Your life, mapped to the day
One birth date in — your whole life out, drawn as the planetary seasons of Vimshottari dasha, each with its exact start and end date. The season you're in now is marked. Grounded in real astronomy.
- Dated, not vague. Not “a hard year ahead” — an actual date when your current planetary season ends and the next begins.
- Set by your Moon. The whole timeline is anchored to the Moon's nakshatra at your birth, computed from NASA JPL ephemeris data (Lahiri ayanamsa).
- Nested. Your current major period expands into its sub-periods (antardashas), so you can see the texture of right now, not just the decade.
- Deterministic. No sun-sign or numerology tool can produce this — it needs a real sidereal chart. Same birth details, same map, forever.
How we compute it — every school decision stated: methodology.
What is a dasha?
Vimshottari dasha divides life into planetary periods (mahadashas) totaling 120 years, in a fixed sequence, timed from the exact position of your Moon at birth. Each period is ruled by one planet and colors that whole stretch of life; sub-periods (antardashas) tune it further. It is the backbone of Vedic timing.
How can you know my exact dates?
Because the sequence and lengths are fixed and the only variable is your Moon's nakshatra position at birth — which is computed from real ephemeris data. Once that's set, every transition date follows arithmetically, to the day. Same birth details, same timeline, forever.
Do I need my birth time?
Not for this — the Moon moves slowly enough that your dasha timeline is stable across most of a day, so a date and place give a reliable map. A birth time sharpens the boundary dates slightly and unlocks the rest of the chart (lagna, houses), which is where the interpretation deepens.
What does a period actually mean?
That depends on where its ruling planet sits in your chart — its sign, house, and strength. A Saturn period for someone with a strong, well-placed Saturn reads very differently from one with a weak Saturn. The timeline shows the seasons; the reading interprets them.
For reflection, not prediction. Home