Gulika Kalam Today in Prayagraj
8 May 2026, Friday
Uttar Pradesh · 25.4358°N, 81.8463°E
Gulika Kalam Timing
Duration: 1 hour 40 minutes
Calculated from Prayagraj's local sunrise (05:20 AM) and sunset (06:37 PM). Friday = second segment after sunrise.
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Chat with AI Astrologer — FreeWhat is Gulika Kalam?
Gulika Kalam (also called Gulikai Kalam, Gulik Kaal, or in classical Sanskrit Mandi or Manda) is a daily ~90-minute window considered mildly inauspicious in Vedic tradition. It is one of the eight equal segments between sunrise and sunset, and the slot decreases by one each weekday — Saturday at the very first segment from sunrise (Saturn's day, Gulika at dawn), Sunday at the seventh. Prayagraj's exact window shifts with local sunrise.
Gulika is an upagraha — a sub-planet, specifically the sub-shadow of Saturn (Shani) — introduced in the Brihat Parasara Hora Shastra and codified for muhurta in the Muhurta Chintamani. The classical commentary in Phala Deepika establishes the unique Recurrence Principle — actions started during Gulika are believed to repeat. This makes the window doubly inauspicious for one-off events you do not want to recur (funerals, loans, resignations, court filings), and conversely favourable for actions whose repetition is desirable: starting Ayurvedic regimens, mantra initiation, opening recurring deposits, gold accumulation, and sowing seeds.
Today's Other Inauspicious Timings in Prayagraj
Rahu Kaal, Yamagandam and other inauspicious windows for today, alongside Gulika Kalam. These follow their own day-of-week slot rules.
Rahu Kalam:
10:19 AM to 11:59 AM
Yamagandam:
01:38 PM to 03:18 PM
Vidaal Yoga:
07:00 AM to 08:40 AM
Dur Muhurtam:
01:03 AM to 01:51 AM
Bhadra:
01:03 AM to 10:54 PM
Gulika Kalam by Weekday
| Day | Slot | When |
|---|---|---|
| Sunday | 7 of 8 | late afternoon |
| Monday | 6 of 8 | early afternoon |
| Tuesday | 5 of 8 | midday |
| Wednesday | 4 of 8 | late morning |
| Thursday | 3 of 8 | mid-morning |
| Friday(today) | 2 of 8 | second segment after sunrise |
| Saturday | 1 of 8 | first segment at sunrise |
The Recurrence Principle — Avoid vs. Use Deliberately
Avoid — recurrence is harmful
- ⚠Funeral rites and antyeshti — classical texts warn of recurrence within the family
- ⚠Taking loans, mortgaging property, or signing recurring debt instruments
- ⚠Resigning from a job or terminating a partnership — the cycle is believed to repeat
- ⚠Selling property, gold, or family heirlooms (sale recurrence depletes wealth)
- ⚠Court filings for divorce, separation, or contested matters
- ⚠Surgical procedures and major non-emergency medical interventions
- ⚠Beginning litigation or business disputes — the conflict tends to recur
- ⚠Weddings and engagement ceremonies (especially if the family observes Mandi/Gulika)
Permitted — recurrence is desirable
- ✓Starting Ayurvedic regimens or chronic-disease medications (you want healing to continue)
- ✓Mantra diksha, japa sankalpa, and beej mantra initiation (repetition is the goal)
- ✓Opening recurring deposits (RDs), SIPs, or salary-disbursement accounts
- ✓Buying gold for accumulation (long-hold investment, not for resale)
- ✓Sowing seeds, planting trees, or starting kitchen-garden cultivation
- ✓Daily routines — eating, sleeping, bathing, household chores
- ✓Mantra chanting and devotional practice (Maha Mrityunjaya, Shani Beej Mantra)
- ✓Emergency action — life and safety always override muhurta considerations
How Gulika Kalam is Calculated for Prayagraj
Gulika Kalam is one-eighth of the time between local sunrise and sunset. Prayagraj's exact coordinates (25.4358°N, 81.8463°E) determine the local sunrise, which sets the entire day's slot grid.
- Today's sunrise in Prayagraj: 05:20 AM, sunset: 06:37 PM.
- Daylight is divided into 8 equal segments of approximately 1 hour 40 minutes each.
- Today is Friday, so Gulika Kalam occupies the 2th segment.
- The slot starts at 07:00 AM and ends at 08:40 AM — Prayagraj's precise window for today.
This is why a city's Gulika Kalam differs from another's, even within the same state — sunrise shifts with longitude. Two cities at the same latitude but different longitudes will see Gulika start at different wall-clock times.
Gulika Kalam vs Rahu Kaal vs Yamagandam
Three time-bands feature in classical muhurta selection. Gulika Kalam carries the unique Recurrence Principle; Rahu Kaal is the most universally observed for any new beginning; Yamagandam is consulted especially for travel.
| Window | Ruler |
|---|---|
| Gulika Kalam | Gulika (sub-shadow of Saturn / Shani) |
| Rahu Kaal | Rahu (north lunar node) |
| Yamagandam | Yama (lord of dharma and death) |
Common Myths & Clarifications
Myth: Gulika Kalam is the same as Rahu Kaal — they are interchangeable.
They are distinct windows ruled by different planetary forces. Rahu Kaal is ruled by the north lunar node and is universally avoided for new beginnings. Gulika Kalam is ruled by Gulika, the sub-shadow of Saturn, and carries the unique principle of recurrence — actions started during it are believed to repeat. The slot-of-day differs: on Wednesday, Gulika is the 4th of 8 slots; Rahu is the 5th.
Myth: Gulika Kalam is universally bad for every activity.
Classical texts treat Gulika more nuanced than that. Because Gulika imprints recurrence, it is doubly inauspicious for events you do NOT want to repeat — funerals, loans, resignations. Conversely, scholars cite it as a deliberate choice for activities whose repetition is desirable: starting medicine that should keep working, mantra initiation, opening recurring-deposit accounts, planting seeds.
Myth: A baby born during Gulika Kalam will face misfortune.
Birth time is determined by the soul's karma, not avoidable by muhurta planning. Classical jyotisha treats a Gulika-born child by examining the natal chart — Gulika position, Saturn placement, and the lord of the natal Gulika lagna determine outcomes. Specific shanti remedies exist (Shani parihara, Maha Mrityunjaya), but the birth itself is not a "curse." Consult an experienced astrologer for chart-specific guidance.
Myth: Gulika Kalam is observed only in South India.
Gulika Kalam observance is strongest in Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, and Malayalam panchangam traditions, but the doctrine itself comes from Sanskrit-language north-Indian classics (Phala Deepika, Brihat Parasara Hora Shastra). Traditional muhurta practitioners across India consult Gulika alongside Rahu Kaal and Yamagandam.
Pooja, Remedies and Devotional Practice
Pooja and mantra initiation are not only permitted during Gulika Kalam — they are classically recommended. The Recurrence Principle works in your favour for sustained sadhana: a daily devotional practice begun during Gulika is believed to deepen and continue. Two streams of worship are most commonly observed during the window:
- Lord Shiva — recitation of the Maha Mrityunjaya Mantra (Om Tryambakam Yajamahe) is the principal classical remedy for Saturn-shadow afflictions, offering protection against the recurrence of suffering.
- Shani Dev — recitation of the Shani Beej Mantra (Om Praang Preeng Praung Sah Shanaiscaraya Namah), lighting a sesame-oil lamp facing west on Saturdays, donating black sesame, urad dal, and iron implements, and wearing blue or black for Saturn parihara.
For remedies tailored to your specific birth chart — particularly if Saturn or Gulika are afflicted in your natal Kundali, or if you are running a Shani mahadasha or sade-sati from Prayagraj — consult an experienced Vedic astrologer rather than applying generic advice.
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Dr. Meenakshi Sharma
PhD in Vedic Astrology • 20+ Years Experience
Distinguished Vedic astrologer specializing in natal chart analysis, predictive astrology, and Vedic remedial measures. Trusted by thousands for accurate Gulika Kalam interpretations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What time is Gulika Kalam in Prayagraj today?
Today's Gulika Kalam in Prayagraj is shown in the timing block at the top of this page, calculated from Prayagraj's exact sunrise and sunset. The window occupies the 7th of eight equal daylight segments on Sunday, the 6th on Monday, the 5th on Tuesday, and so on — Saturday's window starts at sunrise itself. See the weekday table below for the full schedule.
Is Gulika Kala good or bad?
Gulika Kala (also spelled Gulika Kalam) is considered mildly inauspicious — less malefic than Rahu Kaal for new work, but uniquely characterised by the Recurrence Principle: actions started during the window are believed to repeat. This makes it doubly bad for one-off events you do NOT want to repeat (funerals, loans, resignations, court filings), and conversely useful for activities whose repetition is desirable (starting Ayurvedic medicines, mantra initiation, opening recurring deposits, gold accumulation, sowing seeds). It is best understood as a recurrence amplifier, not a "doom" window.
What to avoid in Gulika Kalam?
Traditional muhurta scholars advise avoiding any one-off event whose repetition would cause harm: funerals and antyeshti rites (recurrence within the family), taking loans or signing recurring debt instruments, resigning from a job or terminating partnerships, selling property or family heirlooms, court filings for divorce or contested matters, surgical procedures (non-emergency), starting major travel, and initiating new business disputes. Weddings and engagement ceremonies are also commonly avoided in households that observe Mandi/Gulika strictly.
How is Gulika Kalam calculated?
Gulika Kalam is one-eighth of the time between local sunrise and sunset, with the specific 1-of-8 slot determined by the day of the week. The slot decreases by one each weekday — Sunday is the 7th segment, Monday the 6th, Tuesday the 5th, Wednesday the 4th, Thursday the 3rd, Friday the 2nd, and Saturday the 1st (Saturn's day, Gulika at sunrise itself). Because the calculation depends on local sunrise, the window differs city-by-city — sometimes by 30+ minutes across India east-to-west. The duration is approximately 90 minutes, varying with season.
Can we do pooja during Gulika Kala?
Yes — pooja, mantra chanting, and devotional practice are not only permitted but classically recommended during Gulika Kala. The Recurrence Principle works in your favour for sustained sadhana: prayers and mantra started during Gulika are believed to deepen and continue. Worship of Lord Shiva (Maha Mrityunjaya recitation) and Shani Dev (Shani Beej Mantra) is particularly recommended, and lighting a sesame oil lamp on Saturdays during Gulika is a traditional remedy. The window is inauspicious for starting one-off worldly events, not for daily worship or mantra initiation.
What is the difference between Gulika Kalam, Rahu Kalam, and Yamagandam?
All three are inauspicious daylight segments derived from the same eight-fold division between sunrise and sunset, but each carries a distinct doctrine. Rahu Kaal is the most malefic for any new beginning (ruled by the north lunar node). Yamagandam is consulted especially for travel and journey starts (ruled by Yama). Gulika Kalam is mildly inauspicious overall but carries the unique Recurrence Principle (ruled by Gulika, sub-shadow of Saturn) — actions started here are believed to repeat, making it doubly bad for one-off events and deliberately useful for activities whose repetition is desirable.
Gulika Kalam in Nearby Cities
Related Panchang Information
- Full Panchang for Prayagraj today — Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga, Karana, all auspicious and inauspicious timings.
- Rahu Kaal in Prayagraj — the most universally observed inauspicious window for any new beginning.
- Yamagandam in Prayagraj — the inauspicious window most strongly associated with travel and journey starts.
- Gulika Kalam hub — find Gulika Kalam for any of the 100 cities.
Reviewed by Dr. Meenakshi Sharma, PhD in Vedic Astrology. Last updated: Friday, 8 May 2026. Calculations follow the standard Vedic eight-fold daylight division as documented in the Brihat Parasara Hora Shastra, Muhurta Chintamani, and Phala Deepika.


