Temples in Dausa District Rajasthan - Complete Temple Directory of Dausa

Temples in Dausa District Rajasthan: Famous, Ancient & Hidden Mandirs

Contents

Jai Shree Ram ๐Ÿ™

Welcome to IndiaMandirโ€™s Temple Tour โ€” and we begin this journey from Dausa.

There are some places where you donโ€™t just visit โ€” you feel something shift inside you. You may be a regular devotee, a curious traveller, or someone who simply typed โ€œtemples in Dausa districtโ€ on Google without quite knowing why. But the moment you step into this land, something changes.

Maybe it is the bell of a mandir echoing through a quiet village lane. Maybe it is the dense, electric energy at Mehandipur Balaji that grabs you before you even cross the threshold. Or maybe it is just a small diya flickering near an ancient kund, burning faithfully for a god that this village has believed in for five hundred years.

Dausa โ€” just 60 km from Jaipur โ€” is known as Dev Nagari, the City of Gods. And once you visit, you understand exactly why that name has held for a thousand years. This page is your complete guide of temples in Dausa District (เคฆเฅŒเคธเคพ เค•เฅ‡ เคชเฅเคฐเคฎเฅเค– เคฎเค‚เคฆเคฟเคฐ) to every important temple in Dausa district โ€” from the most powerful pilgrimage sites to the hidden mandirs that only locals know. Let us begin.

About Temples in Dausa District โ€” Dev Nagari – The City of Gods

The Ancient Name and History of Dausa

Before it was Dausa, it was Devansh โ€” a Sanskrit name meaning protected from both sides. This was not a poetic choice but a geographic one: the city sat naturally sheltered by Devgiri hill on one side and the Aravalli terrain on the other.

In approximately 1137 CE, Kachhwaha Rajput king Doleray (also known as Duleh Rai) defeated the Badgujar rulers here and established Dausa as the capital of the Dhundhar region โ€” making it the predecessor capital to Jaipur, centuries before Jaipur was founded. The royal seat later moved to Amber and then Jaipur, but Dausa held onto its spiritual identity long after it ceased to be a political capital.

Over time, โ€œDevanshโ€ evolved in pronunciation to โ€œDausaโ€ โ€” and its cultural meaning became simply: swarg sa sundar โ€” beautiful like heaven.

On 10 April 1991, Dausa was officially constituted as Rajasthanโ€™s 29th district.

Why Dausa Is Called Dev Nagari

The title Dev Nagari is not a tourism label. It was earned through something specific and ancient: the presence of Panch Mahadev โ€” five Shiva temples positioned across the city, each dedicated to a different form of Lord Shiva, forming a sacred protective circle that has been maintained for over a thousand years.

Beyond the Panch Mahadev, Dausa holds an extraordinary density of sacred sites โ€” temples of all-India significance, ancient Shakti shrines, folk deity strongholds, perennial healing springs, and hundreds of village temples across its seven blocks. No district of comparable size in eastern Rajasthan carries this much living, daily-practice spirituality.

Faith That Is Personal, Not Commercial

Every village here has its own temple. Every family follows their kuldevi or kuldevta. Festivals are celebrated with genuine devotion โ€” not for tourists or social media โ€” because this is simply how it has always been done.

The kundas (sacred step-wells) that once supported entire communities are still maintained. Rituals are still performed exactly as they were a hundred years ago. The person who lights the first diya at the village shrine every morning is the grandchild of someone who did the same thing before them.

What you find in Dausa is increasingly rare in modern India: faith that is personal, not commercial. This is not tourism. This is darshan.

Quick Reference Dausa

District Overview

Dausa District โ€” At a Glance

Everything you need to know about Dausa before you begin your temple yatra.

๐Ÿ›• Quick Reference ยท Dausa District, Rajasthan Rajasthan’s 29th District
๐Ÿ“ Location Eastern Rajasthan, India
๐Ÿ™๏ธ Ancient Name Devansh โ€” Protected from both sides
๐Ÿ™๏ธ Also Known As Dev Nagari โ€” City of Gods
๐Ÿ“… Founded ~1137 CE by Kachhwaha king Doleray
๐Ÿ“… District Since 10 April 1991 โ€” Rajasthan’s 29th district
๐Ÿ›• Famous For
Mehandipur Balaji Panch Mahadev Paplaj Mata Harshat Mata Abhaneri
๐Ÿ™ Major Deities
Hanuman Ji Lord Shiva Mata Rani Lord Krishna Folk Devtas
๐Ÿš— From Jaipur ~60 km โ€” approx. 1 to 1.5 hours by road
๐Ÿš— From Delhi ~250 km โ€” via Delhiโ€“Mumbai Expressway / NH-21
๐Ÿš† Railway Dausa Railway Station โ€” Jaipurโ€“Agra route
โœˆ๏ธ Airport Jaipur International Airport (Sanganer) โ€” ~60 km
๐ŸŒค๏ธ Best Season October to March
๐ŸŽ‰ Major Festivals
Hanuman Jayanti Navratri Mahashivratri Sawan Lakhi Melas
๐Ÿ˜๏ธ Blocks
Dausa Bandikui Lalsot Mahwa Sikrai Ramgarh Pachwara Nangal Rajawatan

The Panch Mahadev of Dausa โ€” Five Shiva Temples, One Sacred Circle

Panch Mahadev Temples Dausa Rajasthan

Before exploring individual temples, there is something essential to understand about Dausaโ€™s spiritual geography: the Panch Mahadev โ€” the five ancient Shiva temples that form a sacred circle around the entire city.

This is why Dausa is called Dev Nagari. Five forms of Lord Shiva, five temples, one unbroken tradition spanning over a thousand years.

A complete parikrama (pilgrimage circuit) of all five โ€” particularly on Mahashivratri โ€” is considered one of the most meritorious acts a Shiva devotee can perform in all of Rajasthan.

Dausa District ยท Lord Shiva

The Panch Mahadev of Dausa

Five Shiva Temples ยท One Sacred Circle

Dausa is home to five ancient Shiva temples collectively revered as the Panch Mahadev โ€” a sacred parikrama circuit that devoted pilgrims complete together, especially on Mahashivratri. Each temple carries its own history, energy, and significance.

2
๐Ÿ”ฑ

Bajnath Mahadev

๐Ÿ“ Base of Devgiri Hill

Situated at the foot of Devgiri Hill, Bajnath Mahadev is the natural second stop in the Panch Mahadev parikrama circuit โ€” visited after descending from Neelkanth above.

Parikrama Circuit Devgiri Hill
3
๐Ÿ”ฑ

Sahajnath Mahadev

๐Ÿ“ Behind Bajnath, Dausa

Home to a rare south-facing (Dakshin Mukhi) Hanuman Ji alongside Ganesh Ji โ€” making this temple unique among the five. A spiritually powerful combination of deities in one sacred space.

Dakshin Mukhi Hanuman Ganesh Ji Rare Temple
4
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Somnath Mahadev

๐Ÿ“ Agra Road, Dausa

A 10th-century temple carrying the lifelong legacy of a devoted saint. The temple comes alive every Monday with devotees, bhajans, and offerings โ€” a living tradition maintained without interruption for over a thousand years.

10th Century Alive Every Monday Saint’s Legacy
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Gupteshwar Mahadev

๐Ÿ“ Western Dausa

The most complete campus of the five โ€” with a garden, sacred talab, and dharamshala for pilgrims. Carries 1,900 years of continuous history, making it one of the oldest active temples in the entire district.

1,900-Year History Garden + Talab Dharamshala

Each temple below is introduced with its key details, history, and what makes it spiritually significant. Full dedicated guides are linked for deeper reading.

Mehandipur Balaji Temple, Dausa

Mehandipur Balaji temple darshan Dausa Rajasthan
  • ๐Ÿ“ Location: Mehandipur Village, Sikrai Tehsil, Dausaโ€“Karauli border
  • ๐Ÿ™ Deity: Shri Balaji (Hanuman Ji), Kotwal Bhairav Ji, Pretraj Sarkar
  • ๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ Darshan Timings: 7:00 AMโ€“11:00 AM | 12:00 PMโ€“6:30 PM | 7:10 PMโ€“9:00 PM
  • ๐Ÿท๏ธ Type: Major All-India Pilgrimage Site
  • ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Distance: ~100 km from Jaipur | ~230 km from Delhi | 2.5 km from NH-21 at Balaji Mod
  • Famous across India for its unique spiritual healing practices
  • One of the most mysterious yet revered Hanuman temples in India

History and Origin

If there is one place that defines One of the best Temple in Dausa Districts, it is Mehandipur Balaji.

Situated between two Aravalli hills at the Dausaโ€“Karauli border โ€” which is why it is also called Ghata Mehandipur (the valley of Mehandipur) โ€” this approximately thousand-year-old temple was established after founding mahant Shri Ganesh Puri Maharaj received a divine vision. In that dream, all three deities appeared and commanded him to build a temple here and dedicate his life to the service of the suffering.

All three idols โ€” Balaji, Bhairav Ji, and Pretraj Sarkar โ€” are swayambhu: self-manifested from the Aravalli stone. No sculptor created them.

Why Famous / Significance

This is not a normal temple visit. The atmosphere hits you before you enter โ€” bells ringing continuously, devotees chanting, an energy impossible to describe.

The temple houses three distinct deities with three specific roles: – Shri Balaji โ€” Lord Hanuman in child form; King of Mehandipur; avatar of Shiva. A small hole in his chest continuously drips sacred water called Balaji ka Pasina โ€” sprinkled on devotees when the temple opens each morning – Kotwal Bhairav Ji โ€” the army captain; enforcer of divine justice – Pretraj Sarkar โ€” the chief punisher of evil forces; presides over the divine court

People arrive from every state in India โ€” with problems that medicine could not solve, with burdens carried too long. Many leave lighter.

๐Ÿš— How to Reach

  • By Road: NH-21 (Jaipurโ€“Agra Highway) โ†’ Balaji Mod โ†’ 2.5 km to temple. Delhiโ€“Mumbai Expressway also passes through Dausa
  • By Train: Bandikui Junction (~30 km) is nearest; buses/jeeps available for โ‚น50โ€“60

Parking: Available at โ‚น100โ€“โ‚น150

๐Ÿ‘‰ [Read the Complete Guide to Mehandipur Balaji Temple in Dausa โ€” timings, rituals, rules, stay options, budget โ†’]

Harshat Mata Temple, Abhaneri, Dausa

Harshat Mata temple Abhaneri Dausa district โ€” 9th century Pratihara architecture

๐Ÿ“ Location: Abhaneri Village (also: Abaneri), Nangal Rajawatan Tehsil, Dausa District

๐Ÿ™ Deity: Goddess Harshat Mata โ€” Goddess of Joy and Happiness (Shakti form)

๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ Timings: 6:00 AM โ€“ 6:00 PM (all days)

๐Ÿท๏ธ Type: Ancient Heritage Temple โ€” 8th to 9th Century CE (Pratihara period)

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Distance: ~35 km from Dausa city | ~95 km from Jaipur | ~230 km from Delhi

๐Ÿ“– History & Origin

Most people visit Abhaneri for Chand Baori โ€” the legendary 13-storey step-well with 3,500+ steps, one of the largest in the world. But directly opposite it stands something equally extraordinary: Harshat Mata Temple, built in the same period (8thโ€“9th century CE) by the same Nikumbha dynasty king, Raja Chanda.

Built in the Pratihara-era Mahamaru (Nagara) style, the templeโ€™s stone carvings are genuinely breathtaking โ€” apsaras, mythological panels, geometric precision that speaks to an era when art and devotion were inseparable.

The original idol of Harshat Mata was made of Neelam (sapphire gemstone) โ€” destroyed during 11th-century invasions. The shattered sculptures still visible around the temple walls are physical evidence of that history. The current idol is Goddess Lakshmi, worshipped as Harshat Mata.

Historically, pilgrims would bathe at Chand Baori before entering for darshan โ€” water and worship inseparable, as always in Rajasthan.

Chand Baori Abhaneri Dausa Harshat Mata Temple

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

โ€œHarshatโ€ means joy. Standing here, you feel it โ€” in the carved stone, the ancient proportions, the silence of a goddess who has watched over this village since the 9th century.

The temple is ASI-protected, partially in ruins, and completely alive. Locals come every day. On Jhaljhulni Ekadashi โ€” once a year โ€” locals are given rare permission to descend into Chand Baori and bathe in its waters.

๐Ÿš— How to Reach

  • By Road: NH-21 โ†’ Sikandra โ†’ Abhaneri village turnoff. Located beside Delhiโ€“Mumbai Expressway
  • By Train: Bandikui Junction (~8 km) is nearest station
  • Entry: Chand Baori entry โ‚น20 (UPI) / โ‚น25 (cash). Temple: free

๐Ÿ‘‰ [Read the Complete Guide to Harshat Mata Temple, Abhaneri โ€” history, architecture, carvings, visiting tips โ†’]

Neelkanth Mahadev Temple, Dausa

Neelkanth Mahadev temple Dausa district โ€” 365 steps on Devgiri hill Rajasthan

๐Ÿ“ Location: Top of Devgiri Hill, within old city walls, Dausa city ๐Ÿ™

Deity: Lord Shiva โ€” Neelkanth (the blue-throated one)

๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ Timings: 5:30 AMโ€“12:00 PM | 4:00 PMโ€“9:00 PM

๐Ÿท๏ธ Panch Mahadev: #1 โ€” Raja Baba, King among all five; largest Shivling

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Distance: Dausa city itself | ~60 km from Jaipur

๐Ÿ“– History & Origin

Reaching Neelkanth Mahadev requires passing through the narrow lanes of old Dausa โ€” then climbing 365 stone steps (one for every day of the year) to the highest point in the city.

This 9thโ€“11th century CE temple was established by kings of the Kush dynasty, sitting within the ancient walls (kaalon ki deewar) of historic Dausa. It is built entirely in Nagara style without any cement or binding material โ€” stone fitted against stone, intact for over a thousand years.

The Shivling here is unique: only the top is visible above the temple floor. The rest descends into the earth below โ€” a reference, in local belief, to the infinite Jyotirlinga that has no beginning and no end.

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

Neelkanth Mahadev delivers far more than darshan:

  • Largest Shivling of all five Panch Mahadev temples
  • 365-step climb โ€” devotees say the ascent itself is the worship
  • Bhootnath Baba in Aghore form โ€” a secondary shrine for serious practitioners
  • Sunrise and sunset views over the entire Dausa plain
  • Monsoon magic โ€” clouds visibly move below the hilltop; the hillside transforms from pale yellow to vivid green after the first rains

๐Ÿš— How to Reach

Located within Dausa city โ€” auto-rickshaw or cab from Dausa Railway Station (~2 km). The steps begin after walking through old Dausaโ€™s lanes.

๐Ÿ‘‰ [Read the Complete Guide to Neelkanth Mahadev Temple, Dausa โ€” the 365 steps, the Shivling story, Sawan Lakhi Mela โ†’]

Somnath Mahadev Temple, Dausa

Somnath Mahadev Temple, Dausa

๐Ÿ“ Location: Agra Road, Northern Dausa City

๐Ÿ™ Deity: Lord Shiva โ€” Somnath form

๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ Timings: Open all day; special gatherings on Mondays, Amavasya and Purnima

๐Ÿท๏ธ Panch Mahadev: #4

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Distance: Dausa city | ~60 km from Jaipur

๐Ÿ“– History & Origin

Believed to have been established around the 10th century โ€” when this area was still forested โ€” Somnath Mahadev Temple grew into the lifeโ€™s work of Saint Hira Nand Ji Maharaj, who served here for nearly 80 to 90 years until his passing in 2001. His disciple continued until 2011; a temple committee manages it today.

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

Somnathโ€™s beauty is in its ordinariness. On Mondays, local worshippers fill the beautiful courtyard. On Amavasya and Purnima, there are special gatherings and prasad distribution. No queues. No entry fees. No drama. Just regular people meeting their god โ€” the way it has been done here for a thousand years.

This is the kind of temple where faith feels most real because it is completely unperformed.

๐Ÿ‘‰ [Read the Complete Guide to Somnath Mahadev Temple, Dausa โ†’]

Gupteshwar Mahadev Temple, Dausa

Gupteshwar Mahadev Temple, Dausa

๐Ÿ“ Location: Western Dausa city (opposite direction from Somnath Mahadev)

๐Ÿ™ Deity: Lord Shiva โ€” Gupteshwar (the hidden, secret form)

๐Ÿท๏ธ Panch Mahadev: #5

๐Ÿ“… Established: ~1,900 years ago by Saint Bhagwan Das Ji Maharaj

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Distance: Dausa city | ~60 km from Jaipur

๐Ÿ“– History & Origin

The fifth Panch Mahadev is the most complete spiritual campus in Dausa. The tradition here is 1,900 years old โ€” established by Saint Bhagwan Das Ji Maharaj, with a recorded history that pre-dates most of the districtโ€™s other religious sites.

โ€œGupteshwarโ€ โ€” the hidden, secret Shiva โ€” represents the form of god that is always present but never announces itself. The name carries a quiet philosophy that the temple perfectly embodies.

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

Gupteshwar is the most unhurried of the five Mahadevs. Within one complex:

  • Ancient Shiva shrine (1,900-year-old tradition)
  • A beautifully maintained garden
  • A talab (natural pond) that reflects the sky and greenery
  • A dharamshala for overnight pilgrims

You can spend a half-day here and it still feels too short.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Full dedicated guide coming soon.

Paplaj Mata Temple, Lalsot (Ghata Village)

Paplaj-Mata-Mandir-Ghata-Dausa

๐Ÿ“ Location: Ghata Village, near Kutkya, Lalsot Tehsil, Dausa District (~20 km from Lalsot; ~65 km from Dausa city โ€” take Nangal turn-off on the Lalsot road)

๐Ÿ™ Deity: Paplaj Mata โ€” also called Aashapura (wish-fulfilling), a form of Goddess Durga

๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ Timings: 6:00 AMโ€“12:00 PM | 2:00 PMโ€“8:00 PM

๐Ÿ“… Age: ~1,000 years (idol: 788 years per ASI dating; site: ~1,100 years per Jaga Pothi)

๐Ÿท๏ธ Type: Shakti Temple / Kuldevi Shrine

๐Ÿ“– History & Origin

Nestled between three Aravalli hills in Ghata village, Paplaj Mata Temple is one of those places the internet has barely discovered โ€” but locals have been visiting for nearly a thousand years.

The 788-year-old idol in the sanctum is among the oldest continuously worshipped Shakti idols in Dausa district, as dated by the Archaeological Survey. The site itself is over 1,100 years old, confirmed in the Jaga Pothi โ€” the hereditary genealogical records of Rajasthan.

No one is entirely certain who built it. Some say the Meena lineage; others the Rajput lineage. What is consistent across all traditions: the goddess herself chose this spot. The temple was not built to establish worship โ€” it was built to honour what was already present.

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

Paplaj Mata is worshipped here as Aashapura โ€” the one who fulfills hopes โ€” and locally as โ€œNauakri dene wali Mataโ€ (the goddess who gives employment). The combination of this specific reputation and her Kuldevi status makes her intensely personal to thousands of families.

What makes this temple extraordinary:

  • Three interconnected shrines: main Paplaj Mata sanctum + Languriya temple in front + Bhairav temple on the hilltop
  • The Sapadawa โ€” a perennial natural spring beside the temple, believed to heal skin diseases, that has never run dry
  • The Kuai โ€” a sacred well that has never been recorded as empty
  • Her most beloved offering: Maalpua (sweet fried pancakes) โ€” known to every local, found nowhere in print
  • In monsoon: a magnificent waterfall behind the hills near Khatoombar village
  • Kuldevi for Meena, Bhil, Kumawat Rajput, Bairwa, Khatik, and dozens of communities from Rajasthan, Maharashtra, and Gujarat

๐Ÿš— How to Reach

From Jaipur or Dausa: NH-21 toward Lalsot โ†’ turn at Nangal (before reaching Lalsot town) โ†’ Ghata village. ~86 km from Jaipur; ~65 km from Dausa.

๐Ÿ‘‰ [Read the Complete Guide to Paplaj Mata Temple, Lalsot โ€” history, Sapadawa spring, Kuldevi traditions, Lakhi Mela โ†’]

Jhajhirampura Hanuman Mandir, Baswa, Dausa

Jhajhirampura Hanuman Mandir, Baswa, Dausa

๐Ÿ“ Location: Jhajhirampura Village, Baswa Tehsil, Dausa District (~20 km from Abhaneri; ~50 km from Dausa city; near Alwar border)

๐Ÿ™ Deity: Sankatmochan Hanuman Ji + Ekadash (11) Rudra Mahadev + Bhairav Nath Ji + Devnarayan Chouhan Ji + Jain Temples

๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ Timings: 5:30 AMโ€“12:00 PM | 4:00 PMโ€“8:30 PM (approx.)

๐Ÿท๏ธ Type: Multi-faith village sacred complex

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Listed by: Government of Rajasthan Tourism (official portal)

๐Ÿ“– History & Origin

Near the Alwar border, Jhajhirampura is one of the most spiritually distinctive โ€” and least-documented โ€” places in all of Dausa district. The Government of Rajasthan Tourism officially lists it, yet virtually no comprehensive guide to it exists anywhere online. This is that guide.

The village grew organically into a sacred space โ€” not because a king built a temple here, but because the land, the water, and the Aravalli hills made people feel something. And wherever people feel something, temples follow.

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

What makes Jhajhirampura genuinely rare is the full spectrum of sacred traditions within a single village:

  • Sankatmochan Hanuman Ji โ€” the primary shrine
  • Ekadash Rudra Mahadev โ€” eleven forms of Rudra worshipped together (rare in any temple across India)
  • Bhairav Nath Ji temple
  • Devnarayan Chouhan Ji temple โ€” the beloved folk deity of the Gurjar tradition
  • Jain temples โ€” ancient coexistence of multiple faiths on one sacred ground

The villageโ€™s most extraordinary feature: a Gaumukh kund where water flows in Gaumukh form (emerging from a cow-mouth rock formation) for all 12 months without interruption โ€” even through Rajasthanโ€™s harshest summer.

Behind the main complex, a hilltop Balaji shrine adds yet another dimension to the circuit. In monsoon, the Rudra Mahadev temple sits beside a natural waterfall.

๐Ÿš— How to Reach

  • By Train: Baswa Railway Station is only ~3 km from the village โ€” one of the most rail-accessible rural temple sites in Dausa
  • By Road: Jaipur โ†’ NH-21 โ†’ Bandikui โ†’ Baswa โ†’ Jhajhirampura (~92 km from Jaipur)
  • Combined day trip with Abhaneri (Harshat Mata + Chand Baori), only 15 km away

๐Ÿ‘‰ [Read the Complete Guide to Jhajhirampura Hanuman Mandir, Baswa โ€” all temples, the Gaumukh, how to reach โ†’]

Binori Balaji Temple, Lalsot

Binori Balaji Temple Lalsot Dausa

๐Ÿ“ Location: Lalsot, Dausa District

๐Ÿ™ Deity: Lord Hanuman (Balaji form)

๐Ÿท๏ธ Type: Second most important Balaji temple in Dausa district after Mehandipur

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

Binori Balaji holds one distinction no other temple in Dausa district can claim: for over 25 consecutive years, an unbroken Akhand Ramayana โ€” continuous, day-and-night recitation of the complete Ramcharitmanas โ€” has been maintained here without a single pause.

This is not an annual event. It is a permanent, 24-hours-a-day act of collective devotion that has not stopped for a quarter century.

In the Vaishnava tradition, Hanumanโ€™s entire being is absorbed in Ram-seva. A temple where Ramโ€™s story never stops being told, in Hanumanโ€™s presence โ€” the atmosphere here is something genuinely different from other shrines.

For Hanuman devotees visiting Lalsot for Paplaj Mata, Binori Balaji is an essential addition to the circuit.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Full dedicated guide coming soon.

Giriraj Dharan Temple, Dausa

Giriraj Dharan Temple Dausa

๐Ÿ“ Location: Agraโ€“Jaipur Main Highway (NH-21), Dausa city

๐Ÿ™ Deity: Lord Krishna as Giriraj Dharan (holding Govardhan mountain); Radha Krishna Ji; Sanwaliya Seth Ji
๐Ÿท๏ธ Architecture: Pink South Indian (Dravidian) style with Gopuram โ€” unique in Dausa

๐ŸŒŸ Why Famous / Significance

Standing directly on the Jaipurโ€“Agra highway is a temple that makes you stop โ€” because its pink South Indian Gopuram (entrance tower) looks like it was lifted from Tamil Nadu and placed, perfectly, in the Rajasthan plains.

This is the most famous Krishna temple in Dausa. Inside the main sanctum, Kanhaiya holds the Govardhan mountain on his little finger โ€” the iconic pose of the god who lifted a hill to shelter an entire community from Indraโ€™s fury.

To his left: Radha Krishna Ji. To his right: Sanwaliya Seth Ji โ€” the beloved folk form of Krishna worshipped across Rajasthan.

Behind the temple, the hills of Bankari village offer an off-beaten trek to an ancient Balaji and Kileshwar Mahadev shrine at the summit. On Janmashtami and Govardhan Puja, the temple celebrates with grand melas and Annakuta prasad distribution.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Full dedicated guide coming soon.

Village Mata Temples and Gram Devta Templesโ€” The Soul of Temples in Dausa

๐Ÿ“ Location: Across all seven blocks of Dausa District ๐Ÿ™

Deity: Kuldevi, Gram Devi, local Mata forms, regional Devtas

๐Ÿท๏ธ Type: Folk and Community Temples

If Mehandipur Balaji is the crown of Dausaโ€™s spiritual landscape, then these village temples are its roots.

Across every block โ€” Dausa, Bandikui, Lalsot, Mahwa, Sikrai, Ramgarh Pachwara, Nangal Rajawatan โ€” there are hundreds of small shrines, kund-side mandirs, and village deity temples that never appear in any travel article. They are not designed for visitors. They exist purely for the people who have been worshipping there for as long as anyone can remember. These temples carry something no famous pilgrimage site can manufacture: oral history. The story of when the mata appeared in a dream. The miracle at the kund. The festival that began after the year the rains finally came.

Village temples currently being documented by IndiaMandir:

  • Brahimani Mata Temple, Mandawari Village (Lalsot area)
  • Bijasan Mata Temple, Khura Village (Lalsot area)
  • Bayan Mata Ji Temple, Digo Village โ€” Goddess of safe childbirth; Sheetalashtami Mela
  • Pali Mata, Malwas Village โ€” Nangal Rajawatan area
  • Moroli Balaji Temple โ€” 300-year-old mandir near Amol Dham

If you know of a temple, shrine, or kund that should be recorded here โ€” reach out. Every sacred place deserves to be remembered.

Complete List of Temples in Dausa District

Also Explore While Visiting Temples in Dausa

IndiaMandir is a temple directory โ€” but when you travel to Dausa for darshan, these nearby places are worth a stop.

PlaceWhy Visit
Chand Baori, AbhaneriWorldโ€™s deepest stepwell; beside Harshat Mata; โ‚น20 entry
Getolav Bird Habitat, DausaNatural lake with Shiva temple at center; migratory birds in winter
Sant Sundar Das Ji PanoramaHeritage space of the great Nirgun Bhakti saint; initiated at age 6 by Dadu Dayal Ji
Morel Dam, LalsotRajasthanโ€™s largest earthen dam; stunning in monsoon
Bhandrej Ki Baori1732 CE three-storey stepwell near Delhiโ€“Mumbai Expressway
Hela Khayal Dangal, Lalsot300-year-old folk tradition performed at Gangaur festival

What to buy: Balahedi brass utensils, Lawan handmade dari, Baswa clay pottery, Sikandra red sandstone sculpture.

How to Reach Dausa District โ€” From Jaipur, Delhi & Agra

Dausa is one of the most accessible pilgrimage districts in Rajasthan โ€” connected by two major highways and a direct rail route, through which you may explore Temples in Dausa Distict.

By Road

FromDistanceTravel TimeRoute
Jaipur~60 km1โ€“1.5 hoursNH-21 (Jaipurโ€“Agra highway)
Delhi~250 km4.5โ€“5 hoursDelhiโ€“Mumbai Expressway via Dausa
Agra~230 km4โ€“4.5 hoursNH-21

RSRTC buses run regularly from Jaipur to Dausa town. Private cabs available from Jaipur and Delhi.

By Train

Dausa Railway Station is on the Jaipurโ€“Agra rail route โ€” approximately 1 hour from Jaipur Junction. Bandikui Junction (8 km from Abhaneri) and Baswa Station (3 km from Jhajhirampura) are also useful stops on the same line.

By Air

Jaipur International Airport (Sanganer) is approximately 60โ€“70 km away. Pre-book taxis for early morning darshan visits.

Within Dausa

Auto-rickshaws and shared jeeps connect local temple sites. Direct buses run from Dausa town to Mehandipur Balaji. For a full-day temple circuit covering multiple sites, a private taxi is most convenient.

Best Time to Visit Temples in Dausa District

Season Guide

SeasonMonthsVerdict
โญ IdealOctober โ€“ MarchPleasant weather; perfect for all temple visits
โš ๏ธ ChallengingApril โ€“ June42โ€“45ยฐC; visit only before 8 AM
๐ŸŒง๏ธ Unexpectedly BeautifulJuly โ€“ SeptemberGreen hills; kundas full; waterfalls flowing; spiritually intimate

Festival Calendar โ€” Best Times to Visit Temples in Dausa

FestivalTempleExperience
Hanuman Jayanti (Chaitra Purnima)Mehandipur BalajiLakhs of devotees; overnight ceremonies โ€” the most charged atmosphere in Dausa
Navratri (Chaitra & Ashwin)All Mata temples; Paplaj Mata peakJagran, dandiya, Lakhi Melas; pilgrims arriving on foot
MahashivratriAll five Panch MahadevComplete parikrama circuit; overnight abhishek
Sawan MonthNeelkanth Mahadev; all Shiva templesLakhi Mela; kanwar yatras; waterfall season
Bhadrapad AshtamiPaplaj Mata TemplePeak of the annual Lakhi Mela
JanmashtamiGiriraj Dharan TempleGrand mela + Annakuta prasad
Jhaljhulni EkadashiChand Baori, AbhaneriOnce-a-year permission to bathe in the baori

Temples in Nearby Districts โ€” Extend Your Yatra

Dausa sits at the heart of Rajasthanโ€™s richest spiritual corridor. Natural extensions of your journey:

๐Ÿ›• Jaipur District โ€” Govind Dev Ji Temple, Birla Mandir, Galtaji Monkey Temple, Moti Dungri Ganesh. Natural base for eastern Rajasthan. [โ†’ Read the Complete Guide to Temples in Jaipur District]

๐Ÿ›• Alwar District โ€” Ancient temples in the Aravalli hills; Neelkanth Temple at Rajgarh; Sariska heritage. [โ†’ Read the Complete Guide to Temples in Alwar District]

๐Ÿ›• Karauli District โ€” Kaila Devi Temple, one of the most revered Shakti peethas in North India. [โ†’ Read the Complete Guide to Temples in Karauli District]

๐Ÿ›• Sawai Madhopur District โ€” Trinetra Ganesh Temple at Ranthambore Fort โ€” the only three-eyed Ganesha temple in India. [โ†’ Read the Complete Guide to Temples in Sawai Madhopur District]

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) about Temples in Dausa District

Find answers to your common questions about temples of Dausa.

1: How many temples are in Dausa district? Dausa district has hundreds of temples across its seven blocks โ€” from major all-India pilgrimage sites like Mehandipur Balaji to ancient heritage temples like Harshat Mata at Abhaneri, the five Panch Mahadev Shiva temples of Dausa city, regional Shakti shrines like Paplaj Mata, and hundreds of village-level mandirs, gram devta shrines, and kund-side temples. IndiaMandir is actively documenting them all, with 20+ formally documented so far and the directory growing continuously.

2: Which is the most famous temple in Dausa district? Mehandipur Balaji Temple is the most famous temple in Dausa district and one of the most visited temples in all of India. Located at the Dausaโ€“Karauli border, it draws lakhs of devotees annually from across the country and is known for its unique spiritual healing rituals involving three swayambhu deities: Balaji, Kotwal Bhairav Ji, and Pretraj Sarkar.

3: What is Panch Mahadev Dausa? Panch Mahadev refers to five ancient Shiva temples positioned across Dausa city โ€” Neelkanth Mahadev (on Devgiri Hill), Bajnath Mahadev (at the hill base), Sahajnath Mahadev (behind Bajnath), Somnath Mahadev (on Agra Road), and Gupteshwar Mahadev (western Dausa). Together they form a sacred circle around the city and are the reason Dausa is called Dev Nagari โ€” the City of Gods. Completing a parikrama (pilgrimage circuit) of all five, particularly on Mahashivratri, is considered a great spiritual act.

4: What is the best time to visit temples in Dausa district? October to March is the best season for comfortable weather and easy temple access. However, for the most memorable spiritual experience, time your visit around a major festival: Hanuman Jayanti for Mehandipur Balaji, Navratri for all Mata temples (particularly Paplaj Mataโ€™s Lakhi Mela), Mahashivratri for the Panch Mahadev parikrama, or Sawan month for all Shiva temples. The monsoon (Julyโ€“September) is unexpectedly beautiful in Dausa โ€” green Aravalli hills, flowing kundas, and waterfalls at Jhajhirampura and Khatoombar.

5: How do I reach Dausa district from Jaipur and Delhi? From Jaipur: approximately 60 km via NH-21 (Jaipurโ€“Agra highway) โ€” about 1 to 1.5 hours by road. By train from Jaipur Junction, approximately 1 hour to Dausa station. From Delhi: approximately 250 km via the Delhiโ€“Mumbai Expressway passing through Dausa โ€” about 4.5 to 5 hours. RSRTC buses also run regularly from Jaipur to Dausa.

6: What are the Panch Mahadev temples in Dausa? Can they all be visited in one day? Yes. The five Panch Mahadev temples โ€” Neelkanth Mahadev, Bajnath Mahadev, Sahajnath Mahadev, Somnath Mahadev, and Gupteshwar Mahadev โ€” are all within Dausa city and can be visited in a single day. The most devoted pilgrims complete this circuit on foot on Mahashivratri. Starting at Neelkanth Mahadev (Devgiri hilltop) and working downward through the others is the natural sequence.

7: Is Paplaj Mata Temple in Dausa district? Yes. Paplaj Mata Temple is located in Ghata village, Lalsot Tehsil, Dausa district โ€” approximately 20 km from Lalsot town and 65 km from Dausa city. It is one of the most important Shakti temples in Dausa district and serves as the Kuldevi (clan goddess) for multiple communities including Meena, Bhil, Kumawat Rajput, and Bairwa. The temple site is over 1,100 years old.

8: What is special about the temples near Jaipur in Dausa? Dausa district offers a completely different temple experience from Jaipur โ€” less commercial, more personal, rooted in living folk traditions. Within 60โ€“100 km of Jaipur, you can experience Mehandipur Balaji (Indiaโ€™s most powerful healing temple), Harshat Mata at Abhaneri (beside the world-famous Chand Baori), Neelkanth Mahadev on Devgiri Hill (365 steps, monsoon cloud views), and dozens of undiscovered village temples. It is the temple heartland that most Jaipur visitors miss entirely.

A Few Last Words โ€” About Temples in Dausa

Some places give you photos. Some give you memories. Dausa gives you something harder to name.

A pause. A stillness. Something that quietly settles inside you and does not leave when you drive back to the city.

Maybe it is the bells at Mehandipur, ringing through a valley that has heard them for centuries. Maybe it is the stone face of Harshat Mata at Abhaneri, still watching over a step-well that was already ancient when she was carved. Maybe it is 365 steps in the morning mist climbing toward Neelkanth. Maybe it is just a village temple with one lamp burning and nobody watching โ€” faith so pure it has nothing to prove.

Whatever it is, it stays.

Come with an open heart. You will leave with something you did not expect to find.

Jai Bajrang Bali ๐Ÿ™ Har Har Mahadev ๐Ÿ™ Jai Mata Di ๐Ÿ™

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