Kaner-ki-Putli Temple is located in the Khadirpur area of Bijolia, in the Bhilwara district of Rajasthan. It resides within a valley formed by water eroding the rocks within the Vindhya range. The temple is located in a secluded area close to stone quarries.
The Kaner-ki-Putli Temple is named after the flower buds of the Kaner or Oleander plant. The temple is dedicated to Shiva. The present structure was in a ruinous state and has been restored by the Archaeological Survey of India with a boundary wall and a pathway guiding visitors to the temple.
The present bridge and pathway leading to the Kaner-ki-Putli Temple have been reconstructed by the Jaipur Circle, Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). The bed of the fountain stream is visible below the bridge.
The southwest vertical axis of the Kaner-ki-Pulti Temple has vedibandha (basal mouldings), an elaborately carved jangha (wall), and surviving portions of the shikhara (superstructure). As visible, the shikhara of the temple is damaged, but the surviving portion indicates that it was constructed in the Bhumija style.