Beautiful Ethnic Looks Begin With Kurta Sets for Girls at Myntra Mega Summer Sale 2026

Ethnic sets that stay relevant across occasions: Kurta sets that feel right at multiple events become the true staples of her festive wardrobe. Investing in those during the sale keeps both style and budget in balance.

Best kurta sets for girls to check out
Best kurta sets for girls to check out

Best kurta sets for girls to check out: A kurta set can often become the “default” festive outfit because it feels right for so many occasions. It looks traditional enough for ceremonies and relaxed enough for casual gatherings. That versatility is exactly what you want when dressing her for a season full of events.

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Top kurta sets for girls to consider on Myntra.

These kurta sets for girls have been curated from Myntra to give a clear overview of pieces that work across different kinds of celebrations. With the Myntra Mega Summer Sale 2026 live till July 12, it’s a useful window to add sets that she can wear now and bring out again later in the year. The selection prioritises outfits that feel wearable, age-appropriate, and easy to repeat.

Seams and fabric weight decide how these sets actually move. Pure cotton settles after a few washes and softens around the armhole and hip, while georgette and silk blends hold a more fluid, gliding line that shows up clearly in the flare of a sharara or the swing of a dupatta. Once an Anarkali cut or a straight kurta shape is locked in, the bottom — dhoti, palazzo, or sharara — either follows the same soft volume or adds its own folds and flare.

The recurring trade-off here sits between ease and ceremony. Sleeveless straight kurtas with simple thread or gotta work stay lighter and more agile; three-quarter sleeves, sequins, and silk-like fabrics lean into festive presence. Dhoti pants speak a slightly more playful language, shararas amplify volume around the legs, and palazzos fall somewhere in between — roomy but less dramatically flared. Neckline and ornamentation then nudge each set closer to everyday ethnic or full occasion wear.

Cotton-based sets: dhoti and Anarkali with sharara

Here&Now X Kinder Kids Girls Striped Pure Cotton Gotta Patti Kurti With Dhoti Pants & Jacket
Here&Now X Kinder Kids Girls Striped Pure Cotton Gotta Patti Kurti With Dhoti Pants & Jacket (Source: Myntra)

Two sets lean heavily on pure cotton: the Here&Now X Kinder Kids striped kurti with dhoti pants, and Sangria’s green floral Anarkali with sharara. The striped blue kurti keeps a straight, above-knee shape with a round neck, sleeveless cut, curved hem, and gotta patti detail, paired with printed dhoti pants and an elasticated waistband. It feels playful and light, more about pattern and movement than structure — a good fit when you want something comfortable that still reads festive thanks to the gotta accents and dhoti silhouette.

Sangria Girls Green Floral Printed Gotta Patti Pure Cotton Anarkali Kurta With Sharara
Sangria Girls Green Floral Printed Gotta Patti Pure Cotton Anarkali Kurta With Sharara (Source: Myntra)

Sangria’s floral set pushes cotton into a more traditionally dressy space. The kurta uses an Anarkali shape, large floral print, calf-length flared hem, and gotta patti, matched with solid sharara bottoms on an elasticated waist. The design styling notes an Angrakha idea, which typically adds a wrap-like visual on the bodice, even though the spec shifts the neck to a square. That mix of print, flare, and gotta work makes it clearly festive, especially when the sharara’s extra volume balances the long kurta.

Also Read: Oversized T-Shirts for Women on Zalora Hong Kong That Look Better the Less You Try

Embroidered supernet and silk-blend palazzo sets

UFB Girls Floral Embroidered Regular Thread Work Kurti with Palazzos
UFB Girls Floral Embroidered Regular Thread Work Kurti with Palazzos (Source: Myntra)

Two pieces work the embroidery route with palazzos: UFB’s pink supernet kurti with palazzos, and misbis’s rust silk-blend Anarkali set with dupatta. The UFB kurta uses floral thread work on a sleeveless A-line shape, round neck, asymmetric above-knee hem, and supernet fabric. Paired with solid palazzos, it feels lighter and slightly more contemporary, thanks to the asymmetric hem and placement embroidery. This is the kind of set that can float between smaller functions and dressy daytime without feeling overly formal.

Misbis Girls Floral Embroidered Regular Sequinned Kurta with Palazzos & With Dupatta
Misbis Girls Floral Embroidered Regular Sequinned Kurta with Palazzos & With Dupatta (Source: Myntra)

The misbis set goes deeper into occasion territory. A rust floral embroidered Anarkali kurta in a silk blend, V-neck, three-quarter sleeves, sequinned details, calf-length flared hem, and matching palazzos, all finished with an embroidered dupatta. Sequins, silk-like sheen, and the three-piece structure push it firmly into festive dressing — the kind of ensemble that holds its own at more ceremonious events, where the dupatta completes the visual balance and the Anarkali flare adds drama.

Tie-dye georgette with sharara and dupatta

Pspeaches Girls White And Green Tie Dye Georgette Kurta Sharara Dupatta Set
Pspeaches Girls White And Green Tie Dye Georgette Kurta Sharara Dupatta Set (Source: Myntra)

The Pspeaches set stands apart mostly because of its tie-dye and fabric mix. A white, yellow, and green dyed straight kurta in polyester georgette blend, round neck, sleeveless, above-knee straight hem, and gotta patti detail sits over printed sharara bottoms with an elasticated waist. A cotton-blend embroidered dupatta with taping border finishes the three-piece look.

Compared with the pure cotton and silk-blend options, this one reads more modern and fluid, with the dyed pattern and georgette handfeel introducing a softer, slightly more graphic character. Sleeveless straight lines keep the top fairly clean, while the sharara and dupatta handle the volume and visual interest.

How these five sit in real use

Seen together, the sets fall into three broad lanes:

  • Light, cotton-forward ethnic with playful bases (striped kurti with dhoti pants; floral cotton Anarkali with sharara).
  • Embroidered palazzo ensembles that slide from semi-dressy to full festive (supernet pink A-line; rust silk-blend Anarkali with dupatta).
  • A dyed georgette mix that leans modern and occasion-friendly without heavy traditional motifs (Pspeaches tie-dye kurta–sharara–dupatta).

Fabric pairings and bottom shapes answer most practical questions quickly: dhoti for more folds and a slightly quirky edge, sharara for stronger leg volume and classic festive impact, palazzos when you want airy comfort and cleaner vertical lines. Sleeveless versus three-quarter sleeves then decides climate and coverage, while ornamentation — gotta patti, thread work, sequins — pushes each set up or down the formality ladder.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which set feels most appropriate for a big festive occasion? The rust misbis silk-blend Anarkali with palazzos and dupatta.

Which option is easiest for a comfortable yet festive daytime function? The green floral Sangria Anarkali with sharara gets the nod here — pure cotton, flared hem, and gotta patti keep it celebratory without being heavy.

Which ensemble offers a more contemporary, lighter ethnic look? The pink UFB supernet A-line kurti with palazzos, due to its sleeveless cut, asymmetric hem, and also the thread-work embroidery.

Which set feels playful and kid-friendly with a fun base silhouette? The Here&Now X Kinder Kids striped kurti with printed dhoti pants.

Published: July 5, 2026 16:04 IST

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