Generic panchang vs a personal timing grid
Classical timing draws on several layers: the hora (planetary hour), choghadiya bands, and cautionary periods like Rahu Kaal. Traditional apps display these the same way for the whole city. That is a fine reference, but two people with very different charts get an identical table.
VedicHour instead reads each hour against your chart — your Lagna, Moon and running dasha — and scores the day hour by hour. The result is a grid of clearer and heavier windows that is specific to you, in plain English.
What it covers
- All 18 planetary hours (horas) rated as clearer or heavier windows for the day.
- Choghadiya and hora rulers woven in, not as a separate lookup.
- Rahu Kaal and cautionary periods flagged in context.
- Everything computed with the Swiss Ephemeris and the Lahiri ayanamsa.
How people use it
Think of it as a structured second lens for planning a demanding day — when to schedule the focused work, the difficult conversation, the launch, the long drive. It is timing awareness: a prompt to plan thoughtfully, never a guarantee about how things will turn out. For dated muhurat questions, pair it with the free dasha and dosha calculators.
Try your own timing grid
Generate your free Kundli and see a sample hour-by-hour grid for your chart. A full forecast with daily windows across a 7-day, monthly or annual span is a one-time report.
- 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.