Perform sevas on behalf of devotees who cannot be there — and receive a dakshina of ₹250–₹400 for each one.
अपने मंदिर, गुरुद्वारे या दरगाह से दुनिया भर के भक्तों की सेवा कीजिए — हर सेवा पर ₹250–₹400 की दक्षिणा।
Every day, devotees who cannot travel — elders at home, families in New York and Dubai, someone keeping a vow for a parent's health — long for a prayer at a particular place of worship. You are already there.
As a Sevak, you accept the seva requests you choose, perform each one with the care you would give your own family's prayer, and capture proof for the devotee: photos, a short video, and a handwritten note in your own hand. Devotees see your name and your face. You are never anonymous, and your service is never taken for granted.
Pujaris, granthis, imams, priests, and devoted volunteers of every faith serve as Sevaks today — over 10,000 across India.
A Sevak performs a seva — a puja, ardas, dua, or prayer — at a place of worship on behalf of a devotee who cannot be there, then captures proof: GPS-tagged photos, a short video, audio, and a handwritten note. The devotee may be in the next city or across the world.
Pujaris, granthis, imams, priests, students of faith, retired devotees — anyone who lives near a place of worship, knows its customs, and serves with sincerity. Every faith is welcome. You must be 18 or older and complete identity verification in the Sevahey app.
Between ₹250 and ₹400 per completed seva, depending on the distance travelled and the nature of the seva. The exact dakshina is shown before you accept, and it is credited after the devotee receives your proof.
Download the Sevahey app, choose to serve as a Sevak during onboarding, verify your phone and identity, and set up your Sevak profile with the places of worship you serve. Once verified, seva requests near you appear in the app.
Yes. You see each request — the place, the devotee's intent, and the dakshina — before accepting. You accept only what you can perform with full care. There are no targets and no penalties for declining.
That is the whole design. Sevaks are named, not anonymous — every devotee sees exactly who served them. You are performing seva for devotees who cannot travel: elders, families abroad, the unwell. The dakshina honours your time; the seva remains seva.