Sacred to Shiva

Kedarnath

केदारनाथ मन्दिर

also known as Kedarnath Temple, Kedarnath Dham, Kedareshwar, Shri Kedarnath Mandir

Highest Jyotirlinga; one of the most arduous Himalayan shrines.

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Notice

High altitude — breathing difficulty common above Rambara

The air gets thinner between Rambara and Kedarnath, and many pilgrims experience breathing trouble on this stretch. Pilgrims with cardiac, respiratory or hypertension conditions should consult a doctor before undertaking the yatra and acclimatise at Gaurikund or Sonprayag before climbing.

Read the official notice

Advisory

valid until 30 Jun 2026

IMD weather alert — thunderstorms, lightning, heavy rain (May 2026)

The India Meteorological Department has issued yellow and orange alerts for the Kedarnath route in mid-to-late May 2026, warning of strong winds, lightning, thunderstorms and heavy rainfall. District authorities and SDRF teams are halting pilgrims at designated safe locations during adverse weather windows. Check the IMD Char Dham forecast before each leg of the trek and follow officials' directions.

Read the official notice

Introduction

ēdāranātha Temple (Sanskrit: केदारनाथ मन्दिर, IAST: Kēdāranātha Mandira, lit. 'temple of the God of the field') is a Hindu temple, one of the twelve jyotirlinga of Śiva. The temple is located on the Garhwal Himalayan range near the Mandākinī river, in the state of Uttarakhand, India. Due to extreme weather conditions, the temple is open to the general public only between the months of April (Akṣaya Tritiya) and November (Kārtika Pūrṇimā, the autumn full moon). During the winters, the vigraha (deity) of the temple is carried down to Ukhimath to be worshiped for the next six months. Kēdāranātha is seen as a homogeneous form of Śiva, the 'Lord of Kēdārakhaṇḍa', the historical name of the region. The temple is not directly accessible by road and has to be reached by a 17 kilometres (11 mi) uphill trek from Gaurikuṇḍa. According to Hindu legends, the temple was initially built by the Pāṇḍavas, and is one of the twelve Jyotirlingas, the holiest Hindu shrines of Śiva. The Pāṇḍava were supposed to have pleased Śiva by doing penance in Kēdāranātha. The temple is one of the four major sites in India's Chota Char Dham pilgrimage of Northern Himalayas and is the first of the Pañca Kēdāra pilgrimage sites. This temple is the highest among the 12 Jyotirlingas. It is one of the 275 paadal petra sthalams expounded in the Tēvaram. This temple is sung of by Tirugnāṇasambandar, Appar, Sundarar and Sekkizhar in their Tēvaram texts. Kēdāranātha was the worst affected area during the 2013 flash floods in North India. The temple complex, surrounding areas, and Kēdāranātha town suffered extensive damage, but the temple structure did not suffer any major damage. A large rock among the debris acted as a barrier, protecting the temple from the flood.

History

It is not certain who built the original Kedarnath temple and when. The name "Kedarnath" means "the lord of the field": it derives from the Sanskrit words kedara ("field") and natha ("lord"). The text Kashi Kedara Mahatmya states that it is so called because "the crop of liberation" grows here.

At a height of 3,583 m (11,755 ft), 223 km (139 mi) from Rishikesh, on the shores of Mandakini river, a tributary of Ganga, is a stone edifice of unknown date. One of the earliest references to Kedarnath occurs in the Skanda Purana (c. 7th-8th century), which contains a story describing the origin of the Ganges river. The text names Kedara (Kedarnath) as the place where Shiva released the holy water from his matted hair. According to the hagiographies based on Madhava's Sankshepa-shankara-vijaya, the 8th century philosopher Adi Shankara died at the mountains near Kedarnath; although other hagiographies, based on Anandagiri's Prachina-Shankara-Vijaya, state that he died at Kanchipuram. The ruins of a monument marking the purported death place of Shankara are located at Kedarnath. Kedarnath was definitely a prominent pilgrimage centre by the 12th century, when it is mentioned in Kritya-kalpataru written by the Gahadavala minister Bhatta Lakshmidhara. Adi Shankara was believed to have revived this temple, along with Badrinath and other temples of Uttarakhand; he is believed to have attained Mahasamadhi at Kedarnath.

About the deity — Shiva

Shiva, also known as Mahadeva and Hara, is one of the principal deities of Hinduism. He is the Supreme Being in Shaivism, one of the major traditions within Hinduism.

Read more about [Shiva](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiva).

Architecture

There is a small pillared hall in front of the temple, that has images of Parvati and of the five Pandava princes. There are four temples around Kedarnath itself, namely- Tungnath, Rudranath, Madhyamaheshwar, and Kalpeshwar which form the Panch Kedar pilgrimage sites. The first hall inside Kedarnath Temple contains statues of the five Pandava brothers, Krishna, Nandi, the vehicle of Shiva and Virabhadra, one of the guards of Shiva. Statues of Draupadi and other deities are also installed in the main hall. An unusual feature of the temple is the head of a man carved in the triangular stone lingam. Such a head is seen carved in another temple nearby constructed on the site where the marriage of Shiva and Parvati was held. Behind the temple is the samādhi mandir of Adi Sankara.

Religious significance

The head priest (Raval) of the Kedarnath temple belongs to the Veerashaiva community from Karnataka. However, unlike in Badrinath temple, the Raval of Kedarnath temple does not perform the pujas. The pujas are carried out by Raval's assistants on his instructions. The Raval moves with the deity to Ukhimath during the winter season. There are five main priests for the temple, and they become head priests for one year by rotation. The present (2013) Raval of Kedarnath temple is Shri Vageesha Lingacharya from Davanagere district, Karnataka. Surrounding Kedarnath, there are many symbols of the Pandavas. Raja Pandu died at Pandukeshwar. The locals here perform a dance called "Pandav Lila". The mountain top where the Pandavas went to Swarga, is known as "Swargarohini", which is located off Badrinath. When Yudhishtira, the eldest of the Pandavas, was leaving for the heaven (Swarg), one of his fingers fell on the earth. At that place, Yudhishtira installed a Shiva Linga, which is the size of the thumb. To gain Mashisharupa, Lord Shiva and Bheema fought with maces. Bheema was struck with remorse. He started to massage Shiva's body with ghee. In memory of this event, even today, this triangular Shiva lingam is massaged with ghee.

Kedarnath Teerth Purohits are the ancient Brahmins of this region, their ancestors (Rishi-Muni) have been worshiping the lingam since the time of Nara-Narayana and Daksh Prajapati.

How to reach

Air/helicopter: Helicopter services are available from locations such as Phata and Sersi, with flight durations averaging 8 to 10 minutes.

Ropeway: Kedarnath Ropeway is a proposed 12.9-kilometre cable car transportation system project connecting Sonprayag to Kedarnath in Uttarakhand, India. The project, estimated to cost ₹4,081 crore, is being developed under the Government of India's Parvatmala Pariyojana program utilizing public-private partnership model. The ropeway is expected to reduce the current 8–9 hour trek to a 36-minute journey and will be designed to carry up to 1,800 passengers per hour per direction. The ropeway will utilize Tri-cable Detachable Gondola (3S) technology. In September 2025, the construction contract was awarded to the Adani Group. Road: The journey to Kedarnath typically begins at Haridwar or Rishikesh, both of which are accessible by road and rail.

Located in: Rudraprayag, Uttarakhand.

Tags

chota_char_dhamshivajyotirlinga12-jyotirlingachar-dham-uttarakhanduttarakhandgarhwal-himalayasrudraprayagpanch-kedaradi-shankarashaivismhigh-altitude-yatra

Festivals celebrated here

त्योहार

No festivals linked here yet.

When our editors confirm the festivals that gather pilgrims at this shrine, they will appear in this folio with their next dates.

News & updates

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We are watching for news about this shrine.

As soon as our editors find a piece worth reading — a renovation, a festival report, a court ruling, a historic recovery — it lands here, with full attribution.

Plan your visit

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Before you go

  • Seasonal yatra — open April to mid-November only

    Kedarnath temple is open to the public only between Akshaya Tritiya (April) and Kartika Purnima / Bhai Dooj (mid-November) each year. For 2026, the kapat opened on 22 April 2026 at 8:00 AM. The closing date is tentative around Bhai Dooj in mid-November and is officially announced by BKTC on Vijayadashami. During the winter closure the deity is moved down to Ukhimath for six months of worship.

  • Pilgrim registration is mandatory

    All Char Dham yatris must register online at registrationandtouristcare.uk.gov.in before travelling. Without registration, entry is blocked at the Sonprayag checkpoint and helicopter tickets cannot be booked. Carry a printed registration confirmation and valid photo ID.

  • 17 km uphill trek from Gaurikund

    Kedarnath is not directly accessible by road. From Gaurikund (the road-head) it is a 17 km uphill trek to the temple, gaining roughly 500 m of altitude to 3,400 m. Pony, palki (doli) and porter services are available. Helicopter services from Sirsi, Phata and Guptkashi are operated through the official IRCTC HeliYatra portal; pilgrims are advised to avoid unofficial helicopter brokers.

  • Daily afternoon closure 3 PM – 5 PM

    Per pilgrim guides, the inner sanctum is closed to the public between approximately 3 PM and 5 PM each day for re-shringar. Plan darshan in the morning or after 5 PM. Specific timings can change during festivals — verify with BKTC on arrival.

Sources & attribution

This article's initial draft was assembled from the open-source data above. Reviewed editorially before publication.

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