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Kundli GPT

Griha Pravesh Muhurat 2026

Auspicious dates for life's important beginnings

June 2026

2 auspicious days

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Best dayAuspicious

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Most Auspicious

Muhurat windows

Best14:0619:20
The day's auspicious muhurat window5h 14m
Nakshatra
Pushya
Tithi
Shukla Tritiya
Yoga
Dhruva
Karana
Gar

Why this day

  • Pushya — an auspicious nakshatra for this ceremony
  • Shukla Tritiya — a favourable tithi

Times to avoid

  • Rahu Kaal12:22–14:06
  • Yamaganda07:07–08:52
  • Gulika Kaal10:37–12:22
  • Varjyam02:55–04:21
View full panchang

7 auspicious days

The most auspicious Griha Pravesh dates in 2026.

February2026

2 auspicious days
  1. 20

    Friday, February 20, 2026

    Most Auspicious
    Auspicious window07:43 – 08:2009:45 – 11:1012:35 – 14:38
    Uttara BhadrapadaShukla TritiyaView full panchang
  2. 26

    Thursday, February 26, 2026

    Most Auspicious
    Auspicious window08:15 – 09:4111:08 – 12:12
    MrigashiraShukla DashamiView full panchang

April2026

2 auspicious days
  1. 20

    Monday, April 20, 2026

    Most Auspicious
    Auspicious window05:50 – 07:27
    RohiniShukla TritiyaSarvartha Siddhi YogaView full panchang
  2. 29

    Wednesday, April 29, 2026

    Most Auspicious
    Auspicious window05:42 – 07:2109:18 – 10:3913:57 – 18:55
    HastaShukla TrayodashiSarvartha Siddhi YogaView full panchang

June2026

2 auspicious days
  1. 17

    Wednesday, June 17, 2026

    Most Auspicious
    Auspicious window14:06 – 19:20
    PushyaShukla TritiyaView full panchang
  2. 24

    Wednesday, June 24, 2026

    Most Auspicious
    Auspicious window05:24 – 07:0908:54 – 10:3814:08 – 19:22
    ChitraShukla DashamiView full panchang

December2026

1 auspicious day
  1. 14

    Monday, December 14, 2026

    Most Auspicious
    Auspicious window07:05 – 08:22
    ShravanaShukla PanchamiSarvartha Siddhi YogaView full panchang

About Griha Pravesh Muhurat

Griha pravesh is the first formal entry into a completed new home, timed so the household's life begins on stable, benefic stars. The texts ask for the fixed (sthira) nakshatras, the waxing fortnight and a clean daytime window, with the Abhijit Muhurta around noon as the prime slot. Ground-breaking before construction is a separate ceremony with its own dates — see Bhoomi Pujan Muhurat.

How Griha Pravesh Muhurat dates are chosen

  • Griha pravesh uses twelve nakshatras — the classical house-entry stars (Rohini, Mrigashira, Chitra, Uttara Ashadha and Uttara Bhadrapada, with Anuradha and Revati also permitted) joined by the mainstream additions led by Pushya, classically the most auspicious of all for entering a home, with Uttara Phalguni, Hasta, Swati and Shravana.
  • It is taken only in the waxing (Shukla) fortnight, on the benefic tithis — the 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 10th, 11th, 12th and 13th — on the gentle weekdays (Mon, Wed, Thu, Fri), in a clean daytime window.
  • Panchak bars construction, not the entry — Raman's Muhurtha itself names Uttara Bhadrapada and Revati for moving in — so unlike many popular listings this calendar keeps those days; the Abhijit Muhurta around noon is highlighted as the prime slot within each window.
  • Griha pravesh pauses through Kharmas, Chaturmas and Adhik Maas — and, exactly as for marriage, no entry is made while Jupiter or Venus is combust (asta): the texts ask for both to be strong in the sky when a new home is first entered.

Good to know

  • Dates calculated for New Delhi (IST). Timings shift slightly for other cities.
  • All five panchanga limbs are weighed together — a day is strong only when an auspicious nakshatra also falls on a benefic tithi and a gentle weekday.
  • Abhijit Muhurta — the ~48-minute window around solar noon — is treated as universally auspicious, and is highlighted as the prime slot within the griha pravesh and bhoomi pujan windows.
  • Rahu Kaal, Yamaganda and Gulika Kaal are inauspicious daily intervals; begin the actual ceremony outside these, even on a listed date.
  • Kharmas / Malmaas — when the Sun transits Sagittarius (mid-Dec→mid-Jan) or Pisces (mid-Mar→mid-Apr) — pauses marriages and major beginnings.
  • Chaturmas — from Devshayani to Prabodhini Ekadashi — pauses marriage, griha pravesh and several saMskaras.
  • During Adhik Maas (the leap lunar month) auspicious beginnings are traditionally paused, so some months may show few or no dates.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between griha pravesh and bhoomi pujan?
Bhoomi pujan is the worship of the land and ground-breaking before construction begins; griha pravesh is the first ceremonial entry into the completed home. Both share the stable-nakshatra rules — bhoomi pujan has its own page of dates here.
Why must griha pravesh fall in Shukla paksha?
The waxing fortnight symbolises growth and increase, so home-entry is taken while the Moon brightens, between Amavasya and Purnima.
Many sites avoid Panchak for griha pravesh — why do these dates keep it?
The classical rule applies Panchak to construction — building, repairs, fuel — not to entering a finished home; B.V. Raman's Muhurtha itself names Uttara Bhadrapada and Revati, both inside the band, among the best entry stars. So this calendar keeps those days, while bhoomi pujan (actual construction) excludes them. Families who observe Panchak for entry by custom can simply prefer the other listed dates.
When is the best time of day to enter the new home?
A dosha-free daytime window on the listed date, with the Abhijit Muhurta — about 48 minutes around local solar noon — highlighted as the prime slot. Begin outside Rahu Kaal, Yamaganda and Gulika Kaal.
How are these muhurat dates calculated?
Each day is scored against the five limbs of its Drik panchang — tithi, vara (weekday), nakshatra, yoga and karana — following the classical muhurta tradition — the Muhurta Chintamani, the Kalaprakasika and B.V. Raman's Muhurtha. Days carrying a dosha (Amavasya, the Rikta tithis, Bhadra or Panchak) are then removed, leaving only the auspicious dates for New Delhi.
Are the timings valid for my city?
The dates are anchored to New Delhi (IST). The auspicious day is usually the same across India, but the sunrise-based windows — and intervals like Rahu Kaal and Abhijit — shift a little by location, so check the full panchang for your own city before fixing a time.
Why do some months have no dates?
The strict rules drop the inauspicious tithis and nakshatras, and the seasonal pauses — Kharmas (Malmaas), Chaturmas and Adhik Maas — halt major beginnings entirely. A month sitting inside one of those windows can legitimately show few or no dates.
What is the Abhijit Muhurta?
Abhijit is the roughly 48-minute window around local solar noon, ruled by Lord Vishnu and considered auspicious for almost any task. The Muhurta texts treat it as a 'victory' window, and we highlight it as the prime slot within the griha pravesh and bhoomi pujan windows.
What are Bhadra, Panchak and the Rikta tithis?
These are the classical doshas we exclude. Bhadra (the Vishti karana) and Panchak (the Moon in the last five nakshatras, Dhanishta to Revati) are inauspicious periods; the Rikta tithis — the 4th, 9th and 14th of each fortnight — are the 'empty' tithis avoided for new beginnings.
Should I still consult an astrologer?
Yes. These dates are a strong, rule-based shortlist, but they are computed for a generic chart. For a wedding or any major event, confirming the muhurta against your own birth chart with an astrologer is recommended.