Panchang — Sunday, September 20, 2026

The complete daily panchang (panjika) calculated for Bangladesh (Dhaka) — tithi, nakshatra, yoga and karana with exact change times, plus the day's auspicious and inauspicious periods.

Sunday, September 20, 20265 Ashwin 1433 BS

Panchang at a Glance

Tithi
Navami (until 6:21 PM), Dashami
Paksha
Shukla (waxing)
Nakshatra
Purva Ashadha (until 5:04 AM (Sep 21)), Uttara Ashadha
Yoga
Saubhagya, Shobhana
Karana
Kaulava, Taitila
Masa (Lunar Month)
Bhadrapada
Ritu (Season)
Sharad (Autumn)
Ayana
Dakshinayana
Vikram Samvat
2083 (Parabhava)
Shaka Samvat
1948
Moon Rashi
Dhanu (Sagittarius)
Sun Rashi
Kanya (Virgo)

Sun & Moon

Sunrise

5:46 AM

Sunset

5:57 PM

Moonrise

1:52 PM

Moonset

Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga & Karana Timings

Exact transition times in Bangladesh time (Asia/Dhaka). The panchang day runs from sunrise to the next sunrise, so a single day can carry two tithis or nakshatras.

Tithi

NameStartsEnds
Navami5:46 AM6:21 PM
Dashami6:22 PM5:46 AM (Sep 21)

Nakshatra

NameStartsEnds
Purva Ashadha5:46 AM5:04 AM (Sep 21)
Uttara Ashadha5:05 AM (Sep 21)5:46 AM (Sep 21)

Yoga

NameStartsEnds
Saubhagya5:46 AM3:52 PM
Shobhana3:53 PM5:46 AM (Sep 21)

Karana

NameStartsEnds
Kaulava5:46 AM6:21 PM
Taitila6:22 PM5:46 AM (Sep 21)

Auspicious Timings (Shubh Muhurat)

Favourable windows for beginning new work, travel, puja and other important activities.

Abhijit Muhurta
11:27 AM – 12:16 PM
Brahma Muhurta
4:11 AM – 4:59 AM
Amrit Kalam
11:42 PM – 1:29 AM (Sep 21)

Inauspicious Timings

Periods traditionally avoided when starting auspicious work — Rahu Kaal, Yamaganda, Gulika Kaal, Dur Muhurta and Varjyam.

Rahu Kaal
4:25 PM – 5:57 PM
Yamaganda
11:51 AM – 1:23 PM
Gulika Kaal
2:54 PM – 4:25 PM
Dur Muhurta
8:12 AM – 9:01 AM, 9:49 AM – 10:38 AM, 4:19 PM – 5:08 PM
Varjyam
12:57 PM – 2:44 PM

Festivals & Vrats

  • Navami (Day 6)

About These Calculations

  • All timings are computed astronomically for Dhaka, Bangladesh (Asia/Dhaka) using the Lahiri (Chitra Paksha) ayanamsa.
  • The tithi shown first is the udaya tithi — the tithi prevailing at sunrise — which is the traditional value used for observances.
  • Auspicious and inauspicious periods such as Rahu Kaal depend on sunrise and sunset, so they differ slightly from city to city.
  • Regional panjikas (Bisuddha Siddhanta, Gupta Press) may differ by a few minutes, or occasionally by a day.