Free Vedic Kundali

Enter your birth details to generate a complete Vedic chart — Avakhada Chakra, all 16 Divisional Charts (D1–D60), Nakshatra analysis and the full Vimshottari Dasha timeline with Antardasha and Pratyantara. No sign-up required.

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Accurate birth time and location are essential for precise calculations.

Coordinates: 28.6139°, 77.2090°

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What is a Vedic Kundali?

A Kundali (also called Janam Patrika or Janam Kundli) is a Vedic birth chart that maps the exact position of 9 planets (Navagrahas) across 12 zodiac signs (Rashis) and 12 houses (Bhavas) at the precise moment and place of your birth. It is the foundational tool of Vedic Astrology (Jyotish) — a sidereal system that uses the actual sky positions of constellations, corrected via the Lahiri Ayanamsha (officially recommended by the Government of India).

9

Navagrahas (planets)

27

Nakshatras (lunar mansions)

120 yrs

Vimshottari Dasha cycle

16

Divisional charts (D1–D60)

What Your Kundali Includes

Avakhada Chakra

Your 9-point Vedic identity profile: Lagna, Rashi, Nakshatra, Pada, Gana (Deva/Manushya/Rakshasa), Nadi (Vata/Pitta/Kapha), Varna, and Yoni. Widely used for Guna Milan (marriage matching).

Planetary Positions (Nakshatra)

All 9 Grahas — Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Rahu, and Ketu — placed in their exact sign, house, Nakshatra, and Pada using Swiss Ephemeris and Lahiri Ayanamsha.

16 Divisional Charts (D1–D60)

Complete Varga chart analysis: D1 (life), D9 (marriage/dharma), D10 (career), D7 (children), D4 (property), D12 (parents), D60 (past karma), and 9 more — all calculated from your birth data.

Vimshottari Dasha Timeline

Your complete 120-year planetary life timeline, starting from your Moon Nakshatra at birth. Includes all 9 Maha Dashas, Antardashas (sub-periods), and Pratyantara Dashas (sub-sub-periods).

Shadbala (6-fold Planetary Strength)

Classical Jyotish strength scoring for the 7 major planets: Sthana Bala (positional), Dig Bala (directional), Kala Bala (temporal), Chesta Bala (motional), Naisargika Bala (natural), and Drig Bala (aspectual).

Sunrise & Sunset

Astronomically accurate sunrise and sunset times for your birth location and date — key for determining day/night birth, which affects planetary strength calculations in classical Jyotish.

How to Generate Your Kundali (3 Steps)

  1. 1

    Enter Your Date of Birth

    Select your exact birth date. Use the date picker or type in DD/MM/YYYY format.

  2. 2

    Enter Your Exact Birth Time

    This is the most critical input. Even 4 minutes of error can shift your Lagna (ascendant) or change your Nakshatra Pada. Use your birth certificate for the most accurate time.

  3. 3

    Enter Your Birth City

    Search for your birth city. GrahGita resolves its latitude and longitude automatically. Your complete Kundali will generate instantly — no account or sign-up required.

Vedic Kundali vs Western Horoscope

The two systems use different zodiac foundations, leading to different planetary placements — especially the Sun sign, which shifts back by approximately 23°.

FeatureVedic Kundali (Jyotish)Western Horoscope
Zodiac SystemSidereal (nirayana) — actual sky positionsTropical — season-based (vernal equinox)
AyanamshaLahiri (~23.84° correction in 2026)No ayanamsha — fixed to equinoxes
Key AscendantLagna — changes every ~2 hoursRising sign — similar concept
Lunar Mansions27 Nakshatras — primary timing toolNot commonly used
Timing SystemVimshottari Dasha (120-year planetary cycle)Solar arcs and progressions
Planetary FocusMoon sign (Rashi) primary — Sun secondarySun sign primary
Sub-charts16 Divisional (Varga) charts per personNot standard
Calculation BaseSwiss Ephemeris + Lahiri AyanamshaTropical ephemeris

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Lagna and Rashi?+

Lagna (ascendant) is the zodiac sign rising on the eastern horizon at your exact moment of birth — it changes every ~2 hours, making birth time critical. Rashi is the zodiac sign occupied by the Moon at birth. In Vedic Astrology, Rashi (Moon sign) is considered more personally significant than the Sun sign, and Lagna shapes your overall life path, body, and personality.

What is Nakshatra in Vedic Astrology?+

A Nakshatra is one of 27 lunar mansions that divide the sky into equal 13°20' segments. The Moon transits one Nakshatra approximately every 24.8 hours. Your Janma Nakshatra (birth Nakshatra) is the Nakshatra occupied by the Moon at your birth and is central to Vedic matching (Guna Milan), naming (Namkaran), and the starting point of your Vimshottari Dasha timeline.

What is Vimshottari Dasha and how is it calculated?+

Vimshottari Dasha is a 120-year planetary timing system that divides life into major periods ruled by each of the 9 planets. The starting planet is determined by the Nakshatra of the Moon at birth — specifically, how many degrees remain in that Nakshatra. The sequence of planetary periods follows a fixed order: Ketu (7 yrs) → Venus (20 yrs) → Sun (6 yrs) → Moon (10 yrs) → Mars (7 yrs) → Rahu (18 yrs) → Jupiter (16 yrs) → Saturn (19 yrs) → Mercury (17 yrs).

How accurate is an online Kundali without knowing the exact birth time?+

Without the exact birth time, your Lagna (ascendant) and Vimshottari Dasha start point cannot be determined accurately. However, the Moon, Sun, and slower planets (Jupiter, Saturn) are unlikely to change sign without accurate time and can still give partial insight. For a fully accurate Kundali — especially for predictions using Dasha — the birth time should be accurate to within 10 minutes.

What is Dosha in a Kundali?+

A Dosha is an astrological affliction in the birth chart that Jyotish tradition associates with specific challenges. Common Doshas include Mangal Dosha (Mars in the 1st, 4th, 7th, 8th, or 12th house — associated with relationship friction), Kaal Sarp Dosha (all planets hemmed between Rahu and Ketu — associated with karmic obstacles), and Pitru Dosha (Sun or other planets afflicted in the 9th house — associated with ancestral karma).

Calculations powered by Swiss Ephemeris · Lahiri Ayanamsha (Government of India, Calendar Reform Committee recommendation)

Last updated: March 2026