There is a particular kind of relief that settles over a farming community once the sowing is finally done — the soil turned, the seeds in the ground, and nothing left to do but wait for the rains to do their work. For the Sumi Naga people of Nagaland, that relief has a name and a date: Tuluni, the festival that turns the pause between sowing and harvest into the grandest, most anticipated celebration of the entire year.
Tuluni is the most important festival of the Sumi tribe, celebrated annually from July 8 across Sumi villages in Nagaland — most prominently in Zunheboto district, but also widely observed wherever Sumi communities live, including parts of Dimapur and Niuland. The Nagaland Tourism Department describes it as a festival marked by feasts, betrothals, and reconciliation, occurring at the start of the bountiful season of the year. If you want to understand Naga culture beyond the spectacle of the Hornbill Festival, Tuluni offers something quieter, older, and in many ways more revealing of how Naga communities actually live.
Quick Facts: Tuluni Festival
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Festival | Tuluni (also called Anni) |
| Date | Starts July 8 annually |
| Duration | 5–7 days, varying by region and era |
| Celebrated By | Sumi (Sema) Naga tribe |
| Where | Zunheboto district and Sumi communities across Nagaland |
| Deity Invoked | Litsaba, giver of fruitfulness |
| Core Rituals | Betrothal exchanges, communal feasting, rice beer offerings |
| Named Drink | Tuluni (rice beer, also called Anni) |
| Clan Variations | Swu (Sumi) and Tuku (Tukumi) — differing gennas and rites |
| Signature Dish | Axone (fermented soybean) with smoked pork |
| Indigenous Sport | Aki Kiti (traditional Sumi kick-fighting) |
| Related Festival | Ahuna (post-harvest thanksgiving, in November) |
| ILP Required | Yes — mandatory for all non-domiciled Indian citizens |

Sowing vs. Harvest: The Agricultural Meaning Behind the “Anni” Season
The name Tuluni refers directly to the rice beer brewed and consumed during the festival — drinking this wine is, in the most literal sense, what gives the occasion its name. The alternative name, Anni, denotes the season of plentiful crops, tying the celebration to the agricultural calendar that governs Sumi village life.
Tuluni falls at a specific point in the farming year: after sowing is complete, but well before harvest. It is the festival of the in-between — a moment when the hardest physical labour has concluded, the season’s outcome is still unknown, and the community pauses to celebrate the effort itself. This becomes clearer set against Ahuna, the Sumi’s other major festival, held in November once the harvest is actually secured.
Invoking Litsaba: Ancient Ritual Offerings and Clan Variations
Central to the festival’s spiritual dimension is Litsaba, the deity regarded as the giver of fruitfulness. Prayers are offered throughout Tuluni, asking that the land and the lives of the people be blessed with fruition, prosperity, and longevity — offerings of rice, meat, and the festival’s namesake wine are presented as part of these prayers.
Tuluni rituals vary between Sumi clans. The two main groups—Swu (Sumi proper) and Tuku (Tukumi)—follow different traditions. Swu families perform ceremonies inside the home, offering meat and rice beer to ancestral spirits, while Tuku families conduct rituals outdoors around a banana tree, offering rice beer and mint as prayers for harmony and friendship. As a result, Tuluni celebrations can differ noticeably from one village to another across Zunheboto district.
The Zunheboto Social Blueprint: Agricultural Working Groups and Feast Sharing

To understand Tuluni properly, it helps to understand how Sumi farming communities organise their labour, since this directly shapes how the festival unfolds.
Tuluni celebrates not only the harvest season but also the spirit of cooperation that sustains Sumi communities. Traditionally, cultivators work in groups of 20–30 people, pooling resources throughout the farming season to fund a communal feast. Pigs or cattle are slaughtered, the meat is shared among members, and group leaders receive special portions in recognition of their contributions. New members are also formally welcomed during the festivities, making Tuluni a celebration of community, belonging, and shared achievement as much as an agricultural festival.
A Week Built Around Ritual: How Tuluni Unfolds
Tuluni was traditionally celebrated over five days, though many communities now observe it for a full week. In the traditional Sümi calendar, each day was linked to a specific agricultural ritual. The first day, Asüzani, focused on village cleaning and honoured Italian millet, while the second, Aghizani, was dedicated to paddy cultivation. The final day, Tüghakhani, was observed with quiet reverence, with village gates closed and activities restricted to ward off misfortune.
Modern celebrations often follow a broader community-focused schedule that includes feasting, family visits, crop blessings, and dedicated leisure activities. While the names and sequence may differ between villages, Tuluni remains a living tradition shaped by local customs across the Sümi region.

Betrothal, Unions, and Conflict Resolution: The Social Heart of Tuluni
What sets Tuluni apart from many other harvest festivals across Northeast India is its deep entanglement with marriage customs and social bonding.
The Engagement Feast: Customary Gift Exchanges Between Sumi Families
Tuluni is considered an auspicious time for betrothals and strengthening family ties. Engaged couples often observe the custom of Alhukho Pekili, where the groom-to-be visits his fiancée’s family for a ceremonial feast, accompanied by friends. Families exchange gifts and meat as symbols of goodwill, reinforcing bonds between both households.
The festival is also closely associated with reconciliation and community harmony. Shared feasts and gift exchanges provide opportunities to mend strained relationships, while married daughters traditionally return to their parental homes and are welcomed with gifts before they leave.
Feasting Protocols: Plantain Goblets, Axone, and Sacred Rice Wine
Food and drink are central to Tuluni celebrations. Preparations begin well in advance, with rice wine—known as Tuluni or Anni—brewed in large quantities and traditionally served in cups made from plantain leaves. Communal feasts feature pork, rice, and rice wine, which are also offered during traditional prayers.
A key part of the feast is Axone (Akhuni), the fermented soybean delicacy closely associated with the Sümi community. Typically cooked with smoked pork, its rich, distinctive flavour makes it one of the signature dishes served during Tuluni gatherings.
Beyond the Hornbill Festival: Witnessing Aki Kiti and Traditional Sports
The Tuluni festival is marked by folk songs, dances, indigenous games, and youth competitions. One of the most distinctive traditions is Aki Kiti, the Sümi tribe’s traditional form of kick fighting, where competitors use only their feet to attack and defend within a circular ring.
Historically used as a non-lethal way to settle disputes, Aki Kiti remains an important part of Sümi cultural heritage. Today, it is showcased at cultural events such as the Hornbill Festival and local tournaments across Zunheboto.

Navigating the Monsoon: The Complete Travel Logistics to Zunheboto
Securing Your Nagaland Inner Line Permit (ILP)
This is the most important logistical point for any visitor: all Indian citizens who are not residents of Nagaland require a valid Inner Line Permit to enter the state, including Zunheboto district. There is no general tourist exemption — the one narrow exception is Dimapur city, where air arrivals can stay without an ILP, though one is still required to travel onward anywhere else.
Apply online through the official Nagaland ILP Portal, where all applications have been processed digitally since January 2025. Tourist applications submitted during working hours are typically approved within about four hours. The tourist ILP carries a modest fee and is generally valid 15 to 30 days, extendable at the Deputy Commissioner’s office if needed. Offline applications can also be made at Nagaland House offices in Delhi, Kolkata, Guwahati, and Shillong, or directly at Dimapur and Kohima. Foreign nationals no longer need a separate Protected Area Permit but must register with the local Foreigners Registration Office on arrival.
Apply well before travel, and carry a printed copy in a waterproof sleeve — checkposts in remote areas cannot always verify a digital copy if mobile networks are disrupted by monsoon weather.
Also Read: How to Apply For Travel Permits for Traveling to Northeast India
Road Conditions and Vehicle Requirements for a July Expedition
Tuluni’s early July date places it squarely in the peak of the Northeast monsoon, with real consequences for anyone driving to Zunheboto.
By air, the nearest airport is Dimapur Airport, which has regular connections to major cities such as Kolkata, Guwahati, and Delhi. By train, Dimapur Railway Station is the closest railhead, with onward travel by road.
The road journey from Dimapur to Zunheboto covers about 130 km and typically takes 4–5 hours in good conditions, though monsoon-related landslides and road damage can significantly increase travel times. A high-clearance vehicle is recommended, and travellers should allow extra time for weather-related delays. Similar precautions apply when travelling from Kohima to Zunheboto.
Modest Stays and Homestays: Where to Stay in Sumi Heartland Villages
Accommodation in Zunheboto is modest compared to Kohima or Dimapur, so book ahead and keep expectations calibrated toward simplicity. Village homestays offer the most immersive way to experience Tuluni directly within a Sumi household; if hosted this way, bring a modest token of appreciation, such as good tea leaves or local fruit, rather than arriving empty-handed.
Sumi Backcountry Readiness Protocol
- Hard copies of your approved ILP in a waterproof bag — digital copies aren’t always verifiable at remote checkposts if cell towers go down in heavy rain.
- A technical rain shell and dry-bags for camera gear and electronics, rather than an umbrella, which is impractical on uneven hill terrain.
- Small-denomination physical cash — local homestays and shared transport can’t always process UPI payments when storms disrupt mobile networks.
- A modest gift for your hosts if staying in a village home.
- If offered Tuluni rice beer from a plantain-leaf goblet, accept graciously — declining outright can read as socially awkward.
Why Tuluni Deserves Wider Recognition
Tuluni offers a window into Naga culture that the larger, more internationally promoted Hornbill Festival cannot quite replicate. Where Hornbill is a curated, multi-tribe showcase designed for tourism, Tuluni is a living agricultural and social institution, observed because the Sumi community has always observed it, with visitors welcomed as guests into something genuinely theirs.
The festival’s interweaving of cooperative labour, betrothal customs, communal feasting, and reconciliation reflects a community structure built around mutual obligation and seasonal rhythm — values still very much alive across Sumi communities in Nagaland today.
Use the NE India Trip Planner to start planning a July visit to Nagaland, and explore the NorthEast India Connect Festivals & Events category for more celebrations across the region.