Common Inquiries
Astrology FAQ for the questions people actually ask first.
This page is here for the practical stuff. Not grand theory. Not vague promises. Just the questions most people have before they trust a tool or book a reading.
If you are not sure where to begin
Start with your online kundali for the full chart. Use the daily horoscope for a quick forecast. Check today panchang for local timing.
Yes, exact birth time is critical for the most accurate Vedic birth chart — and here is why: the Ascendant (Lagna), which determines your entire house structure, changes by one full zodiac degree every four minutes. A difference of just 10 minutes can shift your Lagna from one sign to another, rearranging all 12 house cusps and potentially changing which planets fall in which houses. It also affects the Navamsha (D9) divisional chart used for marriage compatibility, and the starting point of your Vimshottari Dasha timeline. If you are unsure of your exact birth time, you can begin with an approximate time. The AstroKund AI Astrologer can help you narrow down the Lagna through chart rectification questions based on key life events. For critical decisions — marriage timing, career planning, medical consultations — always try to obtain your birth certificate or hospital record for the most precise reading.
A Kundali (also called Janam Kundali or birth chart) is a unique, fixed map of the sky at the exact moment, date, and location of your birth. It includes your Lagna (rising sign), the positions of all nine Grahas in the 12 Bhavas (houses), your Moon Nakshatra, active Vimshottari Dasha timeline, and divisional charts like the D9 Navamsha and D10 Dashamsha. This never changes — it is a permanent record of your cosmic blueprint. A daily horoscope, by contrast, reflects the current movement of planets through the sky (transits) and how those transits interact generally with a particular Rashi (Moon sign). Daily horoscopes are broad: the same forecast applies to everyone born under Vrishabha or Mithuna, regardless of their individual Lagna, house positions, or Dasha cycles. Think of the Kundali as your permanent astrological passport and the daily horoscope as the current weather report for your general sign territory.
Vedic kundali matching for marriage uses a system called Ashta Koota (eight-point compatibility scoring), also known as Guna Milan. It compares the Moon Nakshatra of both individuals across eight compatibility dimensions, each carrying a specific maximum point value: Varna (1 point), Vashya (2), Tara (3), Yoni (4), Graha Maitri (5), Gana (6), Bhakoot (7), and Nadi (8). The total maximum score is 36. Traditional guidelines suggest a minimum score of 18 for compatibility, with scores above 28 considered excellent. However, the score alone is only the starting point — Dosha analysis matters equally. Mangal Dosha (Mars in the 1st, 4th, 7th, 8th, or 12th house), Nadi Dosha (same Nadi for both partners), and Bhakoot Dosha (specific Rashi combinations) can override a high Guna score. AstroKund calculates the Moon Nakshatra and Pada precisely from the computed birth chart, then applies classical Ashta Koota tables, and presents individual dimension breakdowns alongside any Dosha flags — not just a total number.
Yes. Panchang values depend on location, sunrise, and local timing, so the same date can show different details in different places.
A good starting point is your birth chart. After that, use the daily horoscope, panchang, and blog content to build familiarity with timing and interpretation.
They can be highly reliable when the platform uses correct ephemeris data and accurate birth details. The quality of the interpretation still depends on context, not just calculation alone.
Book a consultation when the question is personal, urgent, layered, or emotionally significant. Sessions are especially useful after you already have your chart or match report in front of you.
Numerology can reveal personal rhythm, motivation, and expression, while astrology shows timing, placement, and life themes. Many people use both for a fuller picture.
Yes. AstroKund supports platform and API-style use cases through tiered plans designed for heavier usage, product integration, and advanced feature access.
Yes. AstroKund offers all of its core Vedic calculation tools for free, including Janma Kundali generation, daily Panchang lookup, Rashi horoscopes, and basic compatibility matchmaking. Creating a free account allows you to save birth profiles to your dashboard, download a basic PDF report, and try out the AI Astrologer. We offer tiered paid plans only for developers needing API access or users wanting premium multi-page reports and unlimited AI chat consultations.
An Ayanamsa represents the angular difference between the Tropical zodiac (used in Western astrology) and the Sidereal zodiac (used in Vedic astrology), which shifts by about 50.3 arc-seconds annually due to the precession of the equinoxes. Lahiri Ayanamsa (specifically Chitra Paksha) is the official standard chosen by the Indian government's Calendar Reform Committee in 1956. It anchors the zodiac to the fixed star Chitra (Spica) at exactly 180 degrees, ensuring calculations align closely with the traditional astronomical calendar and providing the most consistent planetary positions for predictive Jyotish.
The difference is purely visual, as both styles display the same astronomical positions. In the North Indian style (diamond grid), the houses (Bhavas) are fixed, with the 1st house (Lagna) always at the top-center diamond. The zodiac signs (Rashis) rotate through the houses, represented by sign numbers (1 for Aries, 2 for Taurus, etc.). In the South Indian style (square chart), the zodiac signs are fixed in a clockwise square pattern, and the houses rotate, with the Lagna (marked as 'ASC' or 'Lagna') placed in the appropriate sign square. AstroKund defaults to the traditional North Indian style in its interactive charts.
AstroKund's AI Astrologer is not a generic chatbot. It reads the raw mathematical coordinate data generated for your birth chart by our ephemeris engine and uses Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) to cross-reference classical scriptures like Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra. This means its interpretations are highly accurate and grounded in established Jyotish rules rather than sentiment guessing. However, while the AI is excellent for answering immediate questions about planetary placements or Dasha cycles, a professional human astrologer brings a layer of spiritual intuition, synthesis, and counseling that AI cannot replicate.
Sade Sati is a significant 7.5-year transit period when Saturn (Shani) transits through the zodiac sign immediately preceding your natal Moon sign, your Moon sign itself, and the sign immediately following it. Because Saturn spends roughly 2.5 years in each sign, this transit across three signs totals 7.5 years. It is classically associated with periods of discipline, structural pressure, and karmic refinement. AstroKund calculates your Sade Sati by mapping transiting Saturn's current sidereal coordinates relative to your natal Moon's Nakshatra and Rashi boundaries.
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