Aajche Panchang Details Marathi – आज पंचांगानुसार काय आहे? 15 June 2026
Full Panchang – पूर्ण पंचांग Links
तिथी, नक्षत्र आणि मुहूर्त शहर व स्थानिक वेळेनुसार बदलू शकतात.
Detailed Panchangam Guide
This BhaktiBharat page gives a city-specific Hindu calendar reading with Tithi, Nakshatra, weekday, Yoga, Karana and important local timings. The quick answer appears near the top, while the sections below explain how to understand and use the daily Panchangam details responsibly.
Panchangam values can differ by city because sunrise, sunset, moon movement and local time zone affect the calculation. A page for Delhi may not always match Chennai, Hyderabad, London, New York, Sydney or Auckland for the exact ending time of Tithi or Nakshatra.
For routine use, this page helps with daily puja planning, temple visits, vrata awareness, reading stotra, checking avoid periods and understanding the day’s lunar context. For important life events, always confirm the final Muhurta with a qualified Pandit or Jyotishi.
The purpose of this page is not only to show one timing, but also to explain the meaning of the timing. Many devotees search for a quick daily answer such as today’s Tithi, today’s Nakshatra, today’s Rahu Kalam or today’s good time. A strong Panchangam reading connects all these points together instead of treating them as separate fragments.
How to Read Tithi, Nakshatra and Day Details
Tithi is based on the angular distance between the Sun and Moon. It is important for vrata, festival observance, puja, sankalpa and daily Hindu calendar interpretation.
Nakshatra reflects the Moon’s position among the lunar mansions. It is used in Tarabalam, daily suitability checks, temple visits and Muhurta decisions.
Yoga gives another quality indicator for the day based on the combined positions of the Sun and Moon.
Karana is half of a Tithi and is traditionally considered along with Tithi and Nakshatra.
A simple daily reading usually starts with the Tithi and Nakshatra, but a complete reading does not stop there. Weekday, Yoga, Karana, sunrise, sunset and avoid periods also matter. This is why BhaktiBharat connects the topic page to the full Panchangam page and to the related timing sections.
For example, a person may see a favourable Tithi and still need to avoid Rahu Kalam for beginning a new activity. Another person may check Nakshatra for Tarabalam before travel or temple visit. A daily Panchangam page becomes more useful when it helps the reader understand these relationships clearly.
Why Location-Specific Panchangam Matters
Many users search for today’s Tithi or Nakshatra and assume the same answer applies everywhere. In practice, local sunrise and time-zone differences can change the way a Panchangam day is read. This is why BhaktiBharat uses city-wise pages instead of only a generic national view.
When checking festival observance or fasting rules, the relevant rule may depend on sunrise, moonrise, Pradosh Kaal, Nishita Kaal or another event-specific window. Two sources may look different if they use different regional or observance methods.
The safest interpretation is to use the daily page as a guide and then apply family tradition, regional custom and expert guidance for major decisions. For a simple daily reference, the city-wise page is usually enough. For a major ceremony, the city page should be treated as the base layer, not the final decision.
Location is especially important for users outside India. A Panchangam date in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand or the Gulf region can differ from India because of time zone and sunrise differences. Diaspora users should therefore avoid copying a timing from an Indian city unless the activity is actually happening in that Indian location.
Important Timing Context
Rahu Kalam, Gulika Kalam, Yamagandam, Varjyam and Dur Muhurtam are generally checked before starting important new activities. Brahma Muhurta, Abhijit Muhurta and other good-time windows are often used for spiritual or favourable activities, depending on local tradition.
A good Muhurta is not decided from one factor alone. It normally considers the activity, weekday, Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga, Karana, Tara Bala, Chandra Bala, avoid periods and the person or family involved.
For daily devotional practice, Brahma Muhurta is commonly associated with meditation, japa, study, stotra recitation and quiet prayer. Abhijit Muhurta is often treated as a strong daytime window when available, but it still needs common-sense checks against avoid periods and the nature of the work.
For starting new work, many families avoid Rahu Kalam, Yamagandam and Gulika Kalam. For routine activities, existing work, regular office work or daily worship, families may follow their own practice. The page should therefore be used as a guide, not as a rigid rule for every action.
How Devotees Can Use This Page
Use the top answer when you need a fast summary. Use the cards when you need the exact Tithi, Nakshatra, end time, sunrise, sunset or related Panchangam elements. Use the linked full Panchangam page when you need the wider picture for the day.
For vrat and festival awareness, check the Tithi and observance notes. For temple visit, puja shopping or family prayers, check the Tithi, Nakshatra and good-time sections together. For travel, interviews, property work, business opening or family ceremonies, use the page only as a starting point and then verify with a qualified advisor.
The page is especially useful when comparing dates. A user can open the same topic for today, tomorrow or a selected date and understand whether the Tithi or Nakshatra changes before sunrise, during the day or after midnight. This helps avoid confusion when a Tithi name appears to belong to one civil date but continues into another.
Common Reasons Panchangam Sources Differ
Different Panchangam sources can show different-looking results for several valid reasons. They may use a different city, different ayanamsha, different sunrise convention, different festival rule or different regional tradition. Some traditions follow Amanta month names, while others follow Purnimanta. Some festival rules depend on Pradosh Kaal, Nishita Kaal or moonrise rather than only sunrise.
This does not always mean one source is wrong. It often means the source is applying a different rule or a different location. BhaktiBharat’s goal is to make the daily result clear and practical while also reminding readers that major religious decisions should be confirmed through the tradition they personally follow.
For best use, first confirm the city, then confirm the date, then read the Tithi and Nakshatra cards, and finally check the related timing sections. This sequence reduces mistakes and gives a more complete reading than checking only one line.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use this page for Muhurta?
Use it as a starting point. For major events, consult a qualified Pandit or Jyotishi with personal and family details.
Why does Tithi sometimes end after midnight?
Tithi follows lunar movement, not the civil clock, so it can begin or end at any time.
Can two cities have different Panchangam results?
Yes. Local sunrise, longitude, latitude and time zone can change timings and sometimes observance interpretation.
Is a longer page always better for SEO?
Length alone does not rank a page. A useful page ranks better when it answers the search intent clearly, gives accurate details, explains the meaning, links to related pages and avoids thin or confusing content.
Should I follow this page or my family tradition?
For daily reference, this page is helpful. For rituals, vrats, samskaras and major life events, family tradition and qualified local guidance should be respected.