Skip to main content

Gayatri Mantra గాయత్రీ మంత్రం

DeitySavitr (Sun)
CategoryUniversal
When to chantSunrise, noon, sunset (3 sandhyas)
Recommended count108 cycles ideal
Best lunar dayDaily during Brahma Muhurta
Mala (rosary)Sphatika (clear crystal — universal for any deity)
Seat directionEast (sunrise direction — universal)
Source textRigveda 3.62.10

Sanskrit (Devanagari)

ॐ भूर्भुवः स्वः । तत्सवितुर्वरेण्यं भर्गो देवस्य धीमहि । धियो यो नः प्रचोदयात् ॥

Transliteration (IAST/IPA)

Om Bhur Bhuvah Swah | Tat-Savitur Varenyam Bhargo Devasya Dheemahi | Dhiyo Yo Nah Prachodayat ||

English Meaning

We meditate on the glory of the Creator who has created the universe; who is worthy of worship; who is the embodiment of knowledge and light; who is the remover of all sins and ignorance. May He enlighten our intellect.

Spiritual Significance

The Gayatri Mantra is considered one of the foundational mantras of the universal category in the Vedic tradition. As recorded in the Rigveda 3.62.10, this mantra is dedicated to Savitr (Sun) and carries specific vibrational frequencies that align the chanter's consciousness with the deity's energy. Regular recitation is said to gradually transform the chanter's subtle body (sukshma sharira) and create resonance with Savitr (Sun)'s presence.

When and How Often to Chant

When: Sunrise, noon, sunset (3 sandhyas). The single most powerful time is during Brahma Muhurta — the 96 minutes before sunrise — when the mind is naturally most absorbent and the atmosphere is most sattvic (pure).

How often: The traditional prescription is 108 cycles ideal. Beginners may start with 11 or 21 cycles and gradually build up. The mantra is said to "awaken" — that is, develop autonomous power — when chanted continuously for 40 days at 108 cycles per day, totaling 4,320 recitations.

Step-by-Step Practice Guide

  1. Preparation: Bathe before practice (especially morning practice). Wear clean, preferably natural-fiber clothing. Empty bladder and bowels first.
  2. Seat: Sit on a clean kushasana (grass mat), wool blanket, or cotton cloth. Face East. Cross legs in sukhasana or padmasana; spine erect, not stiff.
  3. Center: Light a ghee lamp and an incense stick. Take 3 deep ujjayi (ocean-sound) breaths to settle.
  4. Sankalpa (intention): Mentally state your purpose for the practice — purification, healing, devotion, or whatever the specific intent.
  5. Mala in hand: Hold your Sphatika mala in your right hand, draped over the middle finger. Use the thumb to advance one bead per recitation. Never let the mala touch the index finger or the floor.
  6. Recite: Begin slowly and audibly. After 27-54 cycles, the recitation can become whisper (upamshu) and eventually mental (manasika). Mental recitation is considered most powerful.
  7. Complete: Upon reaching the sumeru (the larger bead at the top of the mala), reverse direction rather than crossing it.
  8. Conclude: After 108 cycles, sit in silent meditation for 5-10 minutes. The mantra continues to vibrate in the subtle body.
  9. Offer: End with "Idam na mama, idam Shri Savitraya samarpayami" — "This is not mine; I offer this to Savitr." This prevents ego from claiming the merit.

Listen / Watch (Audio Resources)

Below are trusted sources for traditional recitations. Listen first to learn correct pronunciation — incorrect pronunciation can dilute the mantra's effect or even reverse it (per classical texts).

▶ YouTube — search for traditional reciters ♪ Spotify — full recitations available

Benefits (Phala)

Spiritual awakening, intellect, removes karma.

Beyond the specific benefit, all mantra practice generates "tapas" (spiritual heat) and "punya" (merit) which compounds over time. The Upanishads state that mantra is "the boat that ferries one across the ocean of samsara" — meaning even basic, sincere practice gradually liberates the practitioner from suffering and karmic bondage.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Related Mantras

If Gayatri Mantra resonates with you, also explore these mantras with similar energy:

View Today's Panchangam → Best Time to Chant →

తెలుగు పంచాంగం 2026 — Quick Links to Calendar, Mantras, Pilgrimage & Spiritual Content

2026-27 Calendar

Vrat & Date Lists

Mantras & Stotras

Pilgrimage & Temples

Doshas & Astrology

Daily & Other

Library & Tools

Follow on WhatsApp
📱 Follow our WhatsApp Channel for daily panchangam, festival reminders, and muhurat alerts.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these timings/dates accurate?
Yes. All dates use the Drik Siddhantam method aligned with Government of India panchangam. Verified against published almanacs.
Can I follow this without an astrologer?
For general spiritual practice (mantras, vrats, daily worship), yes. For major life decisions or doshas, consult a qualified astrologer with your full chart.
Are these practices for all Hindus?
Most are universal. Some have regional variations (Telugu vs Tamil vs North Indian). Where significant, we note the tradition.
Is this content free?
Yes — Nitya Panchangam is free for personal use. No registration required.