Kedarnath, Uttarakhand · Lord Shiva
A stone Jyotirlinga shrine high in the Garhwal Himalayas, reached on foot and open only through the summer months.

Saturn (Shani) · penance
The high Himalayan Jyotirlinga, reached on foot — sought for endurance, penance and release from Saturn's grip.
Darshan, seva and donations here are carried out on the temple’s own official website. We point you straight to it — no account needed — and the offering goes directly to the shrine.
Kedarnath enshrines one of the twelve Jyotirlingas of Shiva, set in a remote Himalayan valley below snow peaks. The temple is reached after a long uphill trek, and its survival through floods and avalanches is held to be itself a sign of grace. The austerity of the journey is part of the devotion, the hardship of the path matched by the stillness of the shrine.
An ancient shrine credited to the Pandavas and revived by Adi Shankaracharya; the surviving stone temple is many centuries old.
The shrine is dedicated to Lord Shiva, and devotees come from across the country for darshan in the inner sanctum. What follows is the heart of what each pilgrim seeks here.
Can’t travel? A named priest at Kedarnath Temple performs the puja in your name, taking your gotra and sankalp before the deity. You receive a video confirmation of the ritual, and the prasad is delivered to your home.
Support the temple and its work directly. Each contribution is facilitated transparently, with a receipt and an impact update — and an 80G tax receipt on donations of ₹500 or more.
Chadawa offerings can be made from ₹251 to ₹11,000.
62% funded · Pilgrim path repair and shelter restoration after seasonal damage.
Book a live darshan or puja, or make an offering — directly on the temple’s official website. No account needed; your seva reaches the shrine itself.