About Puri Beach
Puri Beach stretches along the Bay of Bengal for nearly 3 kilometres, its golden sands flanked by the holy town of Puri — one of India’s four sacred dhams. The beach is unlike any other in India: here, spirituality and leisure coexist, with pilgrims completing ritual dips alongside families building sandcastles and fishermen hauling their colourful boats ashore.
Why is Puri Famous?
Puri is home to the 12th-century Jagannath Temple, a magnificent structure visible from the beach whose kitchen is said to feed 10,000 devotees daily. The annual Rath Yatra (Chariot Festival) — when giant 14-metre chariots carrying Lord Jagannath are pulled through the streets by hundreds of thousands — is one of the world’s largest religious gatherings.
Historical & Cultural Importance
Puri has been a pilgrimage centre for over a millennium. Adi Shankaracharya established one of his four mathas (monasteries) here in the 8th century. The Pattachitra artists of nearby Raghurajpur have for centuries painted the story of Jagannath on palm leaf and cloth. The fishing community (Nolia) has inhabited this coast for generations and their fishing boats (patashipua) are the iconic image of Puri’s waterfront.
The Visitor Experience
Sunrise at Puri Beach is an unforgettable experience: the sky turns shades of orange and pink, devotees offer prayers at the water’s edge, and fishing boats return with the night’s catch. The beach road is lined with hotel-restaurants and souvenir shops. A horse ride along the shore and a camel ride at dusk are quintessentially Puri.
Why It’s Worth Visiting
Puri uniquely offers the beach holiday and the spiritual journey in one destination. Add in excellent Odishan cuisine (chhena poda, dalma, and the famous Puri rasagola), accessible day-trips to Konark and Chilika, and a warm welcome from the people of Odisha, and it is easy to understand why Puri draws millions of visitors every year.