Aligning the stars...
Aligning the stars...
A solid match with clear strengths. Small areas to grow together.
Check your own Gun Milan scoreNaksham's analysis reveals a score of 25 out of 36 falls in the Madhyama (Good) class. Most kootas score well. A few need care. You and your partner share solid common ground across the core of the Ashtakoota (8-koota system).
Classical wisdom says this is a workable base for marriage. Muhurta Chintamani[2] treats scores above the 18-point baseline as green lights. Small growth areas are easy to bridge with open talks. Check the low-scoring kootas. Look at Manglik on both sides. Read the Navamsa (D9) for a full view. Step ahead with a calm, honest plan together.
Gun Milan is the classical 36-point match used across Vedic India. Muhurta Chintamani[2] sets four key rules that every score should be read against.
Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra[1] adds that the 8 kootas speak to eight layers of life. Mind, body, lineage, speech, and habits all get weighed. A total is a signal, not a full verdict.
Check the 8 koota details one by one. Find the kootas that score low. Read what each weak koota means for daily life.
Look at Manglik status on both sides. Check Nadi Dosha and Bhakoot Parihar rules. A Navamsa (D9) read from a Vedic astrologer adds real depth. Do not stop at the total score alone.
Move ahead with care and a full chart read. Check the low-scoring kootas. Check Manglik and Nadi on both sides.
Run your full Gun Milan check| Score Range | Classical Name | Marriage Recommended? |
|---|---|---|
| 33-36 | Uttama (Excellent) | Yes, with strong blessing |
| 28-32 | Uttama (Excellent) | Yes |
| 25-27 | Madhyama (Good) | Yes |
| 18-24 | Adhama (Acceptable) | Yes, with care |
| 0-17 | Check Parihar | Look deeper |
Source: Muhurta Chintamani[3] and Phaladeepika Chapter 9[4].