Packing for the Kumbh isn't like packing for an ordinary trip, and two things make the difference. The first is the snan itself: you're going to take a holy dip in the Godavari, which means wet clothes, a change of clothes, and somewhere to put the soggy bundle afterward. The second is the weather — the 2027 Amrit Snan dates fall in August and September, the tail of the Maharashtra monsoon — so you're packing for warmth, high humidity, and a real chance of rain, not the dry heat people often imagine. Add the crowds, long walks because vehicles can't reach the ghats on snan mornings, and frequent temple visits where shoes come off — and the right bag looks quite specific.
Documents and money
The things you genuinely cannot do without. Keep them on your person, not in checked luggage, and ideally in a waterproof pouch.
- Photo ID (Aadhaar, or another government ID), carried on you at all times, useful for hotels, trains, and any official requirement during the Mela.
- Travel tickets and booking confirmations, printed as well as on your phone — networks get congested in huge crowds, so don't rely solely on a screen.
- Cash in small denominations. Card and UPI work in Nashik, but small vendors, autos, donation boxes, and dharamshalas often want cash, and connectivity can drop in the crowds. Keep some on you and some back at your room.
- A written contact card for each member of your group, especially children and elderly, with names and a mobile number.
- Hotel address written down, in English and ideally Marathi, to show an auto driver.
A waterproof document pouch
Keeps ID, tickets, cash and phone dry through both the monsoon and the snan — the one bag that protects everything that matters.
See document pouches →Clothing
Light, modest, quick-drying. The monsoon and the temples both shape this.
- Light cotton clothing for the warm, humid days, breathable and loose, in several changes — because humidity means things don't dry fast.
- Modest attire for darshan. Temples expect covered shoulders and legs; for many rituals traditional dress is expected. For men, a kurta-pyjama or a dhoti for ceremonies; for women, a salwar-kameez or saree. Avoid shorts and sleeveless tops for temple visits.
- A set of clothes specifically for the snan (detailed in the snan kit below), and a change of dry clothes for after the dip, kept in a waterproof bag.
- A light shawl or dupatta, useful for covering the head at temples, extra modesty, or sun.
- Rain protection — this matters in August and September. A compact umbrella or, better in crowds, a lightweight rain poncho that leaves your hands free.
- A light layer for early pre-dawn mornings at the ghats and air-conditioned trains.
Quick-drying synthetic-blend clothes are genuinely worth it over pure cotton for the snan-day change — they dry between uses in the humidity, where cotton stays damp.
Footwear
Two competing needs: you walk a great deal, and you remove your shoes constantly.
- Comfortable, broken-in walking sandals or shoes. You'll cover real distances on foot, especially on snan mornings. Don't bring new footwear you haven't worn in.
- Easy-off, easy-on footwear. Because shoes come off at every temple and at the ghats, slip-on sandals beat laced shoes. Closed-toe protects better in crowds; open sandals are cooler and dry faster after rain — many pilgrims bring both.
- A small cloth bag to carry your footwear, so you can take your shoes with you rather than leaving them at crowded temple shoe-stands where they can go missing. A simple drawstring footwear bag does the job.
- Grippy soles — the ghats and temple floors get wet and slippery in the monsoon and from the bathing.
The snan kit
The specific kit for your holy dip, the part most ordinary packing lists miss.
- Clothes to bathe in, for men a dhoti or shorts and a simple top, for women a saree or suit they're comfortable getting wet in. Bring a dedicated set.
- A dry change of clothes for immediately after, sealed in a waterproof bag.
- A small container if you wish to carry home Godavari water, a common and cherished practice.
- Footwear bag, as above, so your shoes come with you to the ghat rather than being left in the crush.
Quick-dry towel + dry sack
A quick-dry travel towel packs small and dries fast; a waterproof dry sack keeps your wet snan bundle from soaking everything else. The two items that make the dip painless.
See towels & dry sacks →Keep this kit as a self-contained bundle you can grab for snan morning without unpacking everything else.
Health and first aid
Sensible basics for a long, crowded, physically demanding pilgrimage. None of this replaces a doctor's advice; pack to your own needs.
- All personal and prescription medication, in sufficient quantity for the whole trip plus a buffer, in your hand luggage, with a copy of the prescription.
- Foot care, blister plasters especially, given the walking. Tired, blistered feet are the most common complaint at any large pilgrimage.
- Hand sanitiser and a few masks, sensible in dense crowds.
- Sun protection, sunscreen, a hat or cap, sunglasses; the sun is strong between the rain.
- A reusable water bottle, stay hydrated, refill from safe sources.
A compact first-aid kit
Plasters, antiseptic, pain relief, rehydration salts and the everyday remedies in one pouch — easier than assembling it piecemeal.
See first-aid kits →If you're travelling with elderly parents or anyone with a medical condition, carry a note of their conditions and medications, and find out where the Mela medical posts are once you arrive. Our health precautions guide goes deeper.
Crowd and safety essentials
The Kumbh draws crowds on a scale few events on earth match. A little preparation prevents most problems.
- Contact cards for everyone, especially vital for children and the elderly. A card with a name and reachable mobile number reunites separated family faster than anything else.
- Minimal valuables. The less you carry into the crowd, the less you can lose. Leave expensive jewellery and unnecessary cash at your accommodation.
- A small cross-body bag worn in front, harder to lose or have lifted than a backpack in a dense crowd.
- A whistle for young children — a surprisingly effective way for a separated child to signal.
- Agreed meeting points. Before each outing, fix a clear, findable spot to regroup, simpler and more reliable than phones in a congested network.
A power bank
Your phone is your map, contact, and wallet, and it will drain in a day of crowds — a power bank keeps it alive.
See power banks →The full set of habits is in our crowd safety guide.
Leave it at home
Packing is as much about what you don't bring. Expensive jewellery and watches — no place in a Kumbh crowd. Large amounts of cash — carry enough, keep the rest secured at your room. Heavy or excessive luggage — you carry what you bring, often on foot and through crowds; one manageable bag per person is the goal. New, unworn footwear — the fastest route to blisters. Valuables you'd be devastated to lose — if it would break your heart to lose it, leave it home.
For specific travellers
Elderly pilgrims. A folding walking stick if useful, all medication with a written list of conditions, and proximity to the ghats prioritised so the snan-morning walk is short. Build in rest — our family travel guide covers travelling with seniors in detail. Young children. Contact cards and a whistle, a recent photo on your phone, snacks and water, and realistic expectations about the pre-dawn snan; keep them within arm's reach in crowds. Women. Modest, comfortable attire for the dip and temples, a dupatta or shawl for versatility, and the usual personal essentials — which can be harder to buy in the thick of the Mela, so bring your own supply.
The condensed checklist
Run down this list before you zip the bag. (A printable PDF version is on the way.)
Clothing: light cottons (several) · modest temple attire · snan clothes · dry change · shawl/dupatta · poncho or umbrella · one light layer.
Footwear: broken-in walking sandals · easy-off pair · footwear cloth bag.
Snan kit: clothes to bathe in · dry change in a waterproof bag · quick-dry towel · dry sack for wet clothes · small container for Godavari water.
Health: all medication + prescriptions · first-aid kit · blister plasters · sanitiser & masks · sun protection · water bottle.
Crowd & safety: contact cards · power bank · cross-body bag · whistle for kids · agreed meeting points · minimal valuables.
Frequently asked questions
What's the weather like at the Nashik Kumbh in 2027?+
The Amrit Snan dates fall in August and September, the tail of the Maharashtra monsoon. Expect warm, humid days, generally in the twenties Celsius, with a real chance of rain, especially around the August dates. Pack light cottons and quick-dry clothes, plus proper rain protection. It is not cold, and it is not dry.
What should I wear for the holy dip?+
Clothes you're comfortable getting wet in and can change out of easily — for men a dhoti or shorts and a simple top, for women a saree or suit. Bring a dedicated set for the dip and a dry change for afterward, plus a quick-dry towel and a waterproof bag for the wet bundle.
How much cash should I carry?+
Enough for daily needs in small denominations — autos, small vendors, donations, and dharamshalas often want cash, and connectivity can drop in crowds. Keep some on you and the rest secured at your accommodation. Card and UPI work in Nashik but aren't reliable in the thick of the Mela.
What's the single most useful thing to pack?+
For families, contact cards for children and elderly members, with a name and mobile number — in crowds this scale, getting separated is the commonest worry, and a card plus an agreed meeting point solves it faster than phones. For everyone, a waterproof bag protects documents and electronics through both the monsoon and the snan.
Do I need to bring puja items?+
Basic offerings and puja goods are widely sold in Panchavati and around the temples, so you needn't carry much. If you have specific ritual needs, or are having a special puja performed at Trimbakeshwar, ask the priest in advance what to bring.
Can I buy things I forget once I'm there?+
Most everyday items, yes — Nashik is a proper city with markets and shops. But during the peak Mela the crowds make shopping slow and some things sell out, so bring your personal essentials and medication rather than relying on buying them in the thick of it.

