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Jyotish Zone

Choghadiya

Choghadiya Today in Sydney

Today's choghadiya in Sydney (Monday, 20 July 2026) opens with Amrit at sunrise, 06:56. The first auspicious window of the day is Amrit, 06:56 to 08:12. The full day and night chart below is computed from Sydney's exact sunrise and sunset.

Choghadiya now in SydneyNow

Amrit

Auspicious

Running now — ends at 08:12

Choghadiya

Day Choghadiya

Sunrise to sunset

ChoghadiyaNatureTime
AmritNowAuspicious06:56 08:12
KaalInauspicious08:12 09:29
ShubhAuspicious09:29 10:45
RogInauspicious10:45 12:01
UdvegInauspicious12:01 13:18
ChalNeutral13:18 14:34
LabhAuspicious14:34 15:51
AmritAuspicious15:51 17:07

Night Choghadiya

Sunset to next sunrise

ChoghadiyaNatureTime
ChalNeutral17:07 18:51
RogInauspicious18:51 20:34
KaalInauspicious20:34 22:18
LabhAuspicious22:18 00:01+1
UdvegInauspicious00:01+1 01:45+1
ShubhAuspicious01:45+1 03:28+1
AmritAuspicious03:28+1 05:12+1
ChalNeutral05:12+1 06:55+1

See tomorrow's chart →

The sun rises in Sydney at 06:56 and sets at 17:07 today, so each of the eight day choghadiyas lasts about 76 minutes. Being Monday, the day cycle enters at Amrit and the night cycle opens with Chal after sunset at 17:07. The night chart runs until the next sunrise, so its late windows carry past midnight into tomorrow's early hours — those times are marked +1 in the table.

Also today in Sydney

How the choghadiya chart works in Sydney

Every window above is one-eighth of Sydney's actual day or night, cut from today's real sunrise and sunset — not from a fixed 06:00 to 18:00 template. That is why the same weekday shows different times here than in another city, and different times here next month.

Use the chart at the moment of starting: pick Amrit, Shubh or Labh for important beginnings, Chal for setting out, and let routine work run through whatever window is passing. The current window is marked live whenever you open this page.

A favourable choghadiya can still overlap the day's Rahu Kalam, which follows a different rule — the one-line strip below shows today's Rahu Kalam for Sydney, and its full page covers Yamaganda and Gulika Kalam too.

Frequently asked questions

Which choghadiya is running now in Sydney?
Right now Sydney is in the Amrit choghadiya (Auspicious), which lasts until 08:12. The chart above shows every remaining window of the day and night.
Which choghadiya is best for travel today in Sydney?
Chal — today 13:18 to 14:34 in the day chart — is the classical travel window, and Amrit, Shubh and Labh serve just as well. Keep the departure clear of Rahu Kalam, which runs 08:12–09:29 in Sydney today.
When does tonight's choghadiya start in Sydney?
Tonight's chart begins at sunset, 17:07, with Chal, and runs in eight windows until the next sunrise. Windows after midnight are marked +1 — they belong to tonight's chart even though the clock date has changed.
Why do the choghadiya timings change every day?
Because Sydney's sunrise and sunset move a little every day, and the windows are cut from that span. The sequence of names repeats weekly, but the clock times never repeat exactly.
Is Sydney's choghadiya chart valid for nearby towns?
Close enough for everyday use if the town shares Sydney's longitude and horizon — a few minutes' difference at most. For exact times, or for towns further out, use a chart computed for that place's own coordinates.

Choghadiya — meaning, weekday cycle & how to use it →

Choghadiya by city

Every choghadiya window is one-eighth of the local day or night, so the same date carries different charts in different cities. Open your city for today's exact aaj ka choghadiya.