Nishita Muhurta in Gurgaon
Tuesday, 2 June 2026 · Haryana
Tonight’s Nishita Muhurta
11:55 PM–12:43 AM
Duration: 48 minutes
Today’s Sunset
07:15 PM
Tomorrow’s Sunrise
05:24 AM
Tithi
Dvitiya
What is Nishita Muhurta?
Nishita (Sanskrit: निशित) means “night” or “sharpened by night.” Nishita Muhurta is the 8th of 15 equal night muhurtas — the exact midnight window, arrived at by dividing the period from tonight’s sunset to tomorrow’s sunrise into 15 equal parts and taking the 8th (central) slot. It is the night’s direct counterpart to Abhijit Muhurta, which occupies the 8th slot of the daytime sequence.
Duration varies by season and city — in Gurgaon, the night is currently {nishitaMuhurta.durationMin} minutes long for this single muhurta slot — longer in winter when nights are extended, shorter in summer. The window always falls near midnight, typically between 11:00 PM and 1:00 AM.
The Shiva Purana identifies Nishita Kaal as the moment Lord Shiva manifested as the infinite Jyotirlinga column — making it the most sacred window of the Shivaratri observance. The Devi Bhagavata Purana prescribes it for Kali Puja, and Kashmir Shaivism’s Tantrasara (Abhinavagupta) establishes it as the peak hour for tantric sadhana.
Is Nishita Kaal Good or Bad?
Nishita Kaal is neither universally good nor universally bad — it is powerful for its specific purpose. The Muhurta Chintamani classifies it as "tamas-dominant but transcendence-conducive": the energy of dissolution and depth, not creation. For Shiva worship, Kali puja, tantric sadhana, and deep meditation, it is the most auspicious hour of the 24-hour cycle. For starting worldly activities — a business, a journey, a medical treatment, a marriage — it is clearly inauspicious, as tamas energy suppresses the creative and social forces those activities require.
| Activity | Verdict | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Shiva Puja (Shivaratri) | Highly auspicious | Shiva manifested as Jyotirlinga at this exact hour (Shiva Purana) |
| Kali Puja (Diwali night) | Highly auspicious | Peak of Kali's midnight energy (Devi Bhagavata Purana) |
| Tantric sadhana, mantra japa | Highly auspicious | Midnight dissolution energy amplifies mantra siddhi (Tantrasara) |
| Deep meditation | Very auspicious | Peak cosmic stillness; natural samadhi-support |
| Starting a business or venture | Inauspicious | Tamas energy suppresses new creation |
| Marriage or samskaras | Inauspicious | Requires sattvic (dawn/daytime) energy |
| Medical treatment, surgery | Inauspicious | Healing requires solar (daytime) muhurtas |
| Starting a journey | Inauspicious | Vijaya Muhurta or Abhijit are suited for departure |
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Chat with AI Astrologer — FreeWhat to Do During Nishita Muhurta
Shiva Puja (Rudrabhishek)
Bathing the Shiva Linga with Panchamrit (milk, curd, honey, ghee, sugar), offering Bilva leaves, and reciting the Mahamrityunjaya Mantra or Shiva Panchakshara ("Om Namah Shivaya") during Nishita Kaal is the prescribed Shivaratri practice across all major sampradayas.
Kali Puja (Diwali Night)
In the Bengali and Tantric traditions, the midnight hour of Kali Puja (Diwali night) is the central ritual window. The Goddess Kali, associated with the darkest midnight moment, is invoked with Shodashopachar (16-step worship) specifically at Nishita Kaal.
Tantric Sadhana
Classical Tantric texts prescribe Nishita Kaal for mantra siddhi (mantra-power activation), Bija mantra repetition (especially the Kali Bija "Kreem"), and the highest tantric practices that work with dissolution energy (tamas-shakti) rather than creation energy.
Deep Meditation & Yoga Nidra
The midnight stillness — the point of minimum external-world activity — creates the ideal condition for Samadhi-oriented meditation. Theravada and Kashmir Shaivism traditions both mark midnight as the peak hour for transcendence practice.
Durgashtami Midnight Puja
The Ashtami midnight puja during Navaratri, prescribed in the Devi Bhagavata Purana, is performed during Nishita Kaal. This is the most powerful window for invoking Durga in her fierce Bhairavi form.
Mantra Japa for Siddhi
Performing 108 or 1008 repetitions of Shiva mantras, Kali mantras, or guru-given initiatory mantras during Nishita Kaal is held to accelerate siddhi (perfection/fruition) according to both Shaivite and Shakta traditions.
What to Avoid During Nishita Muhurta
Nishita Muhurta is governed by tamas (dissolution) energy — potent for midnight worship but unfavourable for acts of worldly creation and beginning. Classical muhurta texts (Muhurta Chintamani, Muhurta Martanda) advise against the following:
- ⚠Starting any new business, project, or commercial venture (tamas energy is not suited for worldly creation)
- ⚠Marriage ceremonies, engagements, or any samskaras requiring harmonious sattvic energy
- ⚠Grihapravesh (house-warming) or property purchase — daytime sattvic muhurtas are required
- ⚠Medical treatments, surgeries, or beginning new health regimens — use daytime muhurtas
- ⚠Departing for important journeys where the destination and purpose are worldly
- ⚠Signing contracts, legal documents, or important agreements (daylight Vijaya or Abhijit muhurtas are more appropriate)
- ⚠Performing death-related or funerary rites — these belong to specific ancestral muhurtas
Festivals Where Nishita Kaal is Central
Maha Shivaratri
Krishna Chaturdashi in Magha month (Feb–Mar)The most important Nishita Kaal of the year. The Shiva Purana states that Lord Shiva manifested as the infinite Jyotirlinga column at midnight on this night. All four Shivaratri prahars are observed, but Nishita (the midnight prahar peak) is the climax. Temples across India perform the most elaborate Rudrabhishek at this precise hour.
Kali Puja (Diwali Night)
Amavasya (new moon), Kartik month (Oct–Nov)The primary midnight puja of the Bengali calendar. The Goddess Kali is invoked at Nishita Kaal with animal sacrifice (in older traditions), red hibiscus offerings, fish, and Panchamrit. The Devi Bhagavata Purana prescribes Shodashopachar worship specifically at this hour.
Durgashtami (Navratri Ashtami)
Ashwin Ashtami, typically OctoberThe Ashtami midnight puja of Navratri, where Durga is worshipped in her fierce Bhairavi aspect. The Devi Mahatmya prescribes the midnight hour for the most potent Chandika invocation — this is widely observed in West Bengal, Odisha, and Assam.
Masik Shivaratri
Krishna Chaturdashi each month (monthly)The monthly Shivaratri observance on the 14th dark-moon night of each month. Devotees performing monthly Shivaratri vrat observe Nishita Kaal puja every month, not just on the annual Maha Shivaratri.
The 15 Night Muhurtas
The night from sunset to next sunrise is divided into 15 equal Muhurtas. Nishita occupies the 8th position — the exact midnight centre. The table below shows all 15 night muhurtas as documented in the Muhurta Chintamani (Daivajna Ramacharya), with their traditional quality and purpose.
| # | Muhurta Name | Quality |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pradosha | inauspicious |
| 2 | Vrishaba | neutral |
| 3 | Mitra | auspicious |
| 4 | Pitru | inauspicious |
| 5 | Vasu | auspicious |
| 6 | Vara | auspicious |
| 7 | Vishvedeva | auspicious |
| 8 | Nishita ★ | very auspicious |
| 9 | Kutapa | inauspicious |
| 10 | Amrita | auspicious |
| 11 | Maha | auspicious |
| 12 | Deva | auspicious |
| 13 | Sarva | neutral |
| 14 | Brahma | very auspicious |
| 15 | Purna | very auspicious |
How Nishita Muhurta is Calculated for Gurgaon
The formula is city-specific and night-specific. Unlike daytime muhurtas that only need today’s sunrise and sunset, Nishita Muhurta requires tonight’s sunset and tomorrow morning’s sunrise — because it falls in the night between them. Gurgaon’s coordinates (28.4595°N, 77.0266°E) determine both, producing a window unique to the city and the date.
- Tonight’s sunset in Gurgaon: 07:15 PM
- Tomorrow’s sunrise in Gurgaon: 05:24 AM
- Night duration: 10 hours 9 minutes
- One muhurta (÷ 15): 48 minutes
- Nishita Muhurta (8th slot): 11:55 PM to 12:43 AM
This is why Nishita Muhurta in Gurgaon differs from every other city — even nearby cities within Haryana see sunset and sunrise at slightly different times by longitude, shifting the midnight window. The east-west difference across India (Kolkata vs. Mumbai) moves Nishita Kaal by nearly one hour.
Nishita Muhurta vs Brahma Muhurta vs Abhijit
These three are the most significant auspicious time windows in the 24-hour Vedic cycle — each serving a distinct purpose and deity.
Nishita Muhurta (this page)
Typical timing: 8th of 15 night slots — exact midnight (~11:30 PM–12:30 AM)
Duration: ~46–50 minutes
Deity / energy: Lord Shiva / Goddess Kali
Best for: Shiva puja, Kali puja, tantric sadhana, deep meditation
The night's most sacred window — powerfully auspicious for midnight deity worship; inauspicious for worldly beginnings.
Brahma Muhurta
Typical timing: Last 2 muhurtas before sunrise (~4:00–5:30 AM)
Duration: ~48 minutes (one classical Muhurta)
Deity / energy: Lord Brahma / Saraswati
Best for: Waking, yoga, meditation, Vedic study, sankalpa
The pre-dawn window of sattvic creation energy — ideal for any positive morning routine and spiritual practice.
Abhijit Muhurta
Typical timing: 8th of 15 daytime slots — ~24 min before and after solar noon
Duration: ~48 minutes
Deity / energy: Sun (midday zenith)
Best for: Starting any new endeavour, contracts, travel, general auspicious beginnings
The most universally auspicious daytime window — good for any positive new start, especially when no other muhurta is available.
Classical Scriptural Basis
Shiva Purana— Sage Veda Vyasa (compiler)
“Nishite paramam shivam jyotirlingam pradrishyate” — “At midnight (Nishita), the supreme Shiva manifests as the Jyotirlinga.”
The Shiva Purana narrates that Lord Shiva manifested as an infinite column of light — the Jyotirlinga — precisely at Nishita Kaal on the night of Shivaratri. This is the canonical basis for Nishita Kaal being the most sacred window of the Shivaratri observance.
Linga Purana— Sage Veda Vyasa (compiler)
Documents that the four prahar (watches) of the Shivaratri night each carry distinct spiritual potency, with Nishita Kaal — the third prahar's peak — representing the highest concentration of Shiva tattva. The text prescribes Rudrabhishek with Panchamrit specifically during this window.
Devi Bhagavata Purana— Sage Veda Vyasa (compiler)
Establishes Nishita Kaal as the sacred window for Kali and Devi worship during Diwali night (Kali Puja) and Durgashtami. The text states that the Goddess is most receptive to midnight invocation — "Nishite devi prasanna bhavati" — at midnight the Goddess becomes pleased.
Muhurta Chintamani— Daivajna Ramacharya
The definitive classical muhurta manual (c. 17th century) codifies the 15 night muhurtas, placing Nishita as the 8th — the exact middle of the night, analogous to Abhijit's position in the daytime sequence. The text classifies Nishita as "tamas-dominant but transcendence-conducive" — unsuited for worldly creation but potent for dissolution and spiritual practices.
Tantrasara— Abhinavagupta
Kashmir Shaivism's foundational tantric text establishes midnight as the peak of Kali's energy in the daily cycle. Abhinavagupta prescribes Nishita Kaal for Kali sadhana, mantra siddhi, and the highest forms of tantric meditation, noting that the midnight stillness allows the practitioner's consciousness to align most directly with the void-like nature of Shiva.
Common Myths & Clarifications
Myth: Nishita Kaal is always inauspicious — you should sleep through it
This conflates "tamas-dominant" with "universally inauspicious." Tamas is the energy of dissolution and depth, not destruction. It is perfectly suited to midnight worship practices. The Shiva Purana and Devi Bhagavata Purana both explicitly prescribe waking and worshipping during Nishita Kaal. The correct guidance: sleep through it for ordinary nights; wake for it on festival nights (Shivaratri, Kali Puja, Navratri Ashtami).
Myth: Nishita Muhurta is the same as Brahma Muhurta
They are distinct and non-overlapping. Nishita is the 8th of 15 night muhurtas — the exact midnight window (~11:30 PM–12:30 AM). Brahma Muhurta is the 14th and 15th — the final pre-dawn period (~4:00–5:30 AM). They serve completely different purposes: Nishita for Shiva/Kali midnight worship; Brahma Muhurta for morning spiritual discipline and waking.
Myth: Nishita Kaal timing is the same every night
False. Nishita Kaal is calculated from the local sunset and next sunrise for each city. As sunset and sunrise shift seasonally (earlier in winter, later in summer), Nishita Kaal shifts accordingly — it can vary by 30–60 minutes across seasons. In Kolkata, it also arrives ~1 hour earlier than in Mumbai on any given night due to the east-west longitude difference.
Myth: Only Brahmins or initiated practitioners can observe Nishita Kaal
Classical texts prescribe Nishita Kaal puja for all devotees during Shivaratri. The Shiva Purana specifically states that even a hunter (referring to the story of the hunter Nishadha) who unknowingly worshipped Shiva at midnight received liberation — emphasising that the window's grace is available to all sincere worshippers regardless of lineage.
Myth: Nishita Kaal is only relevant on Maha Shivaratri
While Maha Shivaratri is the most celebrated Nishita Kaal, the window occurs every night. Monthly Shivaratri (Masik Shivaratri), Kali Puja on Amavasya, Durgashtami, and individual tantric sadhana all use Nishita Kaal as the preferred window throughout the year.
Get personalised midnight puja guidance for Gurgaon
Our AI Astrologer can combine your birth chart with tonight's Gurgaon Nishita Muhurta to recommend the right deity, mantra, and ritual for your specific Shivaratri or Kali Puja intent — free first consultation.
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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 Nishita Muhurta interpretations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Nishita Muhurta?
Nishita Muhurta (also called Nishita Kaal) is the 8th of 15 equal night muhurtas — the exact midnight window, dividing the night from sunset to next sunrise into 15 equal parts. In Gurgaon, the night's length varies seasonally, but Nishita typically falls between 11:00 PM and 1:00 AM. It is the night's equivalent of Abhijit Muhurta — both are the 8th (central) segments of their respective day/night cycles. Nishita is the most sacred time for Shiva puja, Kali puja, and tantric practice according to classical Vedic texts.
Is Nishita Kaal auspicious or inauspicious?
Nishita Kaal is highly auspicious for midnight deity worship (especially Shiva and Kali), tantric sadhana, and deep meditation — and inauspicious for starting worldly activities. The Muhurta Chintamani classifies it as "tamas-dominant but transcendence-conducive." Use it for Shivaratri puja, Kali Puja, and spiritual practice; avoid it for business launches, marriages, journeys, and medical treatments.
What is Nishita puja muhurat?
Nishita puja muhurat is the midnight window used for Maha Shivaratri's most sacred puja, Kali Puja on Diwali night, and Durgashtami during Navratri. For Gurgaon tonight, the exact timing is shown at the top of this page, calculated from Gurgaon's local sunset and tomorrow's sunrise. The puja window is approximately 46–50 minutes. Most temples and households begin their Rudrabhishek or Kali invocation at the start of this window.
How to perform Nishita puja?
For Shiva: (1) Bathe, wear clean white or rudraksha-adorned clothing. (2) Set up the Shiva Linga or image facing north or east. (3) At the start of Nishita Muhurta, begin Rudrabhishek — bathing the linga sequentially with water, milk, curd, honey, ghee, and sugar (Panchamrit). (4) Offer Bilva (bel) leaves — always in odd numbers, preferably trifoliate. (5) Recite Mahamrityunjaya Mantra 108 times or Shiva Panchakshara ("Om Namah Shivaya"). (6) Light a ghee diya, offer dhoop (incense), and conclude with aarti. For Kali: substitute red hibiscus, red sindoor, fish or sweet offerings, and the Kali Bija mantra "Kreem."
How is Nishita Muhurta calculated for Gurgaon?
Nishita Muhurta is the 8th of 15 equal segments of the night — the night being defined as the period from tonight's sunset to tomorrow's sunrise in Gurgaon. The formula: Night duration = (tomorrow's sunrise) minus (tonight's sunset). Each of the 15 night segments = night duration ÷ 15. Nishita start = sunset + (7 × segment length). Nishita end = sunset + (8 × segment length). Because Gurgaon's sunset and sunrise vary seasonally and differ from other cities by longitude, the Nishita timing shown here is specific to Gurgaon and changes nightly.
Is Nishita Kaal the same as the third prahar of Shivaratri?
Not exactly, but they overlap. The four prahars of Shivaratri divide the night into four equal 3-hour watches. The third prahar (Ratri Tritiya Prahar) spans roughly 9 PM–12 AM in many traditions, with the Nishita Kaal falling at the peak of the night near midnight. In practical observance, Nishita Kaal is treated as the climax moment within the third or early fourth prahar, depending on the night's length and local astronomical calculation.
Nishita Muhurta in Nearby Cities
Related Panchang Information
- Full Panchang for Gurgaon today — Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga, Karana, Rahu Kaal, and all auspicious timings.
- Brahma Muhurta in Gurgaon today — the pre-dawn auspicious window for yoga, meditation, and study (96–48 min before sunrise).
- Rahu Kaal in Gurgaon today — the daily inauspicious window to avoid for new beginnings.
- Nishita Muhurta hub — find tonight’s Nishita Muhurta for any of 100 Indian cities.
- National Panchang — full Vedic Panchang with all muhurtas for your city.
Reviewed by Dr. Meenakshi Sharma, PhD in Vedic Astrology. Last updated: Tuesday, 2 June 2026. Calculations follow the classical Vedic formula: Nishita Muhurta is the 8th of 15 equal night muhurtas (sunset to next sunrise), as documented in the Muhurta Chintamani and Shiva Purana.

