of Dhanvantari from the Samudra Manthana. The Bhagavata Purana and the Vishnu Purana describe the churning of the milk-ocean by devas and asuras, using Mount Mandara as the rod and the serpent-king Vasuki as the rope. The fourteen treasures emerge one by one — the poison Halahala (which Shiva drank), Kamadhenu the wish-cow, Uchchaishravas the celestial horse, Airavata the white elephant, the Kaustubha jewel, the Kalpavriksha, the apsaras, Chandra, Varuni, and others — until at the close of the churning the great being Dhanvantari himself rises from the waters, bearing in his hands a golden vessel containing the amrita and the body of knowledge called Ayurveda. Dhanvantari is the divine physician, a partial avatara of Vishnu, the deva of healing and longevity; his emergence on Krishna-Trayodashi of Kartika is the original act for which Dhanteras is named. The amrita he carries is wealth in its truest sense — life that does not end — and the Ayurveda that emerges with him is the body of practice by which that life is preserved. This is why the day is observed not only as a shopping day but as a day of household worship of Dhanvantari, and why, in modern India, Dhanteras is observed by the medical community and by the Ayurveda lineages as Dhanvantari Jayanti — the doctor's day before the patient's.
The second event is the emergence of Lakshmi from the same Samudra Manthana, two days later — on Kartika Amavasya, which is Diwali itself. The Padma Purana and Vishnu Purana describe how, after all the lesser treasures had risen, the goddess herself rose seated on a lotus, holding a garland; she chose Vishnu among all the gathered beings and placed the garland around his neck. Dhanteras therefore is the precursor — the household is being prepared, in a literal sense, to welcome the goddess two nights later. The cleaning and decorating of the house, the buying of metals (gold, silver, brass — metals that do not tarnish, so that their welcome of Lakshmi is durable), and the lighting of the first thirteen lamps facing south are all rehearsals for the puja that will be performed on Amavasya.
A third story explains the lamps facing south. The Skanda Purana describes a young king named Hima whose horoscope predicted that he would die at the bite of a serpent on the fourth night after his wedding. His young wife, refusing to accept this, gathered all the gold and silver of the household on Dhanteras (the third night, the night before the predicted bite) and piled the metals at the threshold; she lit row upon row of clay lamps around them, and she herself sat beside the king through the night, singing softly so that he would not sleep. When Yama himself approached the chamber at midnight in the form of a serpent, he was blinded by the brilliance of the metal-and-lamp light; unable to enter, he sat down at the threshold and listened to the songs through the night. By dawn his hour of striking had passed, and he left without taking the king. From this story descends the practice of lighting thirteen lamps on the evening of Dhanteras with one specifically placed facing south — south being the direction of Yama, the offering a polite request that he pass over the household this year — and the practice of leaving lamps burning through the long night that connects Dhanteras to Naraka Chaturdashi.
The practice of buying gold on Dhanteras descends from the convergence of these three stories: gold does not tarnish (so the welcome is permanent), gold is the most concentrated form of dhana that the household can carry across the threshold (so the act of bringing it in is the household's most concentrated invitation to Lakshmi), and gold has been the metal at the household entrance in the Hima story (so the act of buying it on this day re-enacts the warding of Yama). What the modern Dhanteras advertisements often miss is the Ayurveda layer — Dhanvantari is the older deity of the day, and the practice the Puranas more often emphasise is the worship of Dhanvantari at dusk: a small offering of turmeric, honey, and tulsi to a brass vessel placed before the household shrine, a prayer for the health of every member of the household, and a vow to take care of the body as the household's first wealth in the coming year. The day teaches that the household that will receive Lakshmi well is one whose health, prepared first, can carry her gifts.
How to Observe
Purchase gold, silver, utensils, or new items for the home – this is considered the most auspicious shopping day. Light thirteen diyas in the evening facing south (to ward off untimely death). Worship Lord Dhanvantari for health and Lord Kubera and Goddess Lakshmi for wealth. Clean the home and adorn the entrance with rangoli.
Significance
Dhanteras is the first day of the five-day Diwali festival. "Dhan" means wealth and "Teras" is the thirteenth lunar day. It celebrates health (Dhanvantari), wealth (Lakshmi-Kubera), and prosperity. Lighting lamps facing south is uniquely associated with warding off Yama and untimely death.