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18 Shakti Peeth Temples – Complete Guide with Names, Locations, Body Parts of Sati & Pilgrimage Tips 2026

18 Shakti Peeth Temples – Complete Guide with Names, Locations, Body Parts of Sati & Pilgrimage Tips 2026

✍️ Devendra Khambalkar 📅 April 20, 2026 🕐 Updated Apr 20, 2026 ⏱ 18 min read 💬 No comments

 जय माता दी

18 Shakti Peeth

Astadasha Maha Shakti Peetha — Complete Pilgrimage Guide

All Temples · Sati’s Body Parts · Adi Shankaracharya’s Stotram · Pilgrimage Circuits

“Lankayam Shankari Devi, Kamakshi Kanchika Pure…

Ashtadasha Shakti Peethani, Yoginamapi Durlabham”

— Adi Shankaracharya · Ashtadasha Shakti Pitha Stotram

18 Sacred Temples
All India + Sri Lanka
Shiva’s Bhairava at Each
Most Temples Free
Best: Navratri 2026

18 Shakti Peeth — Jai Mata Di! — these are not merely temples. They are the most powerful, most ancient, and most emotionally profound sacred spaces in the entire universe of the divine feminine. They are the places where the body of Goddess Sati herself became the earth — where the Supreme Mother, in her love for Lord Shiva, sacrificed herself, and where Lord Vishnu’s Sudarshana Chakra cut her body into sacred pieces that fell across the Indian subcontinent and beyond.

At every spot where a piece of Sati’s divine body touched the ground, the earth became charged with her Shakti — and a temple arose. These are the 18 Maha Shakti Peethas — the Astadasha Shakti Peetha — identified and codified by Adi Shankaracharya himself in his sacred Ashtadasha Shakti Pitha Stotram. This complete guide covers every essential detail for devotees and pilgrims — the complete Stotram, the divine origin story, all 18 temple names with locations, the three most sacred Peethas, detailed pilgrimage information for the most visited temples, and essential travel tips. Jai Mata Di!

Why Are There Different Numbers — 18, 51, 64, 108?
18 (Maha Shakti Peeth)
Adi Shankaracharya’s definitive list — gold-standard for most pilgrims
51 Shakti Peeth
Corresponds to the 51 letters of Sanskrit alphabet — most widely accepted full count
64 Shakti Peeth
From the Brahmanda Purana — extended sacred list
108 Shakti Peeth
Certain Puranic traditions — all 18 Maha Peethas are included in every larger list

1

The Divine Story — Daksha Yajna, Sati’s Sacrifice & the Birth of the 18 Shakti Peeth

18 Shakti Peeth origin story Daksha Yajna Sati sacrifice Vishnu Sudarshana Chakra 108 body parts earth divine Astadasha Maha Shakti Peetha birth
18 Shakti Peeth origin — Sati immolated in Daksha’s Yajna. Shiva’s devastating Tandava threatened all creation. Vishnu’s Sudarshana Chakra cut Sati’s body. Pieces fell across the earth. Where each piece landed became a Shakti Peeth — the 18 most sacred are the Astadasha Maha Shakti Peetha.

The origin of the 18 Shakti Peeth is one of the most heart-rending and devotionally significant stories in all of Hindu scripture — a story of a daughter’s love for her husband, a father’s arrogance, a wife’s ultimate sacrifice, and a universe saved from Shiva’s grief. In the beginning of this age, the beautiful and devoted Sati — daughter of King Daksha and first consort of Lord Shiva — defied her father to marry the ascetic Shiva, whom Daksha considered unsuitable. The marriage was a divine love story, but Daksha never forgave the insult.

When Daksha organised a grand Yajna (sacred fire ceremony) and deliberately did not invite Sati or Shiva — inviting every other god, king, and sage in creation — Sati went to the ceremony uninvited. There, before all assembled devas, Daksha publicly insulted Lord Shiva with the most degrading words. Sati, unable to bear this insult to her husband, immolated herself in the sacred Yajna fire. When the news reached Lord Shiva, his grief was beyond measure. He lifted Sati’s charred body from the fire and began his devastating Tandava — the cosmic dance of destruction. The entire universe trembled. Creation itself was at risk. The devas ran to Lord Vishnu in desperation.

Lord Vishnu, in his infinite compassion, launched his Sudarshana Chakra at Sati’s body as Shiva carried it — cutting it into pieces to separate Shiva from the object of his grief. The sacred pieces of Sati’s body fell at different locations across the Indian subcontinent — from Sri Lanka in the south to Kashmir in the north, from Assam in the east to Prayagraj in the west. At every spot where a piece of Sati’s divine body fell, the earth became charged with eternal Shakti — a temple arose, a presiding goddess manifested, and Lord Shiva appeared as Bhairava, the eternal guardian. These are the Shakti Peethas. Jai Mata Di!

Daksha’s Yajna
Sati insults Lord Shiva. Sati sacrifices herself in the sacred fire.
Shiva’s Tandava
Shiva’s grief threatens to destroy all creation with his cosmic dance.
Vishnu’s Chakra
Sudarshana Chakra cuts Sati’s body into pieces to end Shiva’s grief.
Shakti Peethas
Each piece that fell became charged with eternal Shakti — a sacred Peeth arose.

2

Adi Shankaracharya’s Stotram — The Sacred Hymn of All 18 Shakti Peethas

Adi Shankaracharya Ashtadasha Shakti Pitha Stotram 18 Shakti Peeth sacred Sanskrit hymn 8th century destroys enemies cures diseases bestows prosperity
Adi Shankaracharya’s Ashtadasha Shakti Pitha Stotram — 8th century CE. Four shlokas naming all 18 Peethas. Said to destroy all enemies, cure all diseases, bestow all prosperity when recited every evening.

The 18 Shakti Peeth were defined for all posterity by Adi Shankaracharya (8th century CE) in his sacred Ashtadasha Shakti Pitha Stotram — a hymn of just four shlokas that names all 18 Peethas and their presiding goddesses. This hymn is said to:

Destroy all enemies

Sarva Shatri Vinashanam

Cure all diseases

Sarva Roga Haram

Bestow all prosperity

Sarva Sampatkaram Shubham

Grant liberation

Recite every evening

 Ashtadasha Shakti Pitha Stotram (Sanskrit)

Lankayam Shankari Devi, Kamakshi Kanchika Pure

Pradyumne Shrinkala Devi, Chamunda Krouncha Pattane

Alampure Jogulamba, Sri Shaile Bhramarambika

Kolha Pure Maha Lakshmi, Mahurye Ekaveerika

Ujjainyam Maha Kali, Peethikayam Puruhutika

Odhyane Girija Devi, Manikya Daksha Vatike

Hari Kshetre Kama Rupi, Prayage Madhaveshwari

Jwalayam Vishnavi Devi, Gaya Mangalya Gourika

Varanasyam Vishalakshi, Kashmire Tu Saraswati

Ashtadasha Shakti Peethani, Yoginamapi Durlabham

Sayamkale Pathennityam, Sarva Shatri Vinashanam

Sarva Roga Haram Divyam, Sarva Sampatkaram Shubham

Meaning: Goddess Shankari in Sri Lanka · Kamakshi in Kanchipuram · Shrinkala in Pradyumna · Chamunda in Mysore · Jogulamba in Alampur · Bhramaramba in Srisailam · Maha Lakshmi in Kolhapur · Ekaveerika in Mahur · Maha Kali in Ujjain · Puruhutika in Peethika · Girija in Odisha · Manikyamba in Daksha’s home · Kamarupa in Assam · Madhaveshwari in Prayag · Vishnavi in Jwalamukhi · Mangala Gauri in Gaya · Vishalakshi in Varanasi · Saraswati in Kashmir. These 18 abodes of Shakti are rare even to yogis.

3

Complete List of All 18 Shakti Peeth — Names, Locations & Sati’s Body Parts

The following authoritative table is based on Adi Shankaracharya’s Stotram and cross-referenced with the Devi Bhagavata Purana and Kalika Purana:

# Goddess (Shakti) Location State / Country Sati’s Body Part Bhairava (Shiva)
1 Shankari Devi Trincomalee Sri Lanka Groin Trikoneshwara
2 Kamakshi Devi Kanchipuram Tamil Nadu Navel (back) Ekambareshwara
3 Shrinkala Devi Pandua / Hooghly West Bengal Stomach Iswarayan
4 Chamundeshwari Devi Mysuru (Chamundi Hill) Karnataka Head / scalp Kapali/Krouncha
5 Jogulamba Devi Alampur, Gadwal Telangana Upper teeth Bala Brahma
6 Bhramaramba Devi Jyotirlinga Srisailam Andhra Pradesh Neck Mallikarjuna
7 Maha Lakshmi (Ambabai) Kolhapur Maharashtra Eyes Kapila
8 Ekaveerika / Renuka Devi Mahur, Nanded Maharashtra Left hand Chamara
9 Maha Kali Devi Jyotirlinga Ujjain Madhya Pradesh Upper lip Mahakal (Jyotirlinga)
10 Puruhutika Devi Pithapuram, E. Godavari Andhra Pradesh Left hand (back) Kukkuteswara
11 Girija Devi (Biraja) Jajpur Odisha Navel Jagannatha
12 Manikyamba Devi Jyotirlinga Draksharamam, E. Godavari Andhra Pradesh Left cheek Bhimeswara (Jyotirlinga)
13 Kamakhya Devi (Kamarupa) Nilachal Hill, Guwahati Assam Womb / Yoni Umananda
14 Madhaveshwari (Alopi Devi) Prayagraj (Triveni Sangam) Uttar Pradesh Fingers Someshwara
15 Jwalamukhi / Vaishnavi Devi Jwalamukhi, Kangra Himachal Pradesh Tongue Unmatta Bhairava
16 Mangala Gauri (Sarvamangala) Gaya, Vishnupad complex Bihar Breasts Hriyankar
17 Vishalakshi Devi Meer Ghat, Varanasi Uttar Pradesh Earrings (Kundala) Kala Bhairava
18 Sharada Devi (Saraswati) Sharda, PoK Kashmir Kashmir (PoK) Right hand Trayambaka

Special Note — Where Jyotirlinga & Shakti Peeth Coincide (The Triple-Sacred Sites):

Srisailam (AP) — Bhramaramba Devi Shakti Peeth + Mallikarjuna Jyotirlinga
Ujjain (MP) — Mahakali Devi Shakti Peeth + Mahakaleshwar Jyotirlinga
Draksharamam (AP) — Manikyamba Devi Shakti Peeth + Bhimeswara Jyotirlinga
These three temples are the most potent pilgrimage sites in India — a darshan here grants the combined blessings of both Shakti and Shiva. Jai Mata Di! Har Har Mahadev!

4

The 3 Most Sacred Shakti Peethas — Creation, Nourishment & Annihilation

18 Shakti Peeth 3 most sacred cosmic triad Kamakhya creation Gaya nourishment Ujjain annihilation straight line India divine mother three aspects
The 3 most sacred of 18 Shakti Peeth — the cosmic triad of the Divine Mother: Kamakhya/Creation (Assam) · Sarvamangala/Nourishment (Gaya) · Mahakali/Annihilation (Ujjain). These 3 temples lie in a perfect straight line across India.
Quick Answer: The three most sacred are Kamakhya (Guwahati, Assam — Sati’s womb/yoni — Creation), Mangala Gauri/Sarvamangala (Gaya, Bihar — Sati’s breasts — Nourishment), and Mahakali (Ujjain, MP — Sati’s upper lip — Annihilation). These three lie in a perfect straight geographic line across India — symbolising the eternal cosmic cycle of creation, nourishment, and dissolution.
Kamakhya — Creation
Nilachal Hill, Guwahati, Assam

Sati’s womb and yoni (the creative organ of the universe) fell here. The sanctum has no idol — devotees worship a naturally formed yoni-shaped cleft in bedrock with an underground spring flowing through. Kamakhya represents Shakti in her most primal creative form.

Mangala Gauri — Nourishment
Gaya, Bihar

Sati’s breasts — the symbol of nourishment, motherhood, and sustenance — fell here. Goddess Sarvamangala Devi — She Who Is Auspicious for All — is uniquely significant as Gaya is also sacred for pitru karma (ancestral rites).

Mahakali — Annihilation
Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh

Sati’s upper lip — the instrument of speech, mantra, and final dissolution — fell here, coinciding with the Mahakaleshwar Jyotirlinga. Mahakali embodies the annihilating aspect — the force that ends cycles, destroys evil, and grants liberation.

Sacred Geography: The triple cosmic circuit of Kamakhya (creation) → Gaya (nourishment) → Ujjain (annihilation) forms a perfect straight geographic line across India. Ancient saints understood this as a cosmic diagram of the Mother’s three primary cosmic functions — a sacred axis of Shakti running across the entire subcontinent.

5

Six Most Visited 18 Shakti Peeth Temples — Complete Pilgrimage Guide

1. Kamakhya Temple, Guwahati, Assam

Kamakhya Temple Guwahati 18 Shakti Peeth most powerful Sati womb yoni Nilachal Hill 5:30AM free Ambubachi Mela 30 lakh pilgrims Brahmaputra Assam
Kamakhya Temple — the most powerful of all 18 Shakti Peeth. No idol — a natural yoni-shaped cleft in bedrock with underground spring. Timings: 5:30AM–10PM · FREE. Ambubachi Mela (June–July): 30 lakh pilgrims, Brahmaputra said to turn red.
Goddess Kamakhya Devi (Kamarupa) — Divine creative energy
Sati’s Body Part Womb and Yoni — most sacred of all Shakti Peethas
Timings 5:30 AM – 10:00 PM daily (with afternoon break)
Entry FREE general darshan · Paid VIP darshan available
Unique Feature No idol — natural yoni-shaped cleft in rock · Underground spring flows through sanctum
Key Festival Ambubachi Mela (June–July) — 30 lakh pilgrims · Temple closes 3 days · Brahmaputra said to turn red · Website: maakamakhya.org

2. Jwalamukhi Temple, Kangra, Himachal Pradesh

Jwalamukhi Temple 18 Shakti Peeth 9 eternal flames no oil wick fuel Sati tongue Kangra Himachal Pradesh 5AM free Navratri Akbar gold canopy miracle
Jwalamukhi Temple, Kangra — 9 eternal natural flames, no oil, no wick, no fuel. Even Akbar tried to extinguish them — failed. His gold canopy is still in the temple! Timings: 5AM–10PM · FREE.
Goddess Jwalamukhi (Vaishnavi Devi) — manifest as eternal blue flames
Sati’s Body Part Tongue — sacred seat of mantra, speech, and divine fire
Timings 5:00 AM – 10:00 PM daily
Entry FREE
Unique Feature 9 eternal flames burning from underground — no idol, no oil, no wick. Natural gas flames. Akbar tried to extinguish with water and failed — his gold canopy gifted in awe is still in the temple
Best Time Navratri (March–April and Sept–Oct) — spectacular crowds and energy

3. Vishalakshi Temple, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh

Vishalakshi Temple Varanasi 18 Shakti Peeth Ganga ghats Sati earrings Kundala Meer Ghat 5AM free Kashi Kajali Teej Kashi Vishwanath nearby
Vishalakshi Temple, Varanasi — 17th of 18 Shakti Peeth on the sacred Ganga ghats at Meer Ghat. Combine with Kashi Vishwanath Jyotirlinga (200m away) for the ultimate Kashi divine circuit. Timings: 5AM–12PM & 4–9PM · FREE.
Goddess Vishalakshi Devi — ‘She with large eyes’ — divine all-seeing vision
Sati’s Body Part Earrings (Kundala)
Timings 5:00 AM–12:00 PM and 4:00–9:00 PM
Entry FREE
Combine With Located on sacred Ganges ghats at Meer Ghat · Kashi Vishwanath Jyotirlinga just 200m away — the ultimate Kashi Shakti-Shiva circuit

4. Bhramaramba Devi, Srisailam, Andhra Pradesh

Srisailam Bhramaramba Devi 18 Shakti Peeth Mallikarjuna Jyotirlinga only temple India both Sati neck 232km Hyderabad 5:30AM free srisailamonline.com
Srisailam Bhramaramba Temple — the ONLY temple in India housing BOTH a Maha Shakti Peeth AND a Jyotirlinga (Mallikarjuna, #2 of 12). 232 km from Hyderabad · FREE darshan.
Goddess Bhramaramba Devi — ‘Goddess of Bees’ — primal energy
Sati’s Body Part Neck
Unique Feature The ONLY temple in India combining BOTH a Maha Shakti Peeth AND a Jyotirlinga (Mallikarjuna)
Entry FREE darshan · Paid sevas available
Website srisailadevasthanam.org · 232 km from Hyderabad

5. Mahalakshmi Temple (Ambabai), Kolhapur, Maharashtra

Kolhapur Mahalakshmi Temple 18 Shakti Peeth 7000 year idol Kirnotsav sun rays March 21 September 21 Dakshin Kashi Sati eyes 4:30AM Panchganga River
Kolhapur Mahalakshmi Temple — 7th of 18 Shakti Peeth. The 7,000-year-old idol faces west (unique in India). Kirnotsav miracle: sun rays fall directly on the idol every March 21 & September 21. Called “Dakshin Kashi.” Timings: 4:30AM–10PM · FREE. 240 km from Pune.
Goddess Mahalakshmi (Ambabai) — Goddess of wealth, prosperity and good fortune
Sati’s Body Part Eyes
Timings 4:30 AM – 10:00 PM (with breaks)
Unique Features Idol believed to be 7,000 years old · Kirnotsav: direct sunrays fall on idol at equinox (March 21 & Sept 21) each year · Called ‘Dakshin Kashi’ · Idol faces west (unique in India)
Distance 240 km from Pune · 390 km from Mumbai · On banks of Panchganga River

6. Chamundeshwari Temple, Mysuru, Karnataka

Goddess Chamundeshwari (Durga Mahishasuramardini) — victorious warrior goddess
Sati’s Body Part Head / scalp (Krouncha Pattane)
Timings 7:30AM–2PM · 3:30–6PM · 7:30–9PM
Unique Feature State deity of Karnataka · Presiding deity of Mysore Wadiyar Royal family · 1,008-step stone stairway from base
Best Festival Mysore Dasara (Navratri) — world-famous golden procession witnessed by millions · 145 km from Bengaluru

6

Shakti Peeth Pilgrimage Circuits — Planning Your 18 Shakti Peeth Yatra

18 Shakti Peeth India map 5 regional pilgrimage circuits south Maharashtra north northeast Himalaya complete yatra 21-25 days Navratri guide
18 Shakti Peeth India circuit map — 5 regional zones: South (5 temples), Maharashtra (2), North India (4), Northeast/Assam (1), Himalayas (2). Complete 18 Shakti Peeth yatra: 21–25 days. Peak season: Navratri (March–April or September–October).

While completing all 18 Shakti Peethas in a single journey is a rare and extraordinary achievement, most devotees plan regional circuits across multiple trips. Here are the practical circuits:

Circuit Temples Included & Practical Details
South India (5 Peethas) Shankari (Sri Lanka) + Kamakshi Kanchipuram + Chamundeshwari Mysore + Jogulamba Alampur + Bhramaramba Srisailam · 8–10 days from Chennai/Hyderabad
Maharashtra (2 Peethas) Mahalakshmi Kolhapur + Renuka/Ekaveerika Mahur · 2 days from Pune/Mumbai
North India (4 Peethas) Vishalakshi Varanasi + Madhaveshwari Prayagraj + Mangala Gauri Gaya + Mahakali Ujjain · 5–7 days from Delhi/Lucknow
Himachal + Assam (2 Peethas) Jwalamukhi Kangra HP + Kamakhya Guwahati Assam · 5-day standalone or add to North India trip
Odisha + Andhra (3 Peethas) Biraja/Girija Jajpur Odisha + Manikyamba Draksharamam + Puruhutika Pithapuram AP · 3–4 days from Bhubaneswar
Complete 18 Shakti Peeth Yatra Minimum 21–25 days India travel + 2–3 days Sri Lanka · Start from South, work clockwise. Peak season: Navratri (March–April and September–October)

7

Spiritual Significance — What Visiting a Shakti Peeth Bestows

The spiritual power of the 18 Shakti Peethas is described in the Devi Bhagavata Purana, Kalika Purana, and Tantrachudamani in terms that make these shrines absolutely unlike any ordinary temple. According to ancient scripture and the unbroken tradition of crores of devotees across millennia:


Immediate Darshan Blessings: Darshan at any Shakti Peeth is said to grant immediate relief from all sorrows, fears, diseases, and karmic obstacles. The goddess who manifested through Sati’s divine body is always in her most active, powerful form.

Moksha and Liberation: The Adi Shankaracharya Stotram explicitly states that reciting the names of the 18 Shakti Peethas every evening destroys all enemies (Sarva Shatri Vinashanam), cures all diseases (Sarva Roga Haram), and bestows all prosperity (Sarva Sampatkaram Shubham).

Protection by Bhairava: Every Shakti Peeth is protected by a Bhairava — a manifestation of Lord Shiva as eternal guardian of the goddess. When you worship Shakti at her Peetha, you simultaneously receive Shiva’s protective grace.

Navratri Power: The energy at Shakti Peethas is exponentially amplified during Navratri — both Chaitra Navratri (March–April) and Sharad Navratri (September–October). These are the most spiritually potent times to visit any of the 18 Maha Shakti Peethas.

Siddhi and Tantra: The Shakti Peethas are the most sacred sites for Tantric practice in the Hindu tradition — the presence of Shakti in her most primal form makes these temples particularly efficacious for spiritual practices (sadhana) aimed at awakening kundalini shakti.

8

Pilgrimage Tips — Best Time, Dress Code & Practical Advice

18 Shakti Peeth Navratri 2026 best time visit Chaitra March April Sharad September October Ambubachi Mela Kamakhya Kirnotsav Kolhapur festival guide
Best time to visit all 18 Shakti Peeth — Navratri 2026. Chaitra Navratri (March–April) and Sharad Navratri (September–October) amplify divine energy at every Shakti temple. Ambubachi Mela at Kamakhya (June–July), Kirnotsav at Kolhapur (March 21 & Sept 21). Book 30+ days ahead.
Best Time to Visit
  • Navratri (Chaitra & Sharad) — both Navratris are ideal for ALL 18 Shakti Peethas
  • Ambubachi Mela (June–July) — specifically for Kamakhya, Guwahati
  • Kirnotsav (March 21 & Sept 21) — specifically for Kolhapur Mahalakshmi
  • Everyday — all 18 Peethas are perpetually charged with divine energy
Dress Code & Temple Rules
  • Women: Saree or salwar-kameez with dupatta — dress with reverence
  • Men: Dhoti or full trousers with kurta — several South India temples require traditional dress
  • No leather: Shoes, belts, wallets at entry counters — inauspicious at Shakti shrines
  • Non-Hindus: Outer premises open at most; inner sanctum typically for Hindus — always inquire ahead
Essential Practical Tips
  • Register VIP darshan early for Kamakhya, Srisailam, Kolhapur — 15–30 days ahead for Navratri
  • Visit major temples before 9 AM — most peaceful, least crowded darshan
  • Carry cash — smaller Peethas like Mahur, Pithapuram, Jajpur have limited digital payments
  • Combine with Jyotirlingas — at Srisailam, Ujjain, Draksharamam you get BOTH in one visit
  • Hire local guides at older, less-visited Peethas for ritual context and correct darshan procedure

FAQs — 18 Shakti Peeth Temples 2026

Q1. What is the difference between 18, 51, 64, and 108 Shakti Peeth?

The 18 Shakti Peethas (Astadasha Maha Shakti Peetha) are the most sacred 18 identified in Adi Shankaracharya’s Stotram — the definitive classical authority. The 51 Shakti Peethas correspond to the 51 letters of the Sanskrit alphabet (most widely accepted full count). The 64 are from the Brahmanda Purana. The 108 from certain Puranic traditions. All 18 Maha Shakti Peethas are included within every larger list. Most pilgrims use the 18-temple list as their primary reference, as it has Shankaracharya’s scriptural authority.

Q2. Which is the most powerful of the 18 Shakti Peethas?

Kamakhya Temple in Guwahati, Assam is widely regarded as the most powerful of all 18 Shakti Peethas — it enshrines Sati’s womb and yoni (the creative organ of the universe), the most primal of all Shakti manifestations. Among the sacred triad, Kamakhya (creation), Mangala Gauri Gaya (nourishment), and Mahakali Ujjain (annihilation) are the three most important. Srisailam is additionally unique as the only temple combining both a Maha Shakti Peeth AND a Jyotirlinga.

Q3. Can women visit all 18 Shakti Peethas?

Yes — women are not only permitted but especially welcomed at all 18 Shakti Peethas, as these are temples of the Divine Mother. However, at Kamakhya Temple during Ambubachi Mela (when the Devi is in her menstrual period — Ashadha month, June–July), the temple closes for three days and then reopens with specific ritual protocols. Pregnant women should check with individual temple authorities regarding specific restrictions, particularly at Jwalamukhi and Chamundeshwari Hill temple.

Q4. Is it necessary to visit all 18 Shakti Peethas for moksha?

According to Adi Shankaracharya’s Stotram, even chanting the names of the 18 Shakti Peethas every evening grants spiritual liberation, destroys enemies, cures diseases, and bestows prosperity — without physically visiting each temple. Most devotees complete the 18 Shakti Peeth yatra over multiple journeys across many years — there is no prescribed single-trip requirement. Each visit grants its own complete spiritual merit.

Q5. Why is Srisailam Bhramaramba Temple uniquely sacred?

Srisailam Bhramaramba Mallikarjuna Temple in Andhra Pradesh is uniquely the only temple in India that simultaneously houses a Maha Shakti Peeth AND a Jyotirlinga — Goddess Bhramaramba Devi (Shakti Peeth) and Lord Mallikarjuna (Jyotirlinga, 2nd of 12 Jyotirlingas) are both present in the same complex. A darshan here is equivalent to both a complete Shakti Peeth pilgrimage AND a Jyotirlinga darshan in a single visit. Srisailam is additionally a Pancharama Kshetra, adding yet another layer of sacred significance.

Q6. Which 18 Shakti Peethas are outside India?

One of the 18 Maha Shakti Peethas is in Sri Lanka — Shankari Devi Temple in Trincomalee, where Sati’s groin fell. The original Shankari Temple in Trincomalee was reportedly destroyed by Portuguese colonists in the 16th century and the site is debated today. Additionally, Sharada Peeth (18th Shakti Peeth) — where Sati’s right hand fell and Goddess Saraswati is worshipped — is located in Sharda village in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (PoK) and is currently inaccessible to Indian pilgrims. However, a new Sharada Peeth temple was consecrated in Kupwara district, J&K, India in 2023 by the Indian Government and Sringeri Sharada Peetham.

18 Shakti Peeth CTA – divine mother devotee Jai Mata Di Navratri pilgrimage yatra complete guide temples India circuit Om Shakti
The Mother became the earth itself — every step you take reaches Her. Begin your yatra this Navratri 2026. Jai Mata Di! Om Shakti!

Bow Before the Divine Mother at All 18 Shakti Peethas

“The story of the 18 Shakti Peethas is the story of the most profound love in all creation — a wife who gave her life for her husband’s honour, and a Divine Mother who, in choosing to become the earth itself, made every step we take on this sacred land a blessing. These are not places you merely visit. These are places where the Mother recognises you, receives you, and transforms you.”

Start with the temple closest to you. Chant the Shankaracharya Stotram every evening. Let the Divine Mother find you. Jai Mata Di! Om Shakti!

Disclaimer: The list of 18 Shakti Peethas and their locations is based on Adi Shankaracharya’s Ashtadasha Shakti Pitha Stotram and cross-referenced with the Devi Bhagavata Purana and Kalika Purana. Temple timings, entry fees, and access rules are verified from official temple sources as of April 2026. Timings may change during festivals or government orders. Always verify with individual temple authorities before visiting. Jai Mata Di!

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