Badrinath in November
Uttarakhand, India
Skip — Char Dham yatra portal closes early Nov, reopens late April; the temple itself is shut. Joshimath remains accessible year-round. Better window: May–October.
The temple closing ceremony (kapaat band) typically falls in the first week of November, depending on the lunar calendar. After this, Badrinath is sealed for winter. The town empties. The akhand jyoti is lit for its five-month solitary vigil. Snow begins accumulating.
The November story
If the temple closing hasn't occurred in late October, it happens in the first days of November. After the kapaat band ceremony, Badrinath empties completely within 48 hours. The town that held thousands becomes a ghost village. Snow begins in earnest. The road from Joshimath remains open briefly for departing staff and military, then closes for winter. If you time the closing ceremony, it is one of Hinduism's most profound rituals — the idea that even God's house needs to be closed, that the eternal flame burns alone through winter, that faith requires periodic absence. After the ceremony, leave with everyone else. There is nothing here, and the road will close behind you.
Why November scores 0.0/10
Weather
Temple closed for winter after Diwali-week ceremony. Snow begins accumulating. Road closes. Murti moved to Pandukeshwar for winter worship.
Who should go
- ✓Travelers with basic fitness
- ✓Those specifically timing the kapaat band closing ceremony
- ✓Pilgrims seeking the most emotionally charged ritual of the Char Dham calendar
- ✓Travellers who find meaning in endings and transitions
Who should think twice
- ✗Those with mobility issues
- ✗Anyone arriving after the closing ceremony — there is nothing to see
- ✗Travellers who haven't confirmed the exact closing date
- ✗Those without transport arranged for immediate departure after closure
All 12 Months
| Month | Score | Note |
|---|---|---|
| January | 0.0/10 | Temple closed. Buried under 6-10 feet of snow. NH-7 blocked beyond Joshimath. No access whatsoever until late April. |
| February | 0.0/10 | Temple closed. Heaviest snowfall month. Entire valley inaccessible. Avalanche risk on surrounding slopes. Zero visitor infrastructure. |
| March | 0.0/10 | Temple still closed. Snow begins melting at lower elevations but Badrinath remains buried. BRO starts road clearing work mid-March. |
| April | 2.0/10 | Temple may open last week of April (date varies). Roads clearing but unstable. Landslide debris common. Only visit if confirmed open. |
| May | 8.0/10 | Season begins, 5-18°C. Temple open, roads clear. Pilgrims surge. Tapt Kund hot springs at their best. Book Badrinath hotels early — limited options. |
| June | 8.0/10 | Peak Char Dham season, 8-20°C. Heavy pilgrim traffic. Helicopter bookings full. Early monsoon showers start late June. Visit first half of month. |
| July | 4.0/10 | Monsoon hits hard. Landslides on Joshimath-Badrinath road frequent. Temple open but access unreliable. Multiple road closures likely. |
| August | 2.0/10 | Peak monsoon. Road to Badrinath among India's most dangerous this month. Pilgrims stranded regularly. Avoid — not worth the risk. |
| September | 6.0/10 | Monsoon receding, 5-15°C. Roads stabilizing. Fewer pilgrims means peaceful darshan. Neelkanth peak visible on clear days. Good window. |
| October | 8.0/10 | Last month before closure, 2-12°C. Stunning autumn colours in Mana village. Snow dusts upper peaks. Uncrowded, spiritual, photogenic. |
| Novemberviewing | 0.0/10 | Temple closed for winter after Diwali-week ceremony. Snow begins accumulating. Road closes. Murti moved to Pandukeshwar for winter worship. |
| December | 0.0/10 | Deep winter. Temple closed, valley under heavy snow. No road access. Entire area in hibernation until spring thaw. |
Nearby in Uttarakhand scoring high in November
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