
Today at this temple
Quick facts
- Primary deity
- शिव
- Tradition
- shaiva
- Year founded
- ancient
- Founder
- नाना फडणवीस
- Managing trust
- श्री भीमाशंकर देवस्थान ट्रस्ट
- Daily footfall
- 8,000+ daily
- Photography
- outside_only
- Non-Hindu policy
- all_welcome
- Dress code
- Modest traditional attire. Footwear deposited at entrance. Leather items permitted in compound but not sanctum. Mobile phones and cameras not permitted inside sanctum.
- Accessibility
- —
- VIP darshan
- —
- Typical visit
- 45–120 min
Sthala Purana — the story
The Shiva Purana narrates the origin: Bhima, son of the rakshasa Kumbhakarna (Ravana's brother), was raised by his mother Karkati in secret after his father's death in the Ramayana war. As Bhima grew, his mother revealed his father's identity; burning with vengeance, Bhima performed severe tapasya and won a boon from Brahma. He then conquered the world and specifically targeted Kamarupeshwar, a Brahmin-king of great devotion to Shiva. Captured and imprisoned, Kamarupeshwar continued his Shiva worship in the dungeon. When Bhima, in rage, raised his sword to destroy the linga Kamarupeshwar was worshipping, Shiva himself manifested from the linga as a blazing pillar of fire (jyoti). The battle between Shiva and Bhima was fierce — the heat from the encounter caused Shiva to sweat profusely, and that sweat became the source of the Bhima river at this Sahyadri site. After reducing Bhima to ashes, Shiva — at the entreaty of the devas — agreed to remain at this site as Bhimashankar, the Shankara-victor over Bhima. The broad, flat shape of the Jyotirlinga is said to reflect this post-battle manifestation.
References: Shiva Purana Koti Rudra Samhita, Jyotirlinga enumeration; Bhima-demon narrative · Skanda Purana Sahyadri Khanda · Linga Purana Chapters on Shiva manifestations · Maratha-era devotional literature Nana Phadnavis's patronage records
Darshan & aartis
- 04:30काकड आरती45 min · Pre-dawn awakening aarti; first darshan of the day
- 12:00मध्याह्न आरती30 min · Noon aarti and naivedya; sanctum closes for 2.5 hours after
- 18:30संध्या आरती45 min · Evening aarti with deep aradhana
- 21:00शयन आरती30 min · Final night aarti; sanctum closes at 21:30
Plan your visit
Pune International (PNQ) — 115 km, 3 hr 15 min by road
Pune Junction — 110 km, 3 hr by road
Parking at the hilltop complex — 240 steps descent to the temple. ₹50 for cars, ₹20 for two-wheelers. Narrow winding Sahyadri ghat road — allow extra time.
✓
MTDC Resort Bhimashankar (2 km) · Bhimashankar Devasthan Bhakta Niwas (0.5 km) · Green Park Hill Resort (8 km) · Pune-based accommodation (for day trips) (110 km)
Temple prasad (pedha, sukhadi) · Devasthan Bhojanalaya · MTDC Restaurant · Local poha and chai stalls near parking
October to February is the ideal season — cool, pleasant Sahyadri weather (15-22°C), clear mountain views, and manageable crowds. July-September monsoon is spectacular but trails become slippery and the ghat road can be risky. Avoid Shravan Mondays (Jul-Aug) and Mahashivratri unless you're prepared for 4-6 hour queues. Pre-dawn arrival for Kakada Aarti (4:30 AM) + sunrise on the Sahyadri peaks from the temple is the signature Bhimashankar experience. Combine with the Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary walk (guided Giant Squirrel sighting tours, 2-3 hours).
- Comfortable closed-toe walking shoes — 240 steps each way, uneven stone path
- Bilva patra, dhatura, and a small container for Bhima-jal from the springhead
- Warm layer in monsoon and winter (misty Sahyadri altitudes, 15-20°C even in summer morning; 8-12°C overnight in winter)
- Raincoat / poncho if visiting June-September (monsoon rainfall is heavy)
- Torch / headlamp (power outages not uncommon; steps can be dark pre-dawn)
- Water and light snacks for the drive and the 240-step climb back
- Motion-sickness tablets if prone — the winding ghat road is intense
Gallery & media








Deity & iconography
- Vahana
- Nandi (in the mandapa, facing the sanctum)
- Adornments
- Daily abhishekam with spring water; bilva patra and rudraksha-mala offerings; silver-embossed sanctum doors with Maratha-era iconography
- Favored bhoga
- Bilva patra · dhatura · Bhima river water · panchamrit
- Mantras chanted here
- Om Namah Shivaya · Mahamrityunjaya Mantra · Bhimashankar Stotram · Rudrashtadhyayi
- Worship purpose
- Protection from demonic influences (the Jyotirlinga arose from Shiva's victory over the demon Bhima); blessings for physical strength and endurance
Architecture & art
Bhimashankar is a Nagara-style temple with strong Hemadpanti Yadava-era stonework — dressed black-basalt blocks characteristic of Deccan medieval architecture. The current shikhara and the bulk of the outer structure owe to Nana Phadnavis's late-18th-century reconstruction. The sanctum is relatively compact; the mandapa in front holds a large Roman-origin bronze bell — a war trophy from the 1739 Vasai campaign, hung here by Chimaji Appa after defeating the Portuguese. The Bhima river's spring source rises within the compound — pilgrims can offer Bhima-jal directly drawn from the springhead. The surrounding Sahyadri forest (Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary) adds an ecological dimension uncommon at major Jyotirlingas.
- Style
- Nagara with Hemadpanti Yadava-era layers; Nana Phadnavis commissioned the current shikhara expansion in the late 18th century; the bulky dressed-stone sanctum predates the Maratha period
- Built of
- Dressed black basalt stone (the characteristic material of Sahyadri Hemadpanti temples); stone shikhara; sanctum in stone with a relatively simple interior
- Notable features
- Jyotirlinga linga is unusually broad and flat — distinct from other Jyotirlingas · source of Bhima river originates from a spring within the compound · surrounded by Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary (home to the Indian Giant Squirrel / Shekaru, Maharashtra's state animal) · Kamalaja Devi shrine within the compound · ancient Roman bell from Vasai, a gift from Chimaji Appa after defeating the Portuguese (1739)
- Protection status
- trust_managed
History timeline
- Ancient (traditional)
The Shiva Purana narrates the Bhimashankar origin: the demon Bhima, son of Kumbhakarna (Ravana's brother), raised without knowing his father's fate, grew into a tyrant who terrorised the Brahmin king Kamarupeshwar — a devout Shiva bhakta. When Bhima attempted to destroy a Shiva linga in Kamarupeshwar's dungeon, Shiva manifested from the linga as a blazing pillar of fire (jyoti), engaged Bhima in battle, and reduced him to ashes. At the devas' request, Shiva remained at the site as Bhimashankar. The intense heat of the battle caused Shiva to sweat, and the Bhima river originates from that sweat at this Sahyadri peak.
- Yadava dynasty (12th-14th c.)
The characteristic Hemadpanti-style stone construction of the sanctum dates from the Yadava period of the Deccan. The sturdy black-basalt dressed stonework is architecturally continuous with other Hemadpanti temples across Maharashtra (Shivale, Markandi, Varadi).
- 1739
Peshwa general Chimaji Appa, after defeating the Portuguese at Vasai (Bassein), brings the large Roman bronze bell from the Vasai fort chapel and installs it at Bhimashankar — a war trophy re-purposed for Shiva seva. The bell continues to hang in the mandapa to this day.
- Late 18th century
Nana Phadnavis, one of the most powerful Peshwa-era statesmen, commissions the current shikhara and significant structural restorations. Nana's bhakti for Bhimashankar is well-recorded; he funded the construction personally.
- 1984
Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary declared — 130 sq km of surrounding Sahyadri forest protected specifically as habitat for the Indian Giant Squirrel (Ratufa indica, Maharashtra state animal). The temple and sanctuary share the same ecological space.
- 2000s-2010s
Road access from Pune (110 km, 3 hr) significantly improved. Devasthan Trust expands pilgrim amenities, parking, and forest-protected walking paths. Temple administration comes under the Maharashtra Endowments Department oversight.
- Annual cycle
Year-round access; Mahashivratri (Feb-Mar) and Shravan Mondays (Jul-Aug) are the peak pilgrim days. Monsoon (Jun-Sep) is spectacular for the misty Sahyadri setting but some trails can be slippery.
Special phenomena
Source of the Bhima river
A natural spring within the temple compound is the official source of the Bhima river — said to be Shiva's sweat after battling Bhima. The river flows 725 km to join the Krishna; its entire course is sanctified by this source. Pilgrims collect Bhima-jal from the springhead.
Vasai bronze bell
The mandapa hangs a large Roman-origin bronze bell brought by Peshwa general Chimaji Appa from the Vasai fort chapel after the 1739 campaign against the Portuguese. A war trophy repurposed for Shiva seva — a unique historical artefact at a Jyotirlinga.
Indian Giant Squirrel habitat
The Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary (130 sq km) surrounding the temple is the principal protected habitat of the Indian Giant Squirrel (Ratufa indica, Maharashtra state animal). Pilgrims walking forest trails to the temple often see the squirrel — a rust-red mammal with a 60 cm bushy tail. The temple-sanctuary integration is unique among Jyotirlingas.
Poojas & sevas offered here
No bookable poojas listed yet
Festivals & signature events
- Signatureमहाशिवरात्रिAnnual
Location & nearby temples
Scriptural references
- Shiva Purana
- Koti Rudra Samhita, Jyotirlinga enumeration; Bhima-demon narrative
- Skanda Purana
- Sahyadri Khanda
- Linga Purana
- Chapters on Shiva manifestations
- Maratha-era devotional literature
- Nana Phadnavis's patronage records
Sources & credits
✓ Verified by 2026-04-24. Seeded from training knowledge + source JSON + Trust/Maharashtra Tourism/Wikipedia references. Pandit review pending for: exact current aarti timings (verify against Devasthan schedule), exact step count (240 widely cited but varies slightly across sources), shikhara height (no reliable figure, left null). Bhimashankar debate — a rival Bhimashankar claim exists in Assam (Kashipur); the Maharashtra Sahyadri site is the mainstream consensus per Shiva Purana traditions and is what this record describes. Video metadata intentionally empty.