The July 9, 2026 Hindu Panchang is best understood as a sequence rather than a single daily label. In the New Delhi calculation reported by DharmaRenaissance Blog, Ashadha Krishna Paksha Navami gives way to Dashami, while Ashwini Nakshatra later yields to Bharani.
This guide organizes the reported elements around their practical use: which calculations require local verification, how the character of the day changes, and which New Delhi timing windows may matter for worship, routine duties, or a new auspicious undertaking.
Key takeaways
- The source reports Navami until approximately 10:37 AM for New Delhi, followed by Dashami, but also gives a separate general timing of 5:35 AM for most regions. A city-specific Panchang should therefore be checked before a time-bound observance.
- The reported sequence moves from Ashwini to Bharani Nakshatra, from Sukarma to Dhriti Yoga, and from Garaja through Vanija to Vishti Karana.
- For New Delhi, reported favorable periods include Brahma Muhurta, Amrit Kalam, Abhijit Muhurta, Vijaya Muhurta, and the evening Godhuli and Sandhya periods.
- Rahu Kaal is reported from approximately 2:10 PM to 3:54 PM. The source advises postponing fresh auspicious beginnings during that interval when possible, without treating it as a ban on ordinary work.
Why the reported Navami end times differ
The supplied DharmaRenaissance guide contains two timing frames. Its general summary places the end of Krishna Paksha Navami at approximately 5:35 AM on July 9, whereas its expanded New Delhi calculation keeps Navami until approximately 10:37 AM, with Dashami beginning afterward.
The source explains the difference by emphasizing that Panchang calculations are location-sensitive. Tithi, nakshatra, yoga, karana, sunrise, and moonrise depend on astronomical positions interpreted for a particular place. The supplied material does not identify the locations or calculation settings behind its broader 5:35 AM figure, however, so that time should not be substituted for a verified local result.
This distinction is especially important when a vrata, sankalpa, or ritual depends on the tithi prevailing at sunrise. For readers using the New Delhi schedule, the operational figure reported by the source is Navami until 10:37 AM. Readers elsewhere should retain the sequence of Navami followed by Dashami but confirm the local transition time independently.
How the Panchang sequence shapes the day
The source reports the following layered pattern for July 9. The interpretive notes describe traditional associations rather than deterministic predictions; the five limbs are intended to be read together.
| Panchang factor | Reported position or sequence | Practical emphasis described by the source |
|---|---|---|
| Tithi | Krishna Navami to Krishna Dashami | A movement from intensity, courage, and corrective effort toward order, continuity, and completion |
| Vara | Guruwara, or Thursday | Wisdom, teaching, counsel, devotional practice, and respect for Guru or Brihaspati |
| Nakshatra | Ashwini until the afternoon, then Bharani | A shift from quick action, assistance, healing, and restoration toward responsibility, endurance, and carrying work through |
| Yoga | Sukarma followed by Dhriti | Constructive effort followed by firmness and perseverance |
| Karana | Garaja, then Vanija, and later Vishti or Bhadra | Ordinary practical activity in the earlier phases, with caution around auspicious beginnings during Vishti |
| Rashi | Moon in Mesha; Sun in Mithuna | An active lunar tone alongside themes of study, communication, and exchange |
Read as a progression, the day begins with several indications favoring purposeful movement: Ashwini, Sukarma, and the workable Garaja and Vanija karanas. The later transition toward Bharani and Dhriti redirects that momentum toward steadiness, accountability, and completion. Once Vishti or Bhadra applies, the source recommends greater selectivity about inaugurating an auspicious venture.
The waning fortnight provides the wider frame. The source associates Krishna Paksha with simplification, reflection, restraint, correction of habits, japa, scriptural reading, charity, and quiet worship. That makes July 9 more naturally suited to disciplined progress and inward adjustment than to display for its own sake.
New Delhi timing map for July 9
For New Delhi, the source reports sunrise at approximately 5:30 AM and sunset at approximately 7:22 PM. Moonset is placed near 2:01 PM on July 9, while moonrise is reported at approximately 1:06 AM on July 10. Every time below belongs to that New Delhi calculation and should not be transferred unchanged to another city.
| Period | Reported New Delhi time | Suggested use or caution in the source |
|---|---|---|
| Brahma Muhurta | 4:09 AM-4:50 AM | Meditation and quiet spiritual practice |
| Pratah Sandhya | 4:29 AM-5:30 AM | Morning prayer and Sandhya observance |
| Yamaganda | 5:30 AM-7:14 AM | Caution for a fresh auspicious beginning |
| Amrit Kalam | 8:03 AM-9:35 AM | A favorable interval reported by the source |
| Gulikai Kalam | 8:58 AM-10:42 AM | A traditionally inauspicious interval |
| Dur Muhurtam | 10:08 AM-11:03 AM | First period to avoid for auspicious initiation |
| Varjyam | 11:06 AM-12:38 PM | First restrictive interval |
| Abhijit Muhurta | 11:59 AM-12:54 PM | A possible window for an important act when another suitable muhurta is unavailable |
| Rahu Kaal | 2:10 PM-3:54 PM | Avoid beginning a major auspicious undertaking when possible |
| Vijaya Muhurta | 2:45 PM-3:40 PM | A favorable period reported by the source, overlapping Rahu Kaal in this schedule |
| Dur Muhurtam | 3:40 PM-4:36 PM | Second period to avoid for auspicious initiation |
| Godhuli Muhurta | 7:21 PM-7:41 PM | Evening worship |
| Sayahna Sandhya | 7:22 PM-8:23 PM | Evening prayer and reflection |
| Varjyam | 11:51 PM-1:21 AM on July 10 | Second restrictive interval |
The table also shows why no muhurta should be selected from one label alone. Amrit Kalam overlaps part of Gulikai Kalam, Abhijit overlaps Varjyam, and Vijaya Muhurta falls within the reported Rahu Kaal. These intersections do not resolve themselves into a universal verdict; they demonstrate the source’s central point that tithi, vara, nakshatra, yoga, karana, and restrictive periods require a combined reading. The guide additionally reports Sarvartha Siddhi Yoga from sunrise until Ashwini ends in the afternoon, without supplying an exact endpoint in the excerpted material.
Using the calendar without reducing it to good or bad hours
A practical plan can begin with the purpose of the activity. Daily puja, meditation, study, family responsibilities, and established work do not require life to stop whenever a restrictive period appears. The source specifically treats Rahu Kaal as a caution against launching major auspicious ventures, signing important agreements, entering a new home, or beginning marriage-related ceremonies, rather than as a prohibition on routine obligations.
For personal practice, the reported pattern supports early meditation during Brahma Muhurta, morning prayer during Pratah Sandhya, steady work under the Sukarma-to-Dhriti progression, and evening worship around Godhuli or Sayahna Sandhya. Tasks involving healing, assistance, or a prompt response may fit the source’s reading of Ashwini, while duties demanding endurance and accountability accord more closely with its description of Bharani.
Anyone planning a time-bound ritual should next verify the local tithi at sunrise, the exact nakshatra and karana transitions, and any overlapping restrictive interval. That local check allows the Panchang to remain what it is meant to be: a disciplined framework for aligning intention, responsibility, and sacred rhythm as the day unfolds.



