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Indian Saka Calendar Converter — National Calendar to Gregorian | LazyTools
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Indian Saka Calendar Converter — National Calendar & Gregorian

Convert any Gregorian date to the Indian National Calendar — the Saka calendar — and back. The Saka calendar is the official civil calendar of India, used alongside the Gregorian calendar on government documents and communications. Furthermore, the year starts on 22 March (21 March in leap years) and the result shows the Saka day, month name, year in SE (Saka Era) and whether the year is a leap year affecting Chaitra's length.

India National CalendarSaka Era (SE) yearBoth directionsLeap year handling12 Saka months

How to use the Indian Saka Calendar Converter

1
Enter any Gregorian date
Click the date field and select any date. Furthermore, the tool defaults to today — showing the current Saka date immediately. The Saka year is approximately 78 years behind the Gregorian year.
2
Click Convert to Saka
The stat strip shows the Saka day, month name, year in SE and the Saka Era designation. Furthermore, the table shows the Saka new year date for the selected year and whether the year is a leap year — which affects the length of the first month, Chaitra.
3
Check the Chaitra month length
In the Saka calendar, Chaitra (the first month) has 30 days in normal years and 31 days in leap years. Furthermore, this is because the Saka year starts on 22 March — which falls one day after 21 March in Gregorian leap years, as the extra day is in February.
4
Convert Saka to Gregorian
Click the Saka → Gregorian tab. Enter the Saka day, select the month and enter the SE year. Furthermore, clicking Convert shows the Gregorian equivalent in long form, ISO and DD/MM/YYYY.
5
Use the Saka year for Indian government context
The Saka calendar is used on Indian government publications, gazette notifications and official communications. Furthermore, the Republic Day (26 January) and Independence Day (15 August) both appear in Saka calendar dates in official Indian government documents.

The twelve months of the Indian Saka calendar

The Saka calendar has twelve months. Furthermore, the first six months each have 31 days and the remaining six months have 30 days each — except Chaitra in leap years, which has 31 days. The year starts at the vernal equinox in March.

MonthNameDaysGregorian start (approx)
1Chaitra30 (31 in leap)22 March
2Vaisakha3121 April
3Jyaistha3122 May
4Asadha3122 June
5Sravana3123 July
6Bhadra3123 August
7Asvina3023 September
8Kartika3023 October
9Agrahayana3022 November
10Pausa3022 December
11Magha3021 January
12Phalguna30 (29 in leap)20 February

How the Saka calendar works

The Saka Era begins in 78 CE — the year of the Saka dynasty's rise to prominence in India. Furthermore, the Saka year equals the Gregorian year minus 78 for dates from 22 March onwards, and minus 79 for dates from 1 January to 21 March.

Saka Year = Gregorian Year − 78 (after 22 March) or − 79 (before 22 March)
Saka new year = 22 March (normal year) or 21 March (leap year)
Months 1–6 = 31 days each (Chaitra through Bhadra)
Months 7–12 = 30 days each (Asvina through Phalguna)
Chaitra in leap year = 31 days (aligned with extra Gregorian day in February)

Why the Saka calendar aligns with the Gregorian year

The Saka calendar is a solar calendar like the Gregorian calendar — both track the solar year of approximately 365.25 days. Furthermore, the months are fixed relative to the seasons, unlike the Islamic or Hebrew calendars. This means converting between Saka and Gregorian involves only a year offset and a fixed month start day — making it one of the simpler calendar conversions.

Worked example: India Republic Day in Saka

India's Republic Day on 26 January 2025 — what is the Saka date?

DetailValue
Gregorian date26 January 2025
Saka year1946 SE (2025 − 79 = 1946, before March 22)
Saka monthMagha (11th month)
Saka day6 Magha 1946 SE
Republic Day 2025 falls on 6 Magha 1946 SE. Furthermore, since January 26 is before the Saka new year (22 March), the Saka year is 1946 — one year less than the simple subtraction of 78. This pre-new-year adjustment applies to all dates from 1 January to 21 or 22 March each year.

What is the Indian Saka calendar?

The Indian National Calendar (Saka Era) is India's official civil calendar alongside the Gregorian. Furthermore, the Government adopted it in 1957 after the Calendar Reform Committee's work. The calendar standardised India's diverse regional calendars into one national system.

The Saka Era dates from 78 CE — traditionally King Kanishka's coronation year. Furthermore, the year starts at the vernal equinox in March. The calendar uses the same solar year length as the Gregorian and aligns months with the seasons.

Where the Saka calendar appears in India

India's Gazette Extraordinary publishes all official notifications with both Gregorian and Saka dates. Furthermore, Indian national holidays carry Saka dates in government communications. Moreover, All India Radio announces the Saka date daily alongside the Gregorian date.

Saka calendar versus Hindu religious calendars

The Saka calendar is India's standardised national civil calendar. Furthermore, it differs from the Hindu Vikram Samvat used for religious purposes. Moreover, the Saka calendar has fixed month lengths — unlike lunisolar Hindu calendars that vary based on the lunar cycle.

Why the Saka calendar matters

India is a major global economic partner. Furthermore, official Indian government documents — gazette notifications, legal orders, parliamentary records — carry Saka dates alongside Gregorian dates. Understanding Saka dates helps international organisations accurately cross-reference Indian government publications and legal instruments. Moreover, the Saka calendar appears on Indian stamps, coins and government stationery.

Historical research on post-independence India requires Saka calendar awareness. Government records from 1957 onwards often appear in Saka format in official publications. Furthermore, academic researchers working with Indian government archives, legislative records and policy documents encounter Saka dates regularly. Moreover, journalists and analysts following Indian government communications benefit from quick Saka-to-Gregorian conversion.

How the Saka calendar supports Indian national identity

Adopting a unified national calendar was part of India's post-independence effort to create common national institutions. Furthermore, the Saka calendar draws on ancient Indian heritage — the Saka Era name has appeared in Indian inscriptions since the 1st century CE. Moreover, using the Saka calendar in official communications honours this heritage while providing a standardised system that works alongside international Gregorian dating.

Frequently asked questions

For 2025 CE, the Saka year is 1947 SE for dates from 22 March onwards, and 1946 SE for dates before 22 March. Furthermore, the Saka new year (1 Chaitra) falls on 22 March 2025 CE. The tool automatically calculates the correct Saka year for any date entered, including the pre-new-year adjustment for January through mid-March dates.
Both are Indian traditional calendars with different epochs and year structures. The Saka Era starts from 78 CE and uses a solar year aligned with the Gregorian calendar. Vikram Samvat starts from 57 BCE and is a lunisolar calendar — months follow the moon and the year length varies. Furthermore, the Vikram Samvat year 2082 corresponds to 2025 CE. Moreover, the Saka calendar is India's official national civil calendar while Vikram Samvat is predominantly used for religious purposes in North India.
The Saka New Year (1 Chaitra) falls on 22 March in normal Gregorian years and 21 March in Gregorian leap years. Furthermore, this date corresponds to the vernal equinox — the astronomical moment when day and night are equal length and the Sun crosses the celestial equator. The Saka New Year is observed as a public holiday in some Indian states.
No. The Saka calendar adopted as India's national calendar is a reformed solar calendar with fixed month lengths. Furthermore, traditional Hindu calendars — called Panchang — are lunisolar and vary by region and religious tradition. The national Saka calendar was standardised in 1957 specifically to provide a unified, scientifically precise calendar. Moreover, the traditional Saka calendar used in some regional Panchang systems differs slightly from the national Saka calendar in how it handles month boundaries.
Yes. Several Indian states observe Saka New Year (1 Chaitra, around 22 March) as an official public holiday. Furthermore, Gudi Padwa in Maharashtra, Ugadi in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, and Navreh in Kashmir all celebrate around the same date — reflecting the shared solar calendar roots of these regional new year traditions. Moreover, the dates may vary by one or two days between regions depending on local astrological calculations.

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