Tirumala Tirupati Online Blog
Yes — Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) runs a long-standing postal scheme through which newly married couples can receive the blessings of Lord Sri Venkateswara and Sri Padmavathi Ammavaru at home. Couples (or their families)...
What is the dress code for the Srikalahasti Rahu-Ketu Sarpa Dosha pooja? If you are travelling to Srikalahasti to perform the Rahu-Ketu Sarpa Dosha Nivarana pooja, the short answer is this: wear clean, modest...
Tirumala is a compact hill town built around one focal point — the Sri Venkateswara Swamy temple — with the queue complexes, reception office, cottages, bus station and sacred water bodies arranged in rings...
Kumkumarchana at the Sri Padmavathi Ammavari Temple in Tiruchanur is a short paid archana in which the priests worship the Goddess with sacred kumkum (vermilion) while chanting Her holy names. According to the official...
Editor’s Note: This page is an informational guide only. Tirumala Tirupati Online is an independent pilgrim-information blog and is not affiliated with the property, Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD), any temple authority, or any booking...
How to download TTD’s Potana Bhagavatam and devotional e-books for free Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) publishes Bammera Pothana’s Andhra Maha Bhagavatamu — popularly called Potana Bhagavatam — along with hundreds of other sacred texts...
Tirumala Darshan for Pregnant Ladies: Special Entry, Documents & Practical Guide Yes, a pregnant lady can have darshan of Lord Sri Venkateswara at Tirumala, and she does not have to stand in the long...
At Tirumala, tradition asks pilgrims to see one deity before Lord Venkateswara himself: Sri Bhu Varaha Swamy, the boar incarnation (avatara) of Lord Vishnu. His shrine stands on the northern bank of the sacred...
The Abhishekam at the Arulmigu Subramania Swamy Temple, Tiruttani, is a sacred ritual bathing of Lord Murugan performed daily inside the hill sanctum. To attend, devotees reach the temple during darshan hours, take part...
Mokalla Parvatham (also written Mokalla Metlu) is the final, steepest flight of steps on the Alipiri footpath to Tirumala. It is the short but demanding last leg of the roughly 3,550-step Alipiri climb, made...