Lakshmi Puja: A Step-by-Step Guide for Diwali Night

Lakshmi Puja is the heart of Diwali. The form differs from family to family and region to region, but the bones of the ritual are remarkably stable: a clean space, a lit lamp, an offering of sweets and flowers, and a few quiet minutes of attention before the rest of the evening begins. This guide walks through how a simple home puja is typically conducted, with notes on common variations.

Last reviewed on 30 April 2026.

Treat the steps below as a working outline rather than a prescription. Every household has its own order — especially around aarti and the family deity — and an elder in the family is the best authority for the version that's been passed down to you.

When to perform Lakshmi Puja

Lakshmi Puja is performed on the third day of the five-day festival — the new-moon evening of the Hindu month of Kartika. Most almanacs (panchang) identify a specific window, the pradosh kaal with sthir lagna, which usually falls between sunset and roughly two hours after. If you don't follow a specific panchang, sundown to about three hours after is a safe and traditional window. For the date itself, see our Diwali dates page.

Before the puja: cleaning and preparation

Lakshmi is said to enter homes that have been made ready — the cleaning isn't symbolic. Most families:

What to gather (samagri)

A simple home Lakshmi Puja uses items most kitchens already have. Adapt freely:

Step-by-step: a simple home Lakshmi Puja

  1. Light the diya. The first act of the puja is lighting the main ghee diya. Place it to the right of the deities (the deity's left). The lamp is the host's way of saying the home is ready.
  2. Sankalpa. Take a small spoon of water in your right palm with a few grains of rice. Say silently the date, the place, the names of the family present and the intention — "I am performing Lakshmi Puja with my family on this Diwali for the well-being and prosperity of all here." Pour the water on the floor or into a small dish at the end.
  3. Ganesha first. No puja begins without invoking Ganesha. Apply a tilak of roli on the image, offer a flower, a few grains of akshat, and silently invite him to remove obstacles. A short Ganesha mantra such as "Om Gan Ganapataye Namah" is commonly chanted three times.
  4. Kalash sthapana. Place the water-filled vessel with mango leaves and coconut to the left of Lakshmi. The kalash represents abundance — a vessel filled and ready to be received.
  5. Invoke Lakshmi. Apply tilak on the image of Lakshmi, offer flowers and a garland if you have one. Light the incense and rotate it gently in front of the image. Common mantras include "Om Mahalakshmyai Namah" chanted 11 or 21 times, or the longer Sri Suktam where the family follows that text.
  6. Offer naivedya. Place the plate of sweets and fruit before the deities. Sprinkle a few drops of water around the plate (a gesture that "seats" the offering) and silently offer it. Many families also offer the panchamrit at this point.
  7. Worship the tools of livelihood. This is the distinctly Diwali element. Place the account books, business ledgers, work keys or symbolic items in front of Lakshmi; for many merchant communities the financial year is opened ceremonially on this night with a fresh ledger (chopda pujan). Apply a small tilak to each item.
  8. Aarti. Take a small plate with a lit camphor or wick lamp and rotate it clockwise in front of the deities while singing or playing the Om Jai Lakshmi Mata aarti or the family's preferred verses. After the aarti, rotate the plate gently among everyone present so each can pass their hands over the flame and touch their eyes — a closing gesture of receiving the light.
  9. Mantras and silence. A short period of quiet follows: family members sit, close their eyes and offer the puja's intention internally. This is often the most meaningful minute of the evening, and it's easy to miss if the children are restless.
  10. Distribute prasad. The sweets and fruit offered to the goddess are now prasad. Distribute first to the elders, then to children, then around the rest of the family. Save a portion to share with neighbours and any guests still arriving.
  11. Light more diyas. After the puja, light the additional diyas for the doorway, balcony, windows and around the rangoli. The puja's main flame is left burning until everyone goes to sleep, kept in a safe metal vessel.

Common variations

What if you don't have a priest

Most home pujas are conducted by family members — usually the eldest in the household or whoever feels comfortable leading. A priest isn't required. If you'd like one but can't arrange it, a few practical notes:

Common mistakes

After the puja

The rest of Diwali night is usually spent eating, exchanging sweets, lighting more diyas around the home and stepping out to greet neighbours. Children typically light sparklers; many families set off a short round of crackers (the eco-friendly Diwali page has notes on the trade-offs there). The puja diya is kept lit until the last person turns in.

For the meaning behind the day, see Lakshmi Puja in our traditions guide. For what gets cooked and shared, see the Diwali sweets and foods page. For the lamps themselves, the diyas guide covers oil, wick and placement in detail.