Choghaḍiyā — Kolkata, 29 May 2026

Friday. The day and night time-quality windows for Kolkata, computed from the local sunrise and sunset.

Śubh (auspicious) Choghaḍiyā today: 06:33–08:13, 08:13–09:53, 11:34–13:14, 22:14–23:33, 23:33–00:53, 02:13–03:33 (IST). Sunrise 04:53 · sunset 18:14, Kolkata.

Day Choghaḍiyā (sunrise → sunset)

ChoghaḍiyāWindowLordQuality
Chala04:53–06:33VenusNeutral · movable
Labha06:33–08:13MercuryAuspicious
Amrita08:13–09:53MoonAuspicious
Kala09:53–11:34SaturnAvoid new work
Shubha11:34–13:14JupiterAuspicious
Roga13:14–14:54MarsAvoid new work
Udvega14:54–16:34SunAvoid new work
Chala16:34–18:14VenusNeutral · movable

Night Choghaḍiyā (sunset → next sunrise)

ChoghaḍiyāWindowLordQuality
Roga18:14–19:34MarsAvoid new work
Udvega19:34–20:54SunAvoid new work
Chala20:54–22:14VenusNeutral · movable
Labha22:14–23:33MercuryAuspicious
Amrita23:33–00:53MoonAuspicious
Kala00:53–02:13SaturnAvoid new work
Shubha02:13–03:33JupiterAuspicious
Roga03:33–04:52MarsAvoid new work

Amṛta, Śubha and Lābha are the auspicious Choghaḍiyā; Chala is movable (favoured for travel); Udvega, Kāla and Roga are avoided for new undertakings. See the full Kolkata panchāṅga for 29 May 2026 (tithi, nakṣatra, rāhu-kāla) and the Kolkata horā (planetary hours).

← 2026-05-28 2026–2027 calendar 2026-05-30 →

Where do these fall in your chart? AstroAmrit maps every sky event onto your own birth chart — which house it touches, which of your planets it meets — with every claim cited to the computation behind it.

See these in your chart →

How this table was computed

Methodday (sunrise→sunset) and night (sunset→next sunrise) each divided into 8 equal Choghaḍiyā; the sequence starts from the weekday lord's segment (classical derivation) and steps through the fixed cycle; boundaries from Swiss Ephemeris sunrise/sunset
SourceSwiss Ephemeris sunrise/sunset (sidereal Lahiri chart context)
Engineastroamrit seo-tables choghaḍiyā (Kolkata 2026-05-29)

AstroAmrit is a glass box: every number on this page is reproducible from the stated method. These are astronomical facts, not predictions. Times are instants of the event's global maximum or exact crossing; your local civil date can differ by one day depending on timezone.