Two kinds of "AI astrology"
The first kind generates broad daily horoscope copy from your Sun sign — quick, but no more personal than a newspaper column. The second kind computes your real chart and uses AI to explain it: your Lagna, your nakshatra, your running dasha, in plain English. Only the second is worth your time.
How to judge an AI astrology app
- Does it use your full birth details? Date, exact time and place — not just your Sun sign.
- Does it state its engine? Look for the Swiss Ephemeris and, for Vedic work, the Lahiri ayanamsa.
- Does it explain, or just label? A good report tells you what a placement tends to mean, not just that it exists.
- Is it honest about uncertainty? Reflection and planning, never guarantees or "lucky" claims.
Where VedicHour fits
VedicHour is built for the second kind. It casts your chart with the Swiss Ephemeris and Lahiri ayanamsa, writes a plain-English reading, and adds the piece most apps skip: an hour-by-hour grid that rates all 18 planetary hours (horas) of your day as clearer or heavier windows. It is framed as timing awareness — a structured second lens — not a prediction engine.
You can generate your free Kundli and see a sample reading and timing grid before paying for anything.
- Generate your free Kundli — Lagna, Moon sign, nakshatra and current dasha in plain English.
- Open a deep Kundli report for a full chart reading across seven life areas.
- See the plans — free preview, then one-time reports (no subscription).
For reflection and planning only. VedicHour is a structured second lens for timing awareness, not medical, legal, financial, or emergency advice.