Today's Panchang for Bangalore: Tithi, Nakshatra & MuhuratWednesday, October 29, 2025
Bangalore Panchang
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About Bangalore Panchang
The daily panchang for Bangalore tracks the five limbs of the Vedic calendar — Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga, Karana, and Vara — calculated for local sunrise at coordinates 12.9716°N, 77.5946°E.
The Panchang (पंचांग) is the Hindu calendar and almanac for Bangalore.
Key timings include Rahu Kalam (inauspicious period to avoid), Gulika Kalam, Yamaghanda, and the highly auspicious Abhijit Muhurat. All times are adjusted for Bangalore's geographic position.
Today is Budhavara (बुधवार (Wednesday)), governed by Mercury (☿). Activities aligned with Mercury's energy are naturally supported.
Panchang in Bengaluru: Silicon Valley Meets Shalivahana Shaka
Bengaluru operates on two time systems. Corporate campuses run on UTC, while households and temples follow the Shalivahana Shaka calendar that has governed Karnataka's spiritual rhythm since 78 CE. Every Ugadi, when the city celebrates the Kannada New Year, software engineers and sanyasis alike consult the Panchang for the same muhurat windows. The city's 400-plus temples see peak attendance during specific tithis, particularly Purnima at ISKCON Rajajinagar and Ashtami at Dodda Ganapathi. This dual identity makes Panchang consultation not a religious obligation but a cultural bedrock.
Bengaluru sits at 12.9716°N, 77.5946°E, placing it nearly on the IST reference longitude of 82.5°E. The city experiences sunrise approximately 1-2 minutes later than Delhi due to minor longitudinal difference, but its southern latitude creates less seasonal variation. Winter solstice sees roughly 11 hours 20 minutes of daylight, while summer solstice stretches to about 12 hours 50 minutes. This 90-minute annual swing is half what northern cities experience. The 920-meter elevation adds negligible impact to sunrise calculations, less than 30 seconds difference from sea-level predictions.
Kannada households in Jayanagar, Malleshwaram, and Basavanagudi maintain printed Panchang calendars from Udayavani or Kannada Prabha publishers. Jewelers in Chickpet consult Choghadiya before opening new account books. The city uses both Amanta and Purnimanta month systems depending on family tradition, though Purnimanta dominates in temple rituals. Tuesdays bring queues at Ragigudda Anjaneya Temple regardless of nakshatra, but Hanuman Jayanti on Chaitra Purnima sees the hill temple packed from 4 AM. Residents check Rahu Kaal before property registrations at sub-registrar offices, a practice encoded in notary workflows.
Famous Temples in Bangalore
Significant temples where Panchang timing guides worship schedules and festival celebrations.
Bull Temple (Nandi)
NandiThe 16th-century Bull Temple houses a 4.5-meter monolithic Nandi carved from single granite block, one of the largest Nandi statues globally. Kempe Gowda, Bengaluru's founder, commissioned the temple after local farmers reported crop destruction by a rampaging bull that vanished after the deity installation. Mondays draw Shiva devotees who perform abhisheka to Nandi as proxy worship, while Karthikai Deepam in Margashirsha month sees thousands of oil lamps circling the sanctum. The temple maintains traditional Kannada Panchang timings for all four daily pujas.
Mondays and Pradosham tithis (13th lunar day) see four-hour wait times from 6 AM onwards.
ISKCON Rajajinagar
KrishnaOpened in 1997, this temple complex spans 7 acres and serves as India's largest ISKCON center. The main deities Krishna and Balarama receive 8 daily aratis synchronized with Brahma Muhurta, sunrise, and sunset as calculated for Bengaluru's coordinates. Janmashtami preparations begin 40 days prior with daily Bhagavata Purana recitations, the festival itself falling on Krishna Paksha Ashtami of Bhadrapada month. Purnima nights host 12-hour kirtan marathons attended by 5,000 devotees, many arriving after checking Panchang for Vaishnava Ekadashi fasting dates.
Ekadashi tithis bring 3,000-plus visitors for special morning programs starting 4:15 AM sharp.
Dodda Ganapathi Temple
GaneshaThis temple features an 18-foot monolithic Ganesha idol installed in 1997, requiring continuous butter application to prevent granite cracks from tropical heat. Devotees bring 100 kilograms of butter weekly during Chaturthi tithis, particularly the Sankashti Chaturthi that falls on Krishna Paksha Chaturthi each month. The temple mandates Panchang-verified muhurat for weddings scheduled in the kalyana mantapa, refusing bookings during Rahu Kaal or Yamaganda periods. Vinayaka Chaturthi in Bhadrapada draws 50,000 visitors over 36 hours.
Sankashti Chaturthi evenings require 6-8 hour queues, with darshan windows closing only after moonrise confirmation.
Dharmaraya Swamy Temple
DharmarajaDating to the Mahabharata Pandava pilgrimage legend, this temple hosts the Karaga festival, a 9-day Chaitra month spectacle unique to Bengaluru. The Karaga procession occurs on Chaitra Purnima night, with the carrier balancing a floral pyramid while circling the city from midnight to 4 AM. Temple priests calculate the exact Purnima moment using traditional Panchang methods, delaying or advancing the procession by 30-minute increments. The Thigala community maintains exclusive hereditary rights to conduct rituals, following a Panchang printed specifically for this temple since 1962.
Karaga week sees 24-hour temple operations with Brahmin and Thigala priests alternating shifts based on hora divisions.
Ragigudda Anjaneya Temple
HanumanPerched on a natural rock formation in Jayanagar, this temple traces to the 1960s when a Hanuman idol appeared spontaneously according to local accounts. The hilltop location offers sunrise visibility, making it popular for Brahma Muhurta visits calculated at 1.5 hours before local sunrise time. Tuesdays bring 10,000 devotees who climb 120 steps for darshan, while Hanuman Jayanti on Chaitra Purnima requires police crowd control. Temple authorities publish monthly Panchang sheets listing auspicious Nakshatra timings for applying sindoor to the deity.
Saturdays during Shani transit periods see doubled attendance as Hanuman worship mitigates Shani dosha effects.
Which Temple to Visit Today?
Sunday suits solar deity worship at any temple conducting Surya Namaskara programs. Monday directs devotees to Bull Temple for Nandi abhisheka honoring Shiva. Tuesday mandates Ragigudda Anjaneya Temple visits, with Mangalvaar-specific prasad distributed. Check today's ruling nakshatra: Ashwini through Bharani favor Ganesha temples like Dodda Ganapathi, while Rohini through Mrigashira suit Krishna worship at ISKCON Rajajinagar.
The Kannada Panchang: Shalivahana Shaka Calendar in Silicon City
Bengaluru follows the Shalivahana Shaka calendar established in 78 CE, currently running in the 1900s Shaka era (2000s Gregorian). Karnataka traditions employ both Amanta (month ending on new moon) and Purnimanta (month ending on full moon) systems, with Purnimanta dominant in temple calculations and Amanta in household almanacs. The year begins on Ugadi, Chaitra Shukla Pratipada, falling in March or April. Unlike Tamil solar reckoning, the Kannada system uses lunar months with periodic adhika masa (intercalary month) insertion to sync with solar years.
This dual system creates confusion when festival dates cross month boundaries. Ganesh Chaturthi appears in Bhadrapada month under Purnimanta but Shravana under Amanta reckoning. Udayavani and Vijaya Karnataka newspapers print Panchang pages using Purnimanta for ritual dates while labeling months in Amanta convention. The Kannada Panchanga Panchangam app reconciles both systems, displaying parallel month names. Priests at major temples maintain handwritten Panchang registers dating to the 1940s, cross-referencing calculations against Drik Ganita astronomy.
Major Festivals in Bangalore
Regional celebrations where Panchang tithi determines the exact date each year.
Ugadi
Ugadi marks the Shalivahana Shaka New Year on Chaitra Shukla Pratipada, falling in late March or early April. Bengaluru households prepare Bevu-Bella, a mixture of neem leaves and jaggery symbolizing life's bitter-sweet duality. The city observes a pre-dawn oil bath ritual called Ganga Snanam, timed to Brahma Muhurta calculations specific to Bengaluru's longitude. Malls and IT parks close, making Ugadi one of two days annually when the city's economic engine halts completely. Traditional families consult the Panchanga Shravanam, a public reading of the year's predicted events based on Jovian transit and nakshatra patterns.
Falls precisely on Chaitra Shukla Pratipada, with celebrations beginning at calculated sunrise moment, not midnight. The 2026 date depends on whether Chaitra begins with March or April new moon.
Karaga
The Karaga festival spans 9 days in Chaitra month, unique to Bengaluru's Dharmaraya Swamy Temple and the Thigala community. The climax occurs on Chaitra Purnima night when a male carrier balances a floral pyramid deity representation through the city streets. The procession begins after calculating the exact Purnima moment, sometimes delaying midnight starts to 1 AM based on lunar phase precision. Thousands line the route from Nagarathpet to Ulsoor, with temple authorities coordinating 40 checkpoint pujas synchronized to hora divisions. No other Indian city conducts this specific ritual format.
Determined by Chaitra Purnima, with the exact procession hour calculated using traditional drik ganita methods. Priests reject automated Panchang apps, relying on manual ephemeris tables for precision.
Dasara
Dasara unfolds over 10 days from Ashwina Shukla Pratipada through Dashami, with Bengaluru observing parallel celebrations to the famous Mysore Dasara 150 kilometers south. The city conducts Ayudha Puja on Navami, when vehicles, tools, and computers receive turmeric and kumkum application. IT companies schedule product launches during Vijaya Dashami muhurat windows, consulting Panchang for Abhijit Muhurta timing. Dodda Ganapathi Temple sees special alankara for all 10 days, while ISKCON hosts Ramlila performances synchronized to sunset timings.
Begins on Ashwina Shukla Pratipada, typically late September or early October. The 2026 dates shift based on intercalary month insertion, requiring annual Panchang verification.
Makara Sankranti / Ellu Birodhu
Makara Sankranti occurs when the Sun enters Capricorn, falling on January 14 or 15 based on precession corrections. Bengaluru observes Ellu Birodhu, exchanging sesame and jaggery mixtures called Ellu-Bella with the phrase "Ellu birodhu, bella tinnu, huri mukhava mari" (give sesame-jaggery, eat sweet, speak kind words). Unlike lunar festivals, this solar transition occurs at a precise astronomical moment calculated for Bengaluru as 2:30-3:00 PM based on drik calculations. Kite flying begins at sunrise, with competitions running through Abhijit Muhurta.
Fixed by solar transit into Makara rashi, not by tithi. The exact moment shifts by 6 hours every 4 years due to leap year adjustments in the Gregorian calendar overlay.
Why Bangalore's Panchang Differs
Geographic position affects sunrise, sunset, and all derived muhurat timings.
Bengaluru's coordinates at 12.9716°N, 77.5946°E place it 4.5 degrees west of the IST reference meridian at 82.5°E. This translates to an 18-minute difference in solar noon, with the Sun reaching zenith at approximately 12:18 PM IST rather than noon. Sunrise occurs 1-2 minutes later than Delhi (77.21°E) due to minimal longitudinal difference, but the southern latitude creates the real divergence. At 12.97°N versus Delhi's 28.7°N, Bengaluru experiences a compressed annual day-length variation of just 90 minutes compared to Delhi's 5 hours between solstices.
Using Delhi-based Panchang data for Bengaluru introduces 8-12 minute errors in Rahu Kaal calculations during equinoxes. The error compounds during solstices when Delhi's sunrise shift reaches 30 minutes from equinox baseline while Bengaluru shifts only 15 minutes. Choghadiya divisions, each one-eighth of the daylight period, become 2-3 minutes misaligned per division. A temple priest scheduling a 7:30 AM Abhijit Muhurta using Delhi timings might miss the actual window by 15 minutes, rendering the ritual technically invalid by strict Vedic standards. Jewelers in Chickpet report lost business when customers arrive during incorrectly calculated Rahu Kaal periods.
Understanding Panchang: The Five Limbs
The word Panchang comes from Sanskrit: "Panch" (five) + "Ang" (limbs).
1. Tithi (Lunar Day)
Tithi represents the angular relationship between the Sun and Moon. There are 30 tithis in a lunar month (15 in Shukla Paksha, 15 in Krishna Paksha). Each tithi has a ruling deity and specific qualities that influence the auspiciousness of activities.
2. Nakshatra (Lunar Mansion)
The Moon transits through 27 nakshatras (stellar constellations) in approximately 27.3 days. Each nakshatra spans 13 degrees 20 minutes of the zodiac and has a ruling deity, planetary lord, and distinct energy.
3. Yoga (Luni-Solar Combination)
Yoga is calculated from the combined longitudes of the Sun and Moon. There are 27 yogas. Some yogas like Siddhi and Amrit are highly auspicious, while others like Vyaghata and Vajra require caution.
4. Karana (Half-Tithi)
Each tithi is divided into two karanas, giving 60 karanas per lunar month. There are 11 types. Vishti (Bhadra) karana is considered inauspicious, while Bava, Balava, and Kaulava are favorable.
5. Vara (Weekday)
Each day of the week is ruled by a planet: Sunday (Sun), Monday (Moon), Tuesday (Mars), Wednesday (Mercury), Thursday (Jupiter), Friday (Venus), Saturday (Saturn).
Bangalore Panchang questions and general Vedic calendar guidance.