Back/Praying Dates

    拜神吉日

    Praying Dates: Auspicious Chinese Dates for 2026

    Direct answer

    Praying dates are flexible cultural reference points. Many Chinese families pray on the 1st and 15th lunar days, deity birthdays, festival periods, or personal thanksgiving days rather than only on almanac-selected dates.

    Offerings, flowers, tea, and a lunar calendar prepared for Chinese prayers.
    Offerings, flowers, tea, and a lunar calendar prepared for Chinese prayers.

    Date options

    2026 auspicious dates

    excellent date

    February 17, 2026

    Lunar New Year period

    Clash: Snake

    Suitable

    Temple prayers, New year thanksgiving

    Avoid

    Crowd-insensitive photography

    Day officer: Open day. Expect heavy crowds at popular temples.

    good date

    September 25, 2026

    15th day of 8th lunar month period

    Clash: Pig

    Suitable

    Home altar prayers, Family thanksgiving

    Avoid

    Large burning where prohibited

    Day officer: Full moon prayer day. A family-centered prayer window near Mid-Autumn customs.

    Cultural context

    How to use these dates

    Prayer timing depends on the deity, temple, family altar, purpose, and personal schedule. For ordinary thanks, sincerity and respectful conduct matter more than chasing a rare date. For vow returns, temple rites, or major petitions, check temple guidance.

    Suitable activities

    • Temple visit
    • Home altar prayer
    • Thanksgiving
    • Vow return
    • First-and-fifteenth offerings

    Avoid or handle carefully

    • Blocking temple queues for photos
    • Burning offerings where prohibited
    • Making medical or financial decisions based on divination alone
    • Treating prayer as a guaranteed transaction

    Practical planning

    Date-selection checklist

    • Use 1st and 15th lunar days for regular home prayers when family custom supports it.
    • Use deity birthdays or temple festival days for deity-specific devotion.
    • Check temple hours, incense limits, and crowd controls.
    • Keep offerings modest, safe, and allowed by the site.

    Animal signs

    Zodiac clash notes

    Ordinary prayers usually do not require intense zodiac screening. For major vows or life events, families may check clashes for the petitioner.

    Timing

    Lunar-calendar context

    The 1st and 15th lunar days, Lunar New Year, deity birthdays, and major festivals are common prayer anchors across the diaspora.

    Read 2026 lunar calendar notes

    Local practice

    Regional and diaspora variations

    • Families in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Macau, Mainland China, Southeast Asia, North America, Europe, Australia, and Latin America may follow different almanacs, dialect customs, temple calendars, and elder advice.
    • Some households prioritize zodiac clashes and lunar day officers, while others prioritize practical constraints such as venue availability, work leave, school schedules, cemetery rules, or local fire regulations.
    • Diaspora communities often combine ancestral custom with local laws, apartment rules, public-health requirements, and the calendar used by the country where the event happens.
    • Some temples restrict joss paper, large incense, candles, or food offerings.
    • Buddhist, Taoist, and folk temples may have different altar order and etiquette.
    • Home altars should follow family custom and fire safety first.

    FAQ

    Frequently asked questions

    What are the most common prayer days?

    The 1st and 15th lunar days are common, along with Lunar New Year, deity birthdays, and personal thanksgiving dates.

    Do I need an auspicious date to pray?

    No. Many families pray when they are sincere, available, and able to do so respectfully.

    Limits

    Important disclaimer

    Auspicious-date guidance on Bai Bai is cultural and religious reference information for Chinese diaspora communities. It is not guaranteed fortune-telling, professional feng shui, medical advice, legal advice, financial advice, or a substitute for family elders, temple staff, qualified practitioners, or regulated professionals.