Kundali Matching

Kundali Matching for Marriage: Free Online 36 Guna Report

Kundali matching for marriage is the first step Indian families take before finalising any wedding. Two janma-kundalis are compared across the eight kootas of Ashta Koota Milan, a 36 Guna score is calculated, and the compatibility is either confirmed, rejected, or opened for remedies. This complete guide will show you how kundali matching for marriage works, what the 36 Guna score actually means, which koota failures are serious and which are not, and how to get your free 36 Guna report online in under sixty seconds — in English, Hindi, Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, or any of eleven Indian languages the Sahita Vivaha Matching app supports.

What Is Kundali Matching for Marriage?

Kundali matching for marriage is the Vedic astrology practice of comparing two birth charts to check compatibility before a wedding is finalised. It goes by many names across India: kundli milan in Hindi, janmakshar matching in Marathi and Gujarati, jataka porutta in Kannada, jathakam porutham in Telugu and Malayalam, thirumana porutham in Tamil, koshthi milan in Bengali. The astrological rules are the same. Only the script and terminology change.

The most widely used method for kundali matching in North and Central India is Ashta Koota — an eight-part scoring system attributed to the sage Parasara. Each of the eight kootas measures one dimension of compatibility, and each carries a specific point value. The eight scores add up to a maximum of 36 points, which is why kundali matching for marriage is often shortened to “the 36 Guna report”.

The 36 Guna Score: What the Numbers Really Mean

Before we walk through the eight kootas, understand what the total score signals. This single number will drive most family conversations after you run kundali matching for marriage.

Guna ScoreVerdictWhat It Means
18 or belowNot recommendedSerious mismatches. Marriage possible only after remedies + astrologer consultation.
18 to 24AverageAcceptable. Some kootas will need attention but marriage is viable.
25 to 32Very GoodStrong compatibility across most life areas. Green light in most families.
33 to 36ExcellentRare. Considered a divine match. Immediate approval in almost all traditions.

The critical threshold in traditional kundali matching for marriage is 18 out of 36. Below this, most classical astrologers advise against the match unless specific remedies are performed. Between 18 and 24 the match is acceptable but conditional. Above 24, most families proceed. Above 32 is genuinely rare — and even then, not a guarantee: read this real story of a 36/36 couple who still divorced to see why the number is not the whole picture.

Wondering what a low score looks like in practice? Real families have shared their experience: what happened when our kundali matched only 14 gunas and a 32/36 match that still couldn’t work. The interpretation matters as much as the number.

The 8 Kootas of Ashta Koota Milan Explained

Each koota checks one specific dimension of compatibility. Understanding them helps you interpret your kundali matching report rather than reacting only to the total score.

1. Varna Koota (1 point) — Spiritual Compatibility

Varna divides the twelve rashis into four spiritual classes: Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudra. Not to be confused with social caste, this is a spiritual grouping. The rule: the groom’s varna should be equal to or higher than the bride’s varna. This is a soft check — a single point among 36 — and rarely blocks a marriage on its own.

2. Vashya Koota (2 points) — Mutual Attraction and Influence

Vashya categorises the twelve rashis into five groups: Chatushpada (four-legged), Manav (human), Jalachara (water-born), Vanchara (wild), and Keeta (insect). Full points come when both partners fall in the same group. It measures who will naturally influence the other in the relationship.

3. Tara Koota (3 points) — Health and Well-being

Tara compares the birth nakshatras of both partners. The 27 nakshatras are grouped into nine tara categories: Janma, Sampat, Vipat, Kshema, Pratyak, Sadhaka, Vadha, Mitra, and Ati-mitra. Auspicious taras score full points. Vadha tara — a specific mismatch pattern — is the pattern to check for.

4. Yoni Koota (4 points) — Sexual Compatibility

Yoni assigns each of the 27 nakshatras a symbolic animal — horse, elephant, cat, deer, snake, dog, and so on. The compatibility between the two symbolic animals reflects sexual and instinctual harmony. Full points come from same or friendly animal pairings. Natural enemy pairings score zero. This is one of the most talked-about kootas in traditional families.

5. Graha Maitri Koota (5 points) — Mental Compatibility

Also called Rashi Adhipati Maitri, this checks the friendship between the rashi lords of both partners. If the moon-sign lords are natural friends, full 5 points. Neutral relationship earns 3. Enemy planets score zero. Because it carries five points, Graha Maitri failures pull the total score down noticeably.

6. Gana Koota (6 points) — Temperament

The 27 nakshatras are classified into three ganas: Deva (godly, calm), Manushya (human, balanced), and Rakshasa (demonic, intense). Same-gana matches score full 6 points. Deva-Manushya pairings score 5. Deva-Rakshasa pairings score zero and are considered problematic — the classical texts warn of temperament clashes leading to conflict.

7. Bhakoot Koota (7 points) — Family and Financial Well-being

Bhakoot measures the distance between the moon rashis of the two partners. Rashi positions of 6-8, 5-9, and 2-12 from each other create what is called Bhakoot Dosha. These are said to affect wealth, family harmony, and children. Fortunately, Bhakoot Dosha has well-established cancellation rules — for example, when the rashi lords are friendly, or when navamsa placements are strong. One couple shared what happened five years after they ignored Bhakoot Dosha.

8. Nadi Koota (8 points) — Genetic and Progeny Compatibility

The most heavily weighted koota. The 27 nakshatras are divided into three nadis: Adi, Madhya, and Antya. If both partners share the same nadi, this is Nadi Dosha — zero points, and eight points lost. Classical texts warn of health and progeny concerns. However, Nadi Dosha has legitimate cancellations: same nakshatra different pada, same nadi but different rashi, and specific same-nakshatra pairings all qualify. Any good kundali matching for marriage report will check these cancellations before flagging a failure. Read one family’s Nadi Dosha decision for a real-world example.

Manglik Dosha: The Extra Check Beyond the 36 Guna

The 36 Guna score is not the complete picture. Every kundali matching for marriage report must also check Manglik Dosha — the placement of Mars in the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 7th, 8th, or 12th house of the natal chart. A person with this placement is called Manglik or Mangalik.

Traditional wisdom holds that if one partner is Manglik and the other is not, marriage should be avoided or performed only after remedies such as Kumbh Vivah. There are two levels of the dosha — Manglik Anshik vs Purna — the complete guide covers the distinction that most families miss. However, if both partners are Manglik, or if the Manglik dosha is cancelled by specific planetary positions (Mars in own sign or exaltation, aspect from benefics), the dosha is neutralised.

A modern kundali matching for marriage tool worth using — like the Sahita Vivaha Matching app — will check Manglik status for both partners, apply the cancellation rules automatically, and tell you whether the dosha is present, cancelled, or mutual.

Can We Marry If the Kundali Score Is Low?

The single most searched question after a match report is: My score is 18 out of 36 — is it okay? The honest answer requires nuance the score alone does not provide.

First, check which koota failed. A 6-point Gana failure is more serious than a 1-point Varna failure. A Nadi Dosha with no cancellation is one of the strongest warning signs, while a Bhakoot failure that already has classical cancellation is minor. If the report has left you unsure, real couples’ stories help — for example, the couple whose astrologer said no, six years later.

Second, look at the Navamsa chart (D9), the divisional chart used for marriage prediction. A strong 7th house in Navamsa can carry a marriage that has a low Ashta Koota score. Conversely, a high Ashta Koota score with a weak Navamsa is misleading.

Third, understand that in modern practice — especially for love marriages — most astrologers recommend remedies rather than rejection. Puja for the specific dosha, Kumbh Vivah for Manglik cancellation, and chanting the right mantras have been used successfully for centuries.

How to Do Free Kundali Matching for Marriage Online

Twenty years ago, kundali matching for marriage meant a visit to the family astrologer, an hour of calculations, and a handwritten report. Today, an accurate 36 Guna report takes sixty seconds on your phone. Here is how to do it right.

  1. Collect four details for each partner: full name, date of birth, exact time of birth, and place of birth. Time of birth is the critical one — a 20-minute difference can change the Lagna.
  2. Enter both sets of details in a reliable app. Free online tools that show individual koota scores (not just the total) are more useful than tools that show only the verdict. Sahita on Google Play is free and shows all 8 kootas plus cancellations.
  3. Read the koota-by-koota breakdown. A single failing koota is not automatically a dealbreaker. Check the point value, and check whether classical cancellations apply.
  4. Check the Manglik status for both partners separately. If one is Manglik and one is not, look for the mutual Mangla cancellation rules.
  5. Look at the Navamsa chart before making decisions on low scores. The D9 chart shows the true marriage-time picture that Ashta Koota alone misses.
  6. Share the report with your family in their language. Elders in most Indian households read the outcome in the family’s mother tongue, not in English.

Why Kundali Matching for Marriage Matters — Even in 2026

In a decade where love marriages, inter-caste unions, and NRI weddings are common, some couples ask whether kundali matching for marriage is still relevant. The answer is layered. Astrologically, the eight kootas are not superstition — each measures a real dimension of long-term compatibility, from temperament to intimacy to family finances. Culturally, in most Indian households the kundali matching outcome is what parents accept as proof of a “considered” match. Practically, running a free 36 Guna report is a five-minute conversation opener that can protect you from months of family friction — as one reader described in how online kundali matching changed her family’s mind.

Even if you personally do not believe in Vedic astrology, running kundali matching for marriage is one of the fastest ways to bring your parents on side. And in the rare case when the report reveals a serious mismatch, it opens the door to remedies before the wedding rather than regret after it. Real couple stories — wedding postponed because of kundali — show how families navigate this.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is kundali matching for marriage free on Sahita?

Yes. Sahita Vivaha Matching on Google Play offers a complete free 36 Guna Ashta Koota report — all 8 kootas with individual scores, Manglik check for both partners, Nadi Dosha cancellation logic, and a conclusion in your chosen language. No login, no astrologer upsell, no advertisements.

What is the minimum guna score needed for marriage?

The classical minimum is 18 out of 36. Below 18 is considered incompatible without remedies. Between 18 and 24 is acceptable. Above 24 is considered a good match by most astrologers.

Can I do kundali matching for marriage without knowing the birth time?

Yes, but the report is less complete. Without birth time, Lagna and Navamsa cannot be calculated. You can still get a Nakshatra-based match using name and date of birth alone. Sahita supports name-only kundali matching mode for exactly this situation.

Does Nadi Dosha always mean the marriage will fail?

No. Nadi Dosha has several classical cancellations: same nakshatra different pada, same nadi but different rashi, and specific same-nakshatra combinations. A proper 36 Guna report will apply these cancellations before flagging the failure. Even where the dosha is genuine, remedial pujas have been used successfully for centuries.

Which Indian languages does Sahita kundali matching support?

Eleven languages: English, Hindi, Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, Marathi, Malayalam, Gujarati, Bengali, Odia, and Punjabi. Both the app UI and the match report are translated natively — not machine-transliterated — so families can read the report in their own script.

Get Your Free Kundali Matching for Marriage Report

The Sahita Vivaha Matching app is free on Google Play. It runs a complete 36 Guna Ashta Koota check between two birth charts in under a minute, applies all classical cancellation rules, checks Manglik status for both partners, and produces a shareable report your family can read in eleven Indian languages. No login required. No astrologer calls. No hidden fees.

Related reading: The 2-minute kundali match that saved our wedding · App score vs astrologer score — why they differ · When parents secretly check the kundali

Written by Mahant

Vedic astrology writer and the voice behind Sahita’s guides — built with love for Indian families.

3 thoughts on “Kundali Matching for Marriage: Free Online 36 Guna Report”

Leave a Comment

Start your kundali matching journey today

Free on Android. Get the full 36-guna Ashta Koota report in seconds.

▶  Get it on Google Play✓ Free   ✓ 10K+ Downloads   ✓ Vedic Shastra Based