Celebrating Holi - the Hindu festival brings its array of colours to India and elsewhere

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Getty Images People react as fellow students throw colored powder in her face at the Holi or Color Festival Celebration near Kolkata, India, on March 13, 2025.Getty Images

The festival is celebrated across India, but is most popular in northern and eastern states

Millions of people are celebrating Holi, the festival of colours, in India and across the world.

The spring festival, which celebrates the victory of good over evil, also marks the end of winter.

People offer prayers, smear bright colours on family and friends and eat traditional food and sweets to celebrate. They also gather on the streets and throw colours on each other.

Holi is based on the Hindu legend of Holika, a female demon, who tries to kill her nephew Prahlad because he worships the Hindu god Vishnu. But Prahlad miraculously survives the burning fire even as Holika is consumed by the flames.

People light bonfires the evening before Holi in the belief this will destroy the bad so that good can triumph.

Many devotees also believe the festival honours the divine love of Hindu deities Radha and Krishna. Colourful celebrations are held in the northern Indian cities of Mathura and Vrindavan, which are associated with Krishna's birth and childhood.

Music plays a big role as people dance to traditional and film songs celebrating Holi as they throw colours.

Children use toy pistols and dispensers to squirt coloured water at their friends.

A traditional beverage called thandai, a milk-based drink sweetened with dry fruits, is enjoyed on the day.

Holi is also celebrated with enthusiasm in Nepal, which has a majority Hindu population.

Getty Images Revellers smear coloured powder on one another during Holi festival celebrations, at Girgoan, on March 14, 2025 in Mumbai, India.Getty Images

On Holi, many people come out on the streets and throw colour on each other

Getty Images A group of women play with colored powder during the Holi festival in Kolkata, India, on March 3, 2026.Getty Images

Bright colours in shades of reds, pinks, yellows and greens are smeared on friends and family to celebrate the festival

Getty Images Youngsters smeared with coloured powder to celebrate Holi, the Festival of Colours, at Nerul , on March 14, 2025 in Navi Mumbai, India.Getty Images

While Holi is a Hindu festival, people across religions often join in the festivities

Getty Images Revellers celebrate Lathmar Holi, the Hindu spring festival of colours, in Nandgaon near Mathura on February 26, 2026.Getty Images

Huge crowds gather in many places across northern India to celebrate

Getty Images Devotees gather around a ceremonial bonfire during Holika Dahan, marking the victory of good over evil on the eve of Holi. Getty Images

A day before Holi, people light huge bonfires to mark the victory of good over evil

Getty Images Hindus in Kenya take part in the 'Holi' festival, a celebration of colors and the arrival of spring in Indian culture on March 1, 2026 in Nairobi, Kenya.Getty Images

The festival is also celebrated by the Indian diaspora abroad. Here, Hindus in Kenya are celebrating Holi

Reuters A girl sprays her friend with water during holi celebrations in Mumbai, India, March 14, 2025.Reuters

Children play with water pistols or throw balloons filled with water and colour on each other

Getty Images Gujiya (Gujhia), a traditional Indian sweet, garnished with coconut flakes, is displayed during the Mithai Mela, an Indian sweets fair, for the upcoming festival of Diwali in Brampton, Ontario, Canada, on October 18, 2025.Getty Images

Gujiya, a deep-fried sweet stuffed with coconut and dry fruits, is enjoyed on Holi

Getty Images KATHMANDU, NEPAL - 2026/03/02: A woman smeared with vermilion powder fires a color smoke bomb during the Holi festival celebration. The Holi festival is celebrated to mark the victory of good over evil and also symbolizes the arrival of the spring season.Getty Images

Holi is also celebrated enthusiastically in Nepal, which has a majority Hindu population

Getty Images Indian Widows throw colorful powders and flower petals at each other as they dance during a celebration of Holi or 'festival of colors' at Gopinath Temple in Vrindavan.Getty Images

In Vrindavan, Hindu widows celebrate the festival by throwing flower petals and colour on each other

Getty Images Japanese tourists celebrate Holi, the Hindu spring festival of colours, along a road in New Delhi on March 14, 2025.Getty Images

Tourists also partake in the celebrations to experience a slice of Indian culture

Getty Images A seller organizes various color powders called ''abir'' for sale at a market ahead of the Holi festival celebration in Kolkata, India, on February 25, 2026. Getty Images

Shops and market stalls, such as this one in Kolkata, began selling coloured powder and water pistols days before the festival

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