You pick the shubh tithi. The acharya raises the sankalp at the temple in your name on that very day.
Complete your Vedic ritual for family disturbances and parent–child conflict, choose the package for your family.




Each offering is carried in your name-gotra as part of the same ritual at the temple.





Many devotees add one of these alongside the puja, for gratitude, ancestral remembrance, or a simple act of giving.
Watch real puja & chadhava deliveries, sent to devotees on WhatsApp after completion.
Shri Dashashwamedh Ghat sits on the western bank of the Ganga in Varanasi — the ghat named for Brahma's Dasha-Ashwamedha yagna, performed personally by Brahma to welcome Shiva back to Kashi. Per Skanda Purana, this is India's supreme Pitru-Tarpan kshetra — where every family's vansh-naam, when spoken into the Ganga current with til-kusha and Vishnu-pad bhasma, releases the Pitru-rin that the lineage has carried.
The acharya performs the Pitru tarpan with full Vedic vidhi — til-kusha-jal arpan, tri-pind tarpan in your vansh-naam across three generations, Vishnu-pad bhasma sealed at the ghat, and Ganga-jal asthi-bhasma visarjan. Every step is performed only for your family's departed.
Devotees usually want the tarpan carried with care — a clear vidhi, a clear video, and a clear sankalp at the Ganga where Brahma himself first carried the yagna.
You pick the shubh tithi. The acharya raises the sankalp at the temple in your name on that very day.
Every mantra, every sankalp-jal, every offering is performed for your naam-gotra alone. No other devotee’s name enters this sankalp.
The recorded video is of your family’s sankalp only. It is never bundled with another devotee’s name in the same recording.
The Dashashwamedh Pitru-Tarpan Special Puja is performed at Shri Dashashwamedh Ghat on the Ganga in Varanasi — the ghat where, per Skanda Purana, Brahma himself performed the Dasha-Ashwamedha yagna. The vidhi includes tri-pind tarpan in your vansh-naam-gotra, Ganga-jal asthi-bhasma visarjan, Vishnu-pad bhasma sealed at ghat — only on your family's naam-gotra, on the tithi you choose.