Today Panchang
Get today’s tithi, nakshatra, and auspicious timings to plan your day with clarity.
Updated for 19 April 2026 • Live Panchang for New Delhi
Today’s Panchang includes Dwitiya Tithi and Bharani Nakshatra, with Rahu Kaal from 05:12 PM to 06:49 PM.
Panchang is the traditional Hindu calendar that calculates the quality of time using five elements — Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga, Karana, and Vaar. It is used to determine auspicious timings, festivals, and daily decisions based on the positions of the sun and moon.
New Delhi, India (19 April 2026)
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Akshaya Tritiya
Matangi Jayanti
Parashurama Jayanti
Treta Yuga
Varshitapa Parana
Rohini Vrat
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Surdas Jayanti
Get today’s tithi, nakshatra, and auspicious timings to plan your day with clarity.
Upcoming festival dates and special observances across India.
Explore the full month with important dates, festivals, and key astrological events.
Today's Panchang (aaj Ka Panchang) — shows the live cosmic snapshot of the current day, including Tithi, Nakshatra, Rahu Kaal, and Shubh Muhurat, calculated for your exact location.
Today's Panchang includes:
| Element | Meaning | Today Insight |
|---|---|---|
| Tithi | Lunar day | Shows emotional and action energy |
| Nakshatra | Constellation | Defines nature of the day |
| Rahu Kaal | Inauspicious time | Avoid new beginnings |
| Shubh Muhurat | Auspicious time | Best time to act |
Confused about today's Panchang? Ask AI astrologer Jyoti instantly
Panchang is the traditional Hindu almanac that defines each day through five cosmic elements — Tithi, Vara, Nakshatra, Yoga, and Karana — to reveal not just what day it is, but what that day means.
Panchang is the traditional Hindu calendar and daily almanac that decodes time through the movement of the sun, moon, and planets. The word comes from Sanskrit — Pancha meaning five and Anga meaning limbs — referring to the five core elements that define each day: Tithi (lunar day), Vara (weekday), Nakshatra (constellation), Yoga, and Karana. Together, these elements don't just mark a date; they describe the quality of time.
Unlike the standard calendar that simply tells you what day it is, Panchang tells you what the day means. It reveals whether the energy of a particular day supports beginnings, decisions, travel, rituals, or rest. This is why it has been used for thousands of years to choose auspicious timings for important life events like weddings, business launches, and housewarming ceremonies.
In essence, Panchang is a system for aligning human actions with cosmic timing. It transforms time from something you pass through into something you can consciously work with — helping you make decisions that are not just convenient, but also in harmony with the natural rhythms of the universe.
The Gregorian calendar shows you the date. The Panchang shows you the meaning of that date. One is a schedule; the other is a decision system.
| Gregorian Calendar | Panchang |
|---|---|
| Shows the date | Shows the quality of time |
| Fixed, solar-based | Lunar + solar combined |
| Tells you when | Tells you whether |
| A scheduling tool | A decision-making system |
| Same for everyone | Location and chart-specific |
When you check a regular calendar, you know it's Thursday. When you check the Panchang, you know whether Thursday is favourable for signing contracts, starting a journey, or beginning something new — and during which exact hours.
Panchang is not just a calendar — it is a decision tool that helps you choose the right timing for the most important actions in your life.
In short: the Panchang turns the question of "when should I do this?" from a matter of convenience into a matter of alignment.
Checking the Panchang daily helps you time your actions better, avoid unfavourable periods, and bring greater intentionality to how you move through each day.
People ask, reasonably, whether today's Panchang-checking actually makes a tangible difference in daily life. It's a fair question. Here's an honest answer.
Better Timing of Actions
Helps you choose the right time to act — aligning tasks with supportive windows reduces friction and improves effectiveness.
Improved Focus and Intentionality
When you know a certain period supports clarity or creativity, you're more likely to use it purposefully.
Avoiding Unfavorable Periods
Prevents starting work during Rahu Kaal or other inauspicious timings — strategic, not superstitious.
Alignment with Natural Rhythms
Connects daily life with cosmic cycles, adding depth and meaning beyond routine scheduling.
Stronger Sense of Time Awareness
Over time, you begin to feel the texture of different days, making decisions more intuitive.
More Conscious Living
Instead of reacting randomly, you begin planning with awareness — a subtle but powerful shift toward mindful living.
Today's Panchang gives you the immediate, practical energy profile of the current day — what it supports, what to avoid, and when to act.
Here's a question worth sitting with: if you knew that the energy of certain days naturally supported communication and negotiation, would you schedule your most important meetings on those days? If you knew that particular mornings carried a quality of clarity and auspiciousness that others didn't, would you use those mornings for your most meaningful intentions?
That's exactly what Today's Panchang enables.
The daily Panchang on Vedaz is calculated fresh every morning, personalised to your location, and gives you an immediate, practical view of the day's energetic landscape. Here's what you get when you check Today's Panchang:
Tithi of the day
The lunar day you're in, what it governs, and whether it's generally auspicious for the kinds of activities you have planned.
Today's Nakshatra
The lunar mansion the moon is currently passing through, with a clear sense of what types of activities it favours. Some Nakshatras are excellent for travel. Others favour learning. Some are deeply auspicious for marriage or property. Others are better suited to rest and reflection.
Auspicious timings (Shubh Muhurat)
The specific windows of time during the day when the cosmic alignment is most favourable. If you're signing a contract, starting a new project, having an important conversation, or beginning anything meaningful, these are the windows to work with.
Confused about today's Panchang? Ask AI astrologer Muhurta for your personalised Shubh Muhurat instantly
Rahu Kaal
The period governed by Rahu, generally considered inauspicious for beginning new ventures. Knowing when Rahu Kalam falls in your location means you can schedule around it rather than unwittingly starting something important in a window that traditional wisdom cautions against.
Sunrise, sunset, moonrise, moonset
The natural rhythms of the day, which in Vedic tradition are much more than astronomy. They mark the transitions between different qualities of time.
A lot of people check the Today's Panchang the way they check the weather — quickly, in the morning, to get a sense of what they're working with. Others go deeper, using it to choose the exact moment to begin something important. Both approaches are valid. The point is simply this: the day is not a blank slate. It has a character. Knowing that character is useful.
The Monthly Panchang is your strategic map for the entire month ahead — showing Ekadashi dates, auspicious Muhurats, festival timings, and planetary transitions all in one view.
If Aaj ka Panchang is your daily compass, Monthly Panchang is your strategic map. It lets you look at the entire month ahead and identify the patterns before they arrive — which weeks carry the most auspicious energy, which days are best avoided for major decisions, when important Ekadashi and Purnima dates fall, and where the major festivals sit.
This forward view is particularly valuable for people who plan weddings, business launches, property purchases, or any major life event. Rather than picking a date because it's convenient and then hoping it works out, Monthly Panchang lets you start with the most auspicious dates and build your plans around them. It's a fundamentally different — and vastly more intentional — approach to scheduling.
The Monthly Panchang on Vedaz shows you:
All Tithis across the month
See the lunar cycle playing out across the calendar and identify the Purnima (full moon), Amavasya (new moon), and the especially auspicious Tithis like Panchami, Saptami, Dashami, and Dwadashi.
Ekadashi dates
The 11th Tithi of both the waxing and waning moon, considered one of the most spiritually significant days of the month. Observing fasts on Ekadashi is among the most commonly followed Vedic practices, and knowing the dates in advance lets you prepare.
Festival and vrat calendar
Every major Hindu festival, regional celebration, and significant fasting day for the month, all in one place.
Auspicious Muhurats
The best windows within the month for specific activities like marriage, Griha Pravesh (housewarming), starting a new business, buying a vehicle, or naming a child.
Planetary transitions
When major planets change signs during the month, which can significantly shift the overall quality of different periods.
Think of the Monthly Panchang as the difference between walking into a month with your eyes open versus walking in blind. Both are possible. Only one is advised.
Every Hindu festival is a Panchang event — its date, time, and correct observance are all determined by the Tithi, Nakshatra, and planetary positions on that day.
Without the Panchang, you can't know when Diwali falls this year, because Diwali is not a date — it's the Amavasya (new moon night) of the month of Kartik in the Hindu calendar. Without the Panchang, you can't determine the correct date for Navratri, Ganesh Chaturthi, Janmashtami, Maha Shivaratri, or any of the hundreds of festivals that define the Hindu year.
Here's a sense of the major festival categories the Panchang tracks through the year:
Navratri
Occurs four times a year — the two major ones being Chaitra Navratri in spring and Sharad Navratri in autumn. Each begins on the first Tithi (Pratipada) of the respective lunar month and lasts nine days. The Panchang determines the exact start date, the dates of each of the nine forms of Devi, and the auspicious timing for Kanya Puja on Ashtami or Navami.
Ganesh Chaturthi
Falls on the Chaturthi (fourth Tithi) of the Shukla Paksha of the month of Bhadrapad. The Panchang specifies not just the date but the exact time the Chaturthi Tithi begins — and worship is ideally timed to this window.
Janmashtami
Is observed on the Ashtami (eighth Tithi) of the Krishna Paksha of Bhadrapad, specifically at midnight — the moment of Lord Krishna's birth. The Panchang calculates the exact midnight time for your location.
Maha Shivaratri
Falls on the Chaturdashi (fourteenth Tithi) of the Krishna Paksha of Falgun. The Panchang specifies the Nishitha Kaal — the midnight period when Shiva worship is most potent.
Diwali
Spans five days, each with its own significance, and the Panchang specifies the auspicious Pradosh Kaal on Amavasya for Lakshmi Puja, the exact timing of which differs by location.
Ekadashi
Occurs twice a month — on the 11th Tithi of both Shukla and Krishna Paksha. There are 24 Ekadashis across the year, each with its own name and its own specific merit. The Panchang tells you not just which day Ekadashi falls on, but the exact time it begins and ends, and the appropriate Parana (breaking of the fast) window the following morning.
Without the Panchang, you're celebrating on approximately the right day. With it, you're participating in the exact moment the cosmos is aligned for that celebration.
Reading the Panchang begins with five core elements — Tithi, Vara, Nakshatra, Yoga, and Karana — and then moves to transition times, auspicious windows, and inauspicious periods like Rahu Kaal.
If you've never read a Panchang before, the first look can be overwhelming. The data is dense, the terminology is Sanskrit, and there seem to be multiple overlapping systems at once. Here's a practical guide to reading it without getting lost.
Step 1: Start with the five core elements.
When you open Today's Panchang on Vedaz, you'll see the Tithi, Vara, Nakshatra, Yoga, and Karana displayed clearly. Read these first. They give you the essential character of the day.
Step 2: Note the transition times.
Tithis, Nakshatras, and Yogas don't always align with the solar day. A Tithi might begin at 3:47 PM today and run until 5:12 PM tomorrow. Note when transitions happen — they can affect which element is active for the activity you're planning.
Step 3: Look at the auspicious and inauspicious timings.
The Vedaz Panchang highlights Shubh Muhurat windows and marks Rahu Kalam, Gulika Kalam, and Yamaganda clearly. These are the most immediately actionable pieces of information for your daily planning.
Step 4: Check the festival and vrat section.
Even if you're not observing a fast or festival today, knowing what's active in the cosmic calendar gives useful context. A day when Ekadashi is observed by millions carries a particular collective energy.
Step 5: For major decisions, consult an astrologer.
The Panchang gives you data. An astrologer gives you interpretation — specifically, how that data intersects with your birth chart and your current planetary periods. If you're making a major decision about a Muhurat for a wedding, business launch, or Griha Pravesh, the Vedaz astrologers can combine your personal chart with the Panchang to identify the best possible timing for your specific situation.
The Panchang on Vedaz is calculated for your exact location, updated daily, and integrated with personalised astrological guidance — making it the most actionable Panchang tool available online.
Most online Panchang tools give you generic data. They show you the Tithi, note the Rahu Kalam, list the festivals, and leave you to figure out the rest. Vedaz takes a different approach.
The Panchang on Vedaz is calculated for your specific location. This matters more than most people realise. Rahu Kalam in Chennai is not at the same clock time as Rahu Kaal in Delhi or Mumbai. Sunrise in Kolkata happens about 23 minutes earlier than in Mumbai, which shifts every time-based calculation in the Panchang. The auspicious windows of the day are genuinely location-dependent, and a Panchang that doesn't account for your city is giving you approximate data at best.
Beyond location-specific calculations, Vedaz integrates the Panchang with the broader ecosystem of Vedic astrology guidance on the platform. You can check Today's Panchang, note a potentially auspicious window for a major decision, and then immediately consult a Vedaz astrologer — human or AI — to understand how that window intersects with your personal chart.
That combination of real-time Panchang data with personalised astrological context is what makes Vedaz's Panchang genuinely useful rather than just informative.
The AI astrologers on Vedaz can help you interpret what the Panchang's daily data means in the context of your ongoing questions. If you're in a Rahu dasha and you notice that Rahu Kaal is particularly extended on a day you've been considering for an important decision, that's a meaningful signal — and a Vedaz astrologer can help you understand it.
Panchang is the traditional Hindu calendar that evaluates the quality of time using five elements—Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga, Karana, and Vara. It helps determine auspicious timings for daily activities, rituals, and major life decisions by aligning actions with cosmic rhythms.
A regular calendar shows only the date and day, while Panchang reveals the quality and suitability of that time. It combines lunar and solar calculations to guide decisions, helping you understand not just when something happens, but whether it is favourable.
The five elements of Panchang are Tithi (lunar day), Vara (weekday), Nakshatra (constellation), Yoga (planetary combination), and Karana (half of a Tithi). Together, they define the nature of the day and guide timing for actions and rituals.
Panchang helps you plan your day by identifying favourable and unfavourable time periods. It is commonly used to avoid Rahu Kaal, choose Shubh Muhurat, schedule meetings, and align important activities with supportive cosmic timings for better outcomes.
Rahu Kaal is an inauspicious time period during the day ruled by Rahu. It is traditionally avoided for starting new ventures, signing contracts, or making important decisions, as it is believed to bring delays, obstacles, or unfavorable results.
Shubh Muhurat is the most auspicious time window in a day when planetary alignment supports positive outcomes. It is considered ideal for starting important tasks like marriage, business, travel, or financial decisions to increase the chances of success.
Yes, Panchang varies significantly by location because it depends on sunrise, sunset, and planetary positions. Timings like Rahu Kaal and Muhurat differ across cities, making location-specific Panchang essential for accurate and reliable guidance.
Panchang determines the exact date and timing of Hindu festivals based on lunar phases and planetary positions. Festivals like Diwali, Navratri, and Janmashtami are not fixed dates but occur according to specific Tithi and Nakshatra combinations.
Yes, Panchang is widely used to choose auspicious timings for major life events like weddings, housewarming, business launches, and naming ceremonies. For best results, it is often combined with personal horoscope analysis for precise Muhurat selection.
Beginners should start by understanding the five elements—Tithi, Nakshatra, Vara, Yoga, and Karana—then check Rahu Kaal and Shubh Muhurat. Focusing on these basics helps interpret the day's energy without feeling overwhelmed by detailed calculations.
Check today's Panchang now to see what time supports your actions.