Main Festivals in Laos
Festivals/Holiday | Time | Brief Description |
Lao New Year Festival-Boun Pi Mai | In the 5th month of the Buddhist calendar, around mid-April, lasting 3 days. | It is equivalent to the Chinese Spring Festival, and thus the most solemn festival among Lao people. During the festival, Laotians worship Buddha, bathe in the Buddha's body and splash water at the monastery. People splash water on each other at home and on the street to bless each other and let the pure water wash away past diseases and calamities, and pray for abundant rain and abundant crops in the coming year to welcome a wonderful new year. |
Pha That Luang Festival | In the 12th month of the Buddhist calendar (November of the Gregorian calendar), lasting a half month. | Pha That Luang Festival is named because it is held in Pha That Luang. That Luang Stupa is both a Buddhist shrine in Laos and a national symbol of Laos. Pha That Luang is the largest and most grand traditional religious festival in Vientiane, the capital city. During the festival, a steady stream of monks from all over the country make pilgrimages to Wat That Luang, and Buddhists also bring various kinds of food, incense and candles, flowers, money, etc., to Pha That Luang to worship the Buddha, listen to the senior monks chanting and praying for good luck. |
Boun Khoun Khao- Rice Festival | In March | Khoun Khao Festival reflects and honors agriculture of Laos, taking place in various villages throughout the month. The festival appreciates the spirit and abundance of the land as well as the rice harvest. During the ceremony, a senior in the village ties a white cotton strings around people’s wrists and pray for their happiness. |
Boun Bang Fai- Rocket Festival | Between May and September | Every year in May, just before the rainy season, the traditional annual folk festival, the Rocket Festival, is celebrated on a grand scale throughout Laos. At this joyous event, people launch homemade rockets into the sky to pray to the god of rain for abundant rainfall during the upcoming agricultural season. |
Bouk Ok Pansa and Boat Racing Festival of Laos | In the 12th month of the Buddhist calendar (October of the Gregorian calendar) | Bouk Ok Pansa symbolizes the end of the three-month rainy season and the beginning of the receding of the Mekong River. On the day of the festival, people celebrate by launching lantern boats on the Mekong River, and the next day is the Boat Racing Festival, where dragon boat races are held. After the festival, monks are allowed to go out and people can resume their marriages. |
National Day | On December 2nd | The Central Committee of the Lao Patriotic Front held a National People's Congress in Vientiane, the capital, on December 1-2, 1975, which proclaimed the establishment of the Lao People's Democratic Republic. As a result, December 2 became the National Day of Laos. |