Today's Panchang for Hyderabad: Tithi, Nakshatra & MuhuratTuesday, October 28, 2025
Hyderabad Panchang
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About Hyderabad Panchang
The daily panchang for Hyderabad tracks the five limbs of the Vedic calendar — Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga, Karana, and Vara — calculated for local sunrise at coordinates 17.385°N, 78.4867°E.
The Panchang (पंचांग) is the Hindu calendar and almanac for Hyderabad.
Key timings include Rahu Kalam (inauspicious period to avoid), Gulika Kalam, Yamaghanda, and the highly auspicious Abhijit Muhurat. All times are adjusted for Hyderabad's geographic position.
Today is Mangalavara (मंगलवार (Tuesday)), governed by Mars (♂). Activities aligned with Mars's energy are naturally supported.
Panchang in Hyderabad: Telugu Panchangam and the Deccan's Spiritual Heartbeat
Hyderabad operates on the Telugu Panchangam, rooted in the Shalivahana Shaka calendar system that defines religious life across Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. Every Ugadi, families gather for the public reading of the annual Panchangam, a ritual that forecasts the year's agricultural cycles, festival dates, and auspicious periods. The city's dual identity as both a historic Muslim center and a hub of Telugu Hindu culture means residents navigate both lunar Islamic dates and the Amanta lunar months of the Shalivahana system. From software engineers checking Choghadiya before signing contracts to flower vendors preparing for Bathukamma's nine-day cycle, the Panchangam structures commercial and devotional rhythms across this metropolis of 10 million.
Hyderabad sits at 17.385°N latitude and 78.4867°E longitude, positioned 542 meters above sea level on the Deccan Plateau. This longitudinal placement puts the city 3.75 degrees west of the Indian Standard Time meridian at 82.5°E, resulting in sunrise occurring approximately 15 minutes later than the IST reference and about 5 minutes later than Delhi at 78.5°E. Solar noon in Hyderabad happens around 12:15 PM IST year-round, not at the clock's 12:00 PM. This geographic offset directly impacts every Panchang calculation: Rahu Kaal windows shift, Choghadiya periods recalibrate, and Abhijit Muhurta timings adjust based on the city's actual sunrise and sunset times rather than IST conventions.
Locals consult printed Telugu Panchangams published annually by institutions like Sarvari Nama Samvatsara Panchangam, distributed in bookstores across Abids and Koti neighborhoods weeks before Ugadi. Jewelry stores in Punjagutta display daily Choghadiya charts at their counters, guiding gold purchases during Amrit Kaal periods. Temple priests at Keesaragutta and Chilkur Balaji calculate precise muhurat timings for Abhishekam ceremonies based on local sunrise tables, not generic all-India apps. The Amanta month system used here means Amavasya ends the lunar month, unlike the Purnimanta system of North India, so festivals like Diwali fall in different months depending on which Panchangam you reference. This specificity matters: performing Pitru Paksha rituals on the wrong tithi because you used a Purnimanta calendar renders the observance invalid according to local tradition.
Famous Temples in Hyderabad
Significant temples where Panchang timing guides worship schedules and festival celebrations.
Birla Mandir
VenkateswaraConstructed between 1966 and 1976 on Naubat Pahad hill, this white Rajasthani marble temple dominates Hyderabad's skyline at 280 feet elevation above the surrounding city. The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams style architecture houses a 11-foot tall Venkateswara idol alongside shrines for Padmavathi and Andal. Devotees time their visits according to planetary hours, with Thursday being especially auspicious for Venkateswara worship as it aligns with Jupiter's influence. The temple maintains strict Panchang-based schedules for daily pujas: Suprabhata Seva at 6:00 AM coincides with Brahma Muhurta, while evening Ekanta Seva occurs during the Pradosh Kaal window.
Thursdays and Saturdays see crowds exceeding 10,000 devotees, with queue times stretching past two hours during Shukla Paksha tithis.
Chilkur Balaji Temple
VenkateswaraLocated 30 kilometers from the city center, this 500-year-old temple gained fame as 'Visa Balaji' in the 1990s when devotees attributed successful visa approvals to prayers offered here. The temple operates without a donation box, relying entirely on the pradakshina system where devotees complete 108 circumambulations after their wish is fulfilled. Panchang timing governs the priest's availability for special pujas, which occur only during Shubh Choghadiya periods listed in the daily Telugu calendar. The temple closes during Rahu Kaal and Yamaganda Kaal, strictly observed windows when new prayers are not initiated.
Ekadashi tithi draws devotees who fast and complete the 108-pradakshina ritual, with arrivals peaking between 5:30 AM and 7:00 AM.
Jagannath Temple, Banjara Hills
JagannathEstablished in 2009 by the International Society for Krishna Consciousness in Banjara Hills, this temple replicates Puri's architectural style with a 43-foot tall shikhara. The annual Rath Yatra procession during Ashada Shukla Dwitiya attracts 50,000 participants who pull the chariot along Road No. 12. Daily worship follows the Odia Panchang calculations for determining Ashadha month dates, which sometimes differ from Telugu Panchangam by a day due to Purnimanta versus Amanta reckoning. Mangala Arati begins at 4:30 AM during Brahma Muhurta, timed precisely to the city's dawn calculations rather than fixed clock hours.
Sundays and Janmashtami see attendance spike above 5,000, with prasadam distribution continuing until 10:00 PM during major festivals.
Peddamma Temple
Peddamma (Shakti)This Shakti shrine in Jubilee Hills serves as the primary worship site for Mahakali in her local Telangana manifestation as Peddamma, the protective village goddess. Originally a small stone shrine under a neem tree, the current structure expanded in the 1980s as surrounding neighborhoods urbanized. Tuesdays and Fridays are considered especially potent for Shakti worship, with devotees consulting the Panchangam to avoid inauspicious nakshatras like Moola and Ashlesha for initiating new prayers. During Bonalu festival in Ashada month, the temple receives thousands of offerings carried in decorated pots, with timings synchronized to Shubh Muhurat windows published in Telugu newspapers.
Amavasya nights draw Tantric practitioners who perform rituals between 11:00 PM and 2:00 AM, during Nishita Kaal considered powerful for Shakti worship.
Keesaragutta Temple
ShivaPerched atop a 3,000-foot granite hill 35 kilometers east of Hyderabad, this ancient Shiva temple dates back to the Ramayana period according to local legend. The self-manifested Shivalinga sits in a natural cave, with spring water continuously flowing over it. Maha Shivaratri brings over 500,000 devotees who trek uphill carrying Ganges water, with the peak abhishekam occurring during the Nishita Kaal period between midnight and 1:00 AM as prescribed by Panchang calculations. Mondays during Shravana month see continuous abhishekams from sunrise to sunset, timed to avoid Rahu Kaal interruptions.
Pradosh Kaal on Trayodashi tithis attracts devotees who perform the pradosham puja between sunset and 1.5 hours afterward, a window calculated daily based on Hyderabad's sunset time.
Which Temple to Visit Today?
Today's Panchang determines optimal temple choices based on planetary rulership: Sunday aligns with Surya energy, making early morning visits to any east-facing shrine beneficial, though Hyderabad lacks a major dedicated Surya temple. Monday governance by Chandra directs devotion toward Shiva temples like Keesaragutta, especially during Shubh Choghadiya periods. Tuesday's Mars rulership makes Peddamma Temple ideal for Shakti worship, while Wednesday's Mercury influence favors Venkateswara temples like Birla Mandir. Thursday Jupiter energy enhances Vishnu darshan at Chilkur Balaji, Friday Venus governs Lakshmi puja at any temple, and Saturday Shani period draws devotees to Hanuman shrines across the city. Consult today's nakshatra: Rohini, Uttara Phalguni, Uttara Ashadha, and Uttara Bhadrapada are fixed nakshatras ideal for initiating temple vows.
The Telugu Panchangam: Shalivahana Shaka Amanta Reckoning
Hyderabad follows the Shalivahana Shaka calendar, a lunisolar system with its epoch in 78 CE when King Shalivahana of the Satavahana dynasty established this reckoning. The year begins on Ugadi, which falls on Chaitra Shukla Pratipada, the first day after the new moon in Chaitra month. This calendar uses the Amanta system where lunar months end on Amavasya, the new moon day, distinguishing it from North India's Purnimanta system where months conclude on Purnima. The current Shaka year 1946 began on March 22, 2024 in the Gregorian calendar. Solar months determine agricultural festivals and sankrantis, while lunar months govern religious observances and tithi-based festivals.
The Amanta month structure shifts major festivals into different months compared to Purnimanta calendars: Diwali falls in Ashwayuja month here versus Kartika month in North Indian systems. Telugu Panchangam publishers like Bhakti Prakashika release annual editions before Ugadi, printed in Telugu script with daily tithi, nakshatra, yoga, karana, and rahukala timings specific to Hyderabad's coordinates. The Eenadu newspaper publishes a daily Panchangam column with sunrise at 6:15 AM (average), sunset at 6:20 PM (average), and five Choghadiya periods calculated from these base times. Modern apps like Kaalamrutham and Drik Panchang allow location-specific calculations, but traditional families still purchase the printed annual Panchangam, treating it as a sacred text that guides the entire year's activities.
Major Festivals in Hyderabad
Regional celebrations where Panchang tithi determines the exact date each year.
Ugadi
The Telugu New Year begins on Chaitra Shukla Pratipada, typically falling in late March or early April. Hyderabad households wake before sunrise to perform oil bath rituals, then prepare Ugadi Pachadi, a mixture combining six tastes representing life's experiences: neem flowers for bitterness, jaggery for sweetness, tamarind for sourness, green chili for spice, salt for saltiness, and unripe mango for tanginess. Temples across the city conduct Panchangam Shravanam ceremonies where priests read the coming year's predictions for rainfall, crop yields, and political events based on the year's name in the 60-year Jovian cycle. The 2024 Ugadi on April 9 ushered in Krodhi Nama Samvatsara, calculated using sidereal zodiac positions that differ from tropical Western astrology by approximately 24 degrees.
Ugadi's date varies annually because it depends on the lunar Chaitra month's Shukla Pratipada tithi, requiring precise new moon calculations for Hyderabad's longitude that can shift the festival by up to two days from other cities.
Bonalu
This uniquely Telangana festival honors village goddesses like Mahakali, Pochamma, and Yellamma during Ashada month, typically July or August. Women carry decorated pots containing cooked rice, jaggery, and curd on their heads to local goddess temples, walking barefoot in procession. The main Bonalu at Secunderabad's Ujjaini Mahakali Temple occurs on the first Sunday of Ashada, while Golconda Fort celebrations happen the following Sunday. Hyderabad's Lal Darwaza Simhavahini Mahankali Temple concludes the festival with Rangam, where a priest possessed by the goddess makes prophecies for the coming year. The 2024 Bonalu spanned July 7 to July 21, with dates determined by counting Sundays within Ashada Shukla Paksha.
Bonalu timing follows the Amanta lunar month calculation where Ashada runs from one Amavasya to the next, making date determination dependent on Hyderabad's Panchang rather than fixed Gregorian dates.
Bathukamma
This nine-day flower festival celebrates Goddess Gauri during Ashwin month, culminating on Durgashtami, the day before Dussehra. Women create conical flower stacks using seasonal blooms like tangedu, gunugu, and chamanti arranged in concentric circles, then gather around these Bathukammas singing folk songs in Telugu. Each evening, after circling the flower arrangement, women immerse it in local water bodies. Hyderabad's Tank Bund, Hussain Sagar Lake, and smaller neighborhood ponds see thousands of simultaneous immersions during the final Saddula Bathukamma on Durgashtami. The festival follows the Mahalaya Paksha conclusion, beginning on Ashwayuja Shukla Padyami and ending on Navami. October 2024 saw Bathukamma from October 3-11, with dates determined by the lunar fortnight calculations specific to Telugu Panchangam.
Bathukamma's start date is fixed to Ashwayuja Shukla Padyami, requiring Amanta month calculations where Ashwayuja month differs from the Purnimanta Ashwin month by half a lunar cycle.
Sammakka Saralamma Jatara
Held biennially in Medaram village 90 kilometers from Hyderabad, this four-day tribal festival honors the mother-daughter warrior goddesses Sammakka and Saralamma who fought against unjust taxation by Kakatiya rulers in the 13th century. The Jatara occurs during Magha Purnima, drawing over 10 million devotees making it Asia's largest tribal gathering. Devotees offer jaggery equal to their body weight, believing it fulfills wishes and cures ailments. The 2024 Jatara ran February 21-24, synchronized with Magha Purnima at 17.385°N calculations. Unlike Brahminical festivals, this Jatara follows tribal Panchang traditions where Purnima holds primary significance rather than specific tithis. The State Government declares public holidays across Telangana, recognizing the festival's cultural importance to Koya, Lambadi, and other tribal communities.
The Jatara date locks to Magha Purnima in odd-numbered years, requiring precise full moon calculations for the Medaram location that account for the Deccan Plateau's geographic coordinates.
Why Hyderabad's Panchang Differs
Geographic position affects sunrise, sunset, and all derived muhurat timings.
Hyderabad's position at 78.4867°E longitude places it 3.0132 degrees west of the Indian Standard Time reference meridian at 82.5°E. Each degree of longitude represents four minutes of solar time difference, meaning Hyderabad's solar noon occurs approximately 12 minutes after IST noon. Actual sunrise timing varies seasonally: summer solstice sunrise happens around 5:50 AM IST while winter solstice sunrise occurs near 6:45 AM IST. At 17.385°N latitude, the city experiences less seasonal variation than northern India, with daylight ranging from 11 hours 18 minutes in December to 13 hours 14 minutes in June. These precise sunrise and sunset times form the foundation for all Panchang calculations including the eight daily Choghadiya periods, three daily Rahu Kaal windows, and 24 Hora divisions.
Using Delhi's Panchang timings in Hyderabad introduces systematic errors across all muhurat calculations. Delhi at 77.21°E sees sunrise approximately 5 minutes earlier than Hyderabad, meaning Delhi's Rahu Kaal window begins and ends 5 minutes before Hyderabad's actual inauspicious period. This timing shift cascades through Choghadiya periods: what Delhi's Panchang lists as Amrit Kaal might actually be Kaal Ratri in Hyderabad. Commercial astrology apps that use generic 'India' coordinates at 82.5°E introduce even larger errors, up to 15 minutes for Hyderabad. A marriage muhurat calculated for Delhi time could fall during Hyderabad's Rahu Kaal, invalidating the ceremony according to traditional Jyotish. Accurate Panchang consultation requires city-specific calculations based on 78.4867°E longitude and 17.385°N latitude, not approximations from distant locations.
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).
Hyderabad Panchang questions and general Vedic calendar guidance.