Each offering is carried in your name-gotra as part of the same ritual at the temple.





Complete your Vedic ritual, choose the package for your family.




Many devotees add one of these alongside the puja, for gratitude, ancestral remembrance, or a simple act of giving.
Watch real puja & chadhava deliveries, sent to devotees on WhatsApp after completion.
Shri Vishnupad Mandir at Gaya, on the banks of the Falgu, enshrines the sacred footprint of Bhagwan Vishnu himself, pressed into the rock, and is one of the most revered Vishnu kshetras of the land. On Devutthani Ekadashi, the Prabodhini Ekadashi, Vishnu is held to wake from the four months of yoga-nidra he entered on Devshayani Ekadashi, and the Chaturmas — through which weddings and new works are set aside — comes to an end. Here at the place of his footprint, devotees come to wake the Lord with tulsi and prayer, and to seek his grace on the auspicious works that may now begin.
The Devutthani Ekadashi shubh-aarambh sankalp is carried at Shri Vishnupad, Gaya, in your naam-gotra, on Kartik Shukla Ekadashi, the day Vishnu wakes.
Devotees want the sankalp carried with care, a clear ritual, a clear video, and a clear naam-gotra spoken before Bhagwan Vishnu at Vishnupad.
Devutthani Ekadashi is the day Bhagwan Vishnu wakes from four months of yoga-nidra and the Chaturmas ends, when all paused shubh-karya may begin again. On this Devutthani Ekadashi of 20 November 2026, at Vishnupad, Gaya, which holds his footprint, a sankalp is offered in your naam-gotra to Bhagwan Vishnu for the household’s paused shubh-karya to begin and his grace on every new beginning.