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Vedic astrology allows and guides second marriage, with a fresh chart check for the new partner.
Run a fresh Kundali MatchClassical Vedic astrology does speak about second marriage with care. Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra[1] teaches the house-based rule in plain terms. The 7th house (Bhava) shows the first spouse. The 9th house shows the second spouse. This is the core rule.
Why the 9th? In Vedic chart reasoning, each house is counted again from another. The 9th is the 3rd house counted from the 7th. The 3rd stands for the next, or the one that follows. So the 9th from the Lagna is the second union after the first one. Naksham's analysis reveals this is the most trusted classical rule.
9th House (Bhava)
The second spouse and second partnership.
Guru (Jupiter)
Wisdom, blessing, and kind second unions.
Shukra (Venus)
Love, joy, and marriage pleasure.
Guru (Jupiter) is the kind planet of wisdom. When Guru sits in the 9th house, or throws a direct aspect on it, the second marriage carries a blessing. The match feels fated. Phaladeepika[2] lists this as a sign of a long and happy second union.
Shukra (Venus) is the planet of love and marriage joy. A strong Venus in the 9th, or a Venus that looks at the 9th, brings real pleasure to the second bond. If Venus is hurt or combust, the second marriage may need more patience. This is not bad. It is just a signal to plan with care.
You should also read the Navamsa (D9) chart for second marriage. The D9 is the marriage chart. A well-placed 9th house in both the main Lagna chart and the Navamsa is the real classical green light. A full reading checks both charts side by side.
A second marriage is a fresh chart pair. Nothing from the old match carries over. Every koota, every dosha, every score must be run again. This is the golden rule. Naksham's analysis reveals this is where most couples skip steps.
Mangal (Mars) Dosha is read from your Lagna, your Moon sign, and your Venus. The rule is the same as before. Mars in houses 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, or 12 makes you Manglik. Your own chart does not change between marriages. But your new partner's chart is new.
Two kind fixes often apply by the time of a second marriage:
You can run a full check in minutes on Naksham's Manglik Dosha tool. Bring your new partner's birth details. Bring your own. Read the result side by side.
Nadi Dosha is read from the birth star (Nakshatra) of each partner. The 27 stars split into three Nadi groups. Adi, Madhya, and Antya. Same Nadi for both partners is a classical flag. This is the genetics koota, and it still matters for a second marriage.
Your own Nakshatra does not change. But your new partner's Nakshatra is new. So a fresh Nadi check is needed. The good news is that many cancellations do apply. Same Rashi with different stars. Same star with different padas. A skilled Vedic astrologer finds the Parihar (remedy) in most charts.
You should also run Bhakoot, Gana, Yoni, and the full 36-point Ashtakoota match. One koota does not decide a marriage. The whole picture does. Naksham's Kundali Matching tool gives you the full score in one page.
Ready to run a full check for your new partner? The tool does all 36 points in under a minute.
Start a fresh 36-point matchVedic tradition is kind to those who have lost a spouse. The classical texts do allow widow and widower remarriage. Naksham's view is that grief is sacred, and so is the path forward. One does not cancel the other.
Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra[1] reads the 9th house (Bhava) for the second spouse in the same way, whether the first marriage ended by death or by parting. The rule does not change based on how the first union ended. Your chart still holds the map to the next path.
For a remarriage after loss, a few kind signs often show up in the chart:
Many great sages and classical figures married more than once. The texts do not paint this as a failing. The loss of a spouse is karma. The choice to love again is dharma. Both are held with respect.
Old cultural stigma is not the same as classical rule. Some families may still carry old views, but the Vedic chart itself does not judge. The 9th house opens for everyone who seeks a second partnership with an honest heart.
A first marriage that ended in parting is not a mark against you. Naksham's analysis reveals that the chart often holds clear signs that the first union was always a short chapter, not the full book.
A few chart signs that can point to a hard first marriage:
These same charts often show strong yogas for the second marriage. A weak 7th may sit next to a very strong 9th. Saturn's role in the first may give way to Jupiter's blessing in the second. This is not a trick of the chart. It is how the houses work as a set.
Your job now is simple. Read the 9th house with a fresh eye. Check the Navamsa (D9). Run a full Gun Milan with your new partner. Talk honestly with both families. Plan the muhurta with a good Vedic astrologer. The path forward is real and open.
A first marriage that ends is a chapter. A second marriage is a new chapter with its own yogas, its own lessons, and its own joys. The chart does not judge the past. It only shows the road ahead.
Run a full Kundali Match with your new partner
Free 36-point Ashtakoota scoring with Manglik cross-check and all koota Parihars.