Tinder Match → Kundali Check — What Happened Next
His Tinder bio said: “Investment banker, marathon runner, dog dad, looking for someone who can argue politely about Bollywood.” My bio said: “PR person, reformed marathoner, cat mom, looking for someone who has actually seen a Hrishikesh Mukherjee film.” We matched on a Thursday in May 2024. We met for coffee on the Saturday. On the third date, sitting on a bench at Bandstand watching the sea, he asked me what my star sign was. I do not know why I told him my full birth details. I do not know why he told me his. We were on a third date in 2024 and we were exchanging Nakshatras like 1960s parents.
Setup
My name, for this telling, is Rhea. I am 27, a PR executive at a consumer goods agency in Lower Parel, born and raised in Mumbai. Veer is 30, a vice president at an investment bank in BKC, originally from a Punjabi family in Delhi but settled in Mumbai for six years.
(This story is a composite of three couples who shared their experiences.)
I had been on the apps for three years. I was, by 2024, exhausted with the apps in a way that surprised me, because I had thought I was the type who would never date the way my mother had been set up. I had been on enough first dates to know what I did not want. Veer was the first match in a year where the conversation across three dates had felt like a real conversation. So when he asked, on the bench, I told him.
I did not have a parental kundali. I had not grown up with one. My mother had given mine away to a relative who was studying astrology and had never asked for it back. My father had never been religious in that way. The exchange with Veer on the bench was almost a joke. He said, “My grandmother would absolutely run this through a kundali.” I said, “Mine would too, if she remembered I existed.” We both laughed. Then, that same night, alone in my flat, I opened the App Store.
The app I downloaded
I searched for free kundali apps. The third result was a free app called Sahita. It looked clean. No ads. No 999-rupee unlock paywall. I downloaded it on a whim, the way you download an astrology app at 11 PM after a third date that went better than you had expected.
I entered both birth details. Mine: October 5, 1996, 11:18 PM, Mumbai. Veer’s: February 14, 1994, 6:42 AM, Delhi. The chart generated in 90 seconds. The summary card showed 24 out of 36, which is considered a good score.
I closed the app. I told myself I had checked it out of curiosity. I went to sleep.
I opened it again the next morning. I am being honest here. I had thought about it twice on the way to work. I had wanted to see the breakdown.
The 8 Kootas. Varna: matched. Vashya: 1.5 out of 2. Tara: 2 out of 3. Yoni: 3 out of 4, strong. Graha Maitri: 5 out of 5, ideal. Gana: 4 out of 6. Bhakoot: 0 out of 7, flagged. Nadi: 8 out of 8, clean.
The Bhakoot was the one flag. Sahita explained it was a 2/12 Bhakoot. Veer’s Moon was in Aquarius. Mine was in Pisces. The two Moons sat in adjacent signs, which is what 2/12 means. The app noted that 2/12 Bhakoot is traditionally considered cancellable when both Moon-sign lords share a friendly aspect. Saturn rules Aquarius. Jupiter rules Pisces. Saturn and Jupiter are not classical friends. They are neutral. The cancellation rule for friendship did not apply. The Bhakoot stayed flagged.
But then a second panel appeared. Sahita noted that 2/12 Bhakoot has a second cancellation: when both Moon signs share a common benefic aspect. I tapped through. Both our Moons were receiving a Jupiter aspect from a single Jupiter placement in Leo. The cancellation applied. The dosha was considered mitigated.
I closed the app. I texted Veer: “We have a Bhakoot. It is cancelled.” He replied: “Sorry, what?”
What we did with the information
I did not, the next morning, decide to marry Veer. We were on a third date. The relationship had not yet acquired the gravity that would justify that.
What we did was different. We treated the chart as an interesting piece of information we had stumbled into. Veer, who was as new to apps that read kundalis as he was to apps that read pull requests, sent the Sahita PDF to his grandmother in Delhi. She read it on her tablet (she has had a tablet for six years). She read it twice. She called him back and said, “It is a respectable chart. If you both like each other, the chart is not the obstacle.” Veer told me this on date five, over Goan fish curry, in the same flat voice he uses to deliver work updates.
My mother, when I told her about Veer (date seven), did not ask for the chart. She asked about him. The chart came up much later, almost as an afterthought, when she met him over dinner in August and said in passing, “I trust your judgement, I have always trusted your judgement, but it is good to know the chart was not in the way.” That was the most she said about astrology in the entire courtship.
What I want to say about apps and dating
Running a kundali check on the third date is not, on its face, romantic. It is not, in any classical sense, the way these things are supposed to be done. The texts assume an arranged-marriage context where families exchange details and astrologers do the reading.
What I found, doing it the way I did it, is that the texts still have something to say. The Bhakoot was real. The cancellation rule was real. The chart told me a true thing about us, which is that there is a small friction in our compatibility (the 2/12 Bhakoot) that has been mitigated by a structural factor (the Jupiter benefic). It is not a guarantee. It is, as Veer’s grandmother put it, the absence of an obstacle.
I would not have known any of this if I had not opened the app at 11 PM on a whim. I would not have known the small friction was named. I would not have known there was a cancellation rule. I would have, in the months that followed, blamed any small friction on us as individuals rather than on a chart pattern that the texts already had a word for. Knowing the name made the small frictions easier to recognise and easier to discuss without taking them personally.
Where we are now
Veer and I have been together for eleven months. We are not engaged. We are not in a rush. We met our families this past Diwali. We are, in his calm phrasing, “letting the thing take the time it needs.”
The Sahita app is still on my phone. I have not opened it since that first week. I do not think of us as a 24/36 score. I think of us as two people who got curious one Saturday night and learned that the chart was not against us. That was enough for me to stop holding my breath. The rest is the work two people do.
If you are curious tonight
If you are curious tonight, Sahita is free, takes 2 minutes, and gives you the per-Koota breakdown with every cancellation rule in plain English. You do not have to be in an arranged-marriage track to find it useful. Many couples on dating apps run the check out of curiosity and find something honest in the result. 36 Gunas, 8 Kootas, the dosha panel, the downloadable PDF. Free forever. No paywall. Get it on Play Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.appsapien.sahita
You can read more on a 2-minute kundali story, why accurate birth details matter on dating apps too, or a story about taking the chart seriously after dismissing it for years.
FAQ
Is it weird to run a kundali check on a dating app match?
It is becoming more common, particularly among adults in their late 20s and 30s who grew up between arranged-marriage tradition and self-selected dating. Many couples use the chart as an additional data point rather than a verdict, especially when both partners are curious about astrology but not heavily committed to it.
Do I need permission to enter my date’s birth details into an app?
It is courteous to ask. Many couples we have heard from exchange details openly when both are curious about astrology. If your match has not shared details voluntarily, it is reasonable to either ask directly or to wait until the relationship is at a stage where the question fits.
What if the kundali score is low for a couple who is already dating?
A low score does not mean the relationship will fail. It means certain classical compatibility points are flagged. The per-Koota breakdown and the cancellation rules are more informative than the total. Many couples with flagged scores have long, healthy relationships, especially when they treat the flags as named patterns rather than as verdicts.
What does Sahita actually do?
Sahita is a free Vedic kundali matching app that calculates the 36 Gunas across 8 Kootas, flags doshas like Bhakoot and Manglik, and shows which classical cancellation rules apply to a specific pair of charts. It takes about two minutes and is free forever on Play Store.
When is Bhakoot 2/12 considered cancelled?
Bhakoot 2/12 is traditionally considered cancellable when both Moon signs fall in the same nakshatra, when the planetary lords of both Moon signs share a friendly aspect, or when both Moons receive an aspect from a common benefic like Jupiter. Sahita walks through each rule for your specific charts.
Should we still consult a family astrologer if we met on a dating app?
If the relationship moves toward engagement, many families do still consult their family astrologer regardless of how the couple met. The Sahita PDF can be a useful starting point for that conversation, giving the astrologer the same baseline numbers in plain English and surfacing cancellation rules that might otherwise be missed.