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Updated 2026-06-25

Losar (Tibetan New Year) 2026

February 18, 2026 · 1st day, 1st lunar month high confidence

Tibetan New Year — the most important festival, traditionally a 15-day period of renewal, purification and celebration with Bon and Buddhist roots. 2026 begins the Fire Horse year (royal year 2153).

How Losar is marked

Falling on 1st day, 1st lunar month, Losar is observed with prayers and pujas at the local datsan, butter-lamp and incense offerings, circumambulation of stupas, and acts of generosity. It is one of the days when many practitioners take the Eight Mahayana Precepts, keep a fast, recite mantras and avoid harmful actions — because the merit, or the harm, of what is done is traditionally said to be multiplied many times over. On such a holy day the temples fill, and many keep it as a day of practice, offering and restraint rather than ordinary work.

Ways the day is kept

When is it in 2026, and why the date moves

In 2026 it falls on February 18, 2026. Because the Tibetan calendar is lunisolar, the Gregorian date of every observance shifts from year to year, and can differ by a day between lineages wherever a lunar day is doubled or skipped — so a published almanac, or the Zurkhai app, is the surest guide.

Other 2026 observances

Chotrul DuchenMarch 3, 2026Saka Dawa DuchenMay 31, 2026Chokhor DuchenJuly 18, 2026Lhabab DuchenNovember 1, 2026Year of the Fire Horse

FAQ

When is Losar in 2026?
Losar falls on February 18, 2026 in 2026 (1st day, 1st lunar month).
What is Losar?
Tibetan New Year — the most important festival, traditionally a 15-day period of renewal, purification and celebration with Bon and Buddhist roots. 2026 begins the Fire Horse year (royal year 2153).
Why does Losar fall on a different date each year?
Because the Tibetan calendar is lunisolar — its months follow the moon while leap-months keep the year aligned to the sun — the Gregorian date shifts every year and can differ by a day between lineages.

← Full 2026 Tibetan calendar

Date follows the Tibetan lunar calendar and can differ by a day between lineages. Traditional/reference info.