EngToHindi

Months of the year in Hindi

Two calendars in one language — महीने (महीने, maheene) — the everyday Gregorian months and the traditional Hindu months, with pronunciation and when each is used.

India runs on two calendars at once, and Hindi reflects both. For appointments, salaries, school terms and the news, people use the familiar twelve Gregorian months — but said the Hindi way, with their own settled spellings and stress. Learn these first; they are the ones you'll need to fill in a form or catch a date in conversation.

Alongside them lives the older Hindu lunar calendar (the Vikram Samvat system), whose twelve months — चैत्र, वैशाख … फाल्गुन — govern festivals, weddings, fasts and the all-important panchang almanac. A festival like Holi or Diwali is fixed by these months, not by a Gregorian date, which is why its “English” date shifts each year. Knowing both sets lets you read a wedding invitation and a calendar app with equal ease.

The Gregorian months in Hindi

The everyday months — use these for dates, forms and conversation.
EnglishHindiPronunciation
Januaryजनवरीjanvari
Februaryफ़रवरीfarvari
Marchमार्चmaarch
Aprilअप्रैलaprail
Mayमईmai
Juneजूनjoon
Julyजुलाईjulaai
Augustअगस्तagast
Septemberसितंबरsitambar
Octoberअक्टूबरaktoobar
Novemberनवंबरnavambar
Decemberदिसंबरdisambar

The traditional Hindu (Vikram) months

The lunar months that set festivals and the panchang, with the Gregorian span each roughly covers.
Roughly coversHindiPronunciation
Mar–Aprचैत्रchaitra
Apr–Mayवैशाखvaishaakh
May–Junज्येष्ठjyeshtha
Jun–Julआषाढ़aashaadh
Jul–Augश्रावणshraavan
Aug–Sepभाद्रपदbhaadrapad
Sep–Octआश्विनaashvin
Oct–Novकार्तिकkaartik
Nov–Decमार्गशीर्षmaargasheersh
Dec–Janपौषpaush
Jan–Febमाघmaagh
Feb–Marफाल्गुनphaalgun
Why the dates don't line up. The traditional months are lunar, so they drift against the solar Gregorian calendar — each one straddles two English months and shifts slightly year to year. That's why a festival fixed to कार्तिक (Diwali) or फाल्गुन (Holi) lands on a different Gregorian date each year.

Month, year & useful extras

The building-block words. Month is महीना (maheena) or formally मास (maas); year is साल (saal) or वर्ष (varsh). “This month” is इस महीने and “next year” is अगले साल.

The two year-counts. The Hindu era is the Vikram Samvat (विक्रम संवत), which runs roughly 57 years ahead of the Gregorian year — so a panchang may show a year in the 2080s while your phone shows the 2020s.

When to use which. Default to the Gregorian months for anything practical — dates, deadlines, travel. Reach for the traditional months when you talk about festivals, fasts (व्रत), weddings, or anything tied to the religious calendar.

A frequent beginner slip is over-Sanskritising the everyday months. No one says a Sanskrit equivalent for “March” in conversation — they just say मार्च. Keep the two systems in separate mental boxes and you'll always pick the natural one.

Translate your own dates

Need to write “my birthday is in September” or a festival date in Hindi? Type it below and get the Devanagari instantly.

Frequently asked

What are the 12 months in Hindi?
In daily life Hindi uses the Gregorian months: जनवरी, फ़रवरी, मार्च, अप्रैल, मई, जून, जुलाई, अगस्त, सितंबर, अक्टूबर, नवंबर and दिसंबर.
Does Hindi have its own calendar months?
Yes. The Hindu (Vikram Samvat) calendar has twelve lunar months: चैत्र, वैशाख, ज्येष्ठ, आषाढ़, श्रावण, भाद्रपद, आश्विन, कार्तिक, मार्गशीर्ष, पौष, माघ and फाल्गुन, beginning around mid-March with चैत्र.
When are the Hindu calendar months used?
They set festival dates and appear in the panchang (almanac), religious fasts and regional new-year celebrations. For appointments, school terms and business, India uses the Gregorian months.
What is the Hindi word for month and year?
Month is महीना (maheena) or formally मास; year is साल (saal) or वर्ष. The Vikram Samvat era runs about 57 years ahead of the Gregorian year.