Book Chandika Homa
Chandika Homa is a grand and powerful fire ritual centred on the recitation of the Durga Saptashati (Chandi Path) — the 700 verses describing the Goddess’s victory over Mahishasura and other demons. Offerings are made through the fire at prescribed points in the chanting, invoking Chandika to destroy grave difficulties, enemies and doshas, and to grant sweeping protection and prosperity.
When is Chandika Homa performed?
Performed for serious obstacles, protection of family or business, removal of long-standing doshas, and during Navaratri; often as a periodic or vow-based observance.
What’s included
The Durga Saptashati recitation, red flowers and kumkum, extensive havan samagri, multiple ritviks and the full Chandi homa kit. We bring everything needed, so you only have to be present. Extra pandits, outstation travel or premium add-ons (if any) are shown clearly before you pay.
Available across India & for NRIs
We perform Chandika Homa in these cities — and for families abroad we offer a live-streamed e-puja with sankalp in your name and gotra:
Other pujas & homas we perform
How booking works
- Tell us your puja, city, date and language on WhatsApp.
- We share the muhurat, a verified pandit and an all-inclusive price.
- Pay just 25% to confirm — the balance is due only after the ceremony.
- The pandit arrives with all samagri and performs the vidhi.
Frequently asked questions
What is included in the price?
The starting price of ₹28,000 covers the pandit’s dakshina and all listed samagri for one pandit, plus travel within city limits.
Can I book in my language and tradition?
Yes — we match a verified pandit who performs your exact sampradaya and can chant in your preferred language.
How is this different from a Durga Homa?
Chandika Homa is far more elaborate — it is built around the full Durga Saptashati (700 verses) with multiple priests, and is undertaken for grave or long-standing difficulties.
Why does it need several priests?
The complete Saptashati recitation with fire offerings is lengthy and precise, so two to three ritviks share the chanting and homa; this is confirmed in your quote.