
In 2025, Jagannath Yatra isn’t just a spiritual event. It’s a marketing goldmine. With over 1.5 crore pilgrims expected in Puri, ad spends for this year’s Rath Yatra have surged 14 times—from ₹3-4 crore in 2024 to an estimated ₹50-60 crore, according to Shruti Haresh Chaturvedi, founder of Chaaipani, the official brand activation agency for the Puri District Administration.
For the average devotee, this means better facilities, more comfort, and a surprisingly branded experience.

Think bio-toilets with logos, rest zones sponsored by cola companies, and mattresses that double as marketing. From food, drinks, lockers, showers, to even luggage rooms—brands are suddenly everywhere, and they’re solving real problems.
Why now? Because India’s spiritual economy is booming. After a blockbuster Maha Kumbh campaign earlier this year, companies have realized that devotion delivers footfall—and eyeballs.
This year, 26 brands have already signed on, with another dozen in the pipeline. Even Swiggy is delivering prasad across eight cities for those who can’t make it.
But here’s the twist: it’s not just hoardings anymore. Brands are offering cooling jackets for cops, building shaded areas near the beach, and feeding 1.5 lakh people a day with sponsored maha prasad.
Chaturvedi says locker rooms and co-branded apparel are also in demand, with packages starting at ₹15 lakh and going up to ₹2.5 crore.
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“There’s too much clutter at events like these,” she explains. “So, we shifted from billboards to solutions.” In short: less shouting, more serving.
The strategy is working. National brands—once hesitant—are now crowding into a space that was earlier dominated by regional players. And the Puri District Administration has helped by opening up to national agencies this year for the first time.
There’s also a push online. Social media accounts for 30% of all marketing activity, with influencer collaborations leading the charge. Around 19 influencers will be on the ground creating content and giving brands shoutouts, adding digital reach to physical presence.
This isn’t just a one-off. With events like Ambubachi Mahayog, Bali Yatra, and Wari Yatra lining up next, more brands are asking to be part of India’s faith circuit. And Gen Z—once thought to be “too cool” for religion—is turning up in massive numbers, smartphone in hand and devotion in heart.
Faith sells. But more than that—it connects. And brands that help a tired pilgrim catch a breath, store a bag, or cool down with a mist fan? They’re the ones who’ll be remembered—long after the Rath is parked.
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