Ashtakavarga
About this tool
The Ashtakavarga (अष्टकवर्ग — "eight-fold division") is a system defined in BPHS that assigns each of the 12 signs in your chart a numerical score by counting benefic contributions (Bindhu points) cast by each of the seven classical planets and the Lagna. The result is a precise, quantifiable map of your chart's house-by-house strength — which areas of life have broad planetary support, and which are inherently challenged. For transit timing, Ashtakavarga is the most reliable refinement tool in classical Jyotish: it tells you whether a planet transiting a house will deliver results or face resistance, regardless of its general position from the Moon.
Free · Bindu Analysis
Ashtakavarga Chart
House bindu strength and sign-level receptivity based on Sarvashtakavarga.
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Calculating Ashtakavarga — applying Shodhana reductions…
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Precise bindu counts · Trikona & Ekadhipatya Shodhana applied
Ashtakavarga — The Complete System Explained
Construction · Trikona Shodhana · SAV · BAV · Kakshya · How to Use It for Timing
Reference material only. All Ashtakavarga principles described here follow the BPHS (Ashtakavarga Adhyaya). Bindhu contribution rules, reduction methods, and SAV thresholds are established in the classical text. Your actual computed scores will vary based on your specific birth chart.
✦ The Core Principle — What a Bindhu Is and Why It Matters

A Bindhu (बिंदु — "point" or "dot") is a single benefic contribution cast by a planet from its natal position to a specific sign. Each of the seven classical planets has a unique set of positions from which it contributes Bindhu — these positions are fixed rules established in BPHS and do not vary. The Lagna (Ascendant) also contributes Bindhu following its own fixed rule set, making eight total contributors.

When you add all eight contributors' Bindhu scores for each sign, you get the Sarvashtakavarga (SAV) — the total benefic point count for that sign and its corresponding house. The maximum possible SAV for any house is 56 (8 contributors × 7 possible positions each). In practice, scores range from about 18 to 42, with the average around 28.

The core logic is straightforward: a house with a high SAV has received concentrated planetary support at birth. Life events connected to that house tend to flow with relative ease. A house with a low SAV has received little support — the domain it governs requires sustained effort, and even positive transits through it tend to underperform.

1 · How Each Planet Contributes Bindhu — The Eight Tables

BPHS establishes a fixed contribution table for each of the eight contributors. Each table lists the positions (counted from the contributor's own placement) that receive a Bindhu. Positions not listed receive nothing (Rekha — a malefic point in the Rekha analysis, though NAKSHATRA focuses on the Bindhu system). The contribution rules as defined in BPHS are:

Surya (Sun)
Contributes Bindhu to the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, and 11th signs counted from its own natal position. 8 Bindhu total.
Chandra (Moon)
Contributes Bindhu to the 3rd, 6th, 7th, 8th, 10th, and 11th signs from its natal position. 6 Bindhu total.
Mangal (Mars)
Contributes Bindhu to the 3rd, 5th, 6th, 10th, and 11th signs from its natal position. 5 Bindhu total — Mars is the most selective contributor.
Budha (Mercury)
Contributes Bindhu to the 2nd, 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, and 11th signs from its natal position. 6 Bindhu total.
Guru (Jupiter)
Contributes Bindhu to the 2nd, 5th, 6th, 9th, 10th, and 11th signs from its natal position. 6 Bindhu total.
Shukra (Venus)
Contributes Bindhu to the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 8th, 9th, and 11th signs from its natal position. 8 Bindhu total — Venus is the most generous contributor.
Shani (Saturn)
Contributes Bindhu to the 3rd, 5th, 6th, and 11th signs from its natal position. Only 4 Bindhu total — Saturn is the most restrictive contributor, reflecting its naturally limiting nature.
Lagna (Ascendant)
Contributes Bindhu to the 3rd, 6th, 10th, and 11th signs from the Lagna. 4 Bindhu total.

These tables are applied simultaneously from each contributor's natal position. The overlapping contributions across all eight contributors produce the final SAV score for each house.

2 · Trikona Shodhana and Ekadhipatya Shodhana — The Two Reductions

BPHS establishes two reduction (Shodhana) procedures that must be applied to the raw Bindhu scores before the final SAV is used. These reductions refine the scores by removing excess that would otherwise inflate the totals. Both are described in the BPHS Ashtakavarga Adhyaya.

Trikona Shodhana — Trine Reduction

The zodiac is divided into four groups of three trine signs: (1) Aries, Leo, Sagittarius — the fire trines; (2) Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn — the earth trines; (3) Gemini, Libra, Aquarius — the air trines; (4) Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces — the water trines. Within each trine group, find the sign with the lowest Bindhu score. Subtract that lowest score from all three signs in the trine. This process is called Trikona Shodhana and is applied to each planet's individual Bhinnashtakavarga (BAV) table separately before constructing the SAV.

Ekadhipatya Shodhana — Single-Lord Reduction

Several planets rule two signs each: Mars rules Aries and Scorpio, Mercury rules Gemini and Virgo, Jupiter rules Sagittarius and Pisces, Venus rules Taurus and Libra, Saturn rules Capricorn and Aquarius. For each such planet, compare the Bindhu scores of its two ruled signs. In each planet's individual BAV table, reduce the higher-scoring ruled sign's score to match the lower one. This prevents a single ruling planet from double-amplifying results across both its signs. Sun and Moon rule only one sign each and are exempt from this reduction.

After both reductions, the eight individual planet BAV tables are summed to produce the final, reduced SAV — the number used for all practical interpretation and transit timing. The reduced SAV scores are lower than the raw totals and represent the true effective strength of each house.

3 · Reading SAV Scores — House Strength Assessment

Once the reductions are applied, the SAV score for each house is interpreted as follows. These thresholds are drawn from classical practice and the work of B.V. Raman who systematised the practical application of BPHS Ashtakavarga for modern use:

SAV 30 or above
A strong house. Life areas governed by this house will generally flourish with relative ease. Planetary transits through this house tend to deliver positive results — especially when the transiting planet also has strong BAV in that sign.
SAV 28 to 29
Above average. The house has solid support. Events connected to this domain tend to arrive on time and deliver reasonably well.
SAV 25 to 27
Average house. Mixed results — some support, some friction. Outcomes are more variable and depend heavily on which planet is transiting and the concurrent Dasha.
SAV 22 to 24
Below average. The house domain faces inherent challenges. Effort is required where ease might be expected. Transits through this house, even by benefics, often underdeliver.
SAV below 22
Weak house. This life domain is actually difficult in the natal promise. Significant obstacles are built into the chart here. Even in the best Dasha, events connected to this house require sustained effort and patience.

Importantly, a weak SAV house does not mean that domain is destroyed — it means the native will work harder for results in that area than someone with a strong SAV house. With conscious effort and the right Dasha support, even a low-SAV house can deliver meaningful results.

4 · Bhinnashtakavarga (BAV) — Planet-Specific Transit Timing

The Bhinnashtakavarga (BAV) is the individual Ashtakavarga table for each planet — its own Bindhu contribution score across the 12 signs, after Trikona and Ekadhipatya Shodhana have been applied. The BAV is used specifically for transit timing: when a planet transits a sign, its own BAV score in that sign tells you how productive that transit will be.

Reading BAV for Transit Quality
BAV 5 or above (out of 8 maximum)
An excellent transit. The planet has high self-contributed support in this sign. Its significations activate strongly. Even a classically difficult planet like Saturn produces more constructive results when its own BAV is high.
BAV 4
A productive transit. The planet is supported. Results are generally positive and arrive without excessive resistance.
BAV 3
Average transit. The planet delivers moderate results — neither its best nor its most difficult expression. Outcomes are present but not exceptional.
BAV 2
A challenging transit. The planet lacks self-support in this sign. Results are reduced, delayed, and require effort to materialise.
BAV 0 or 1
A resistant transit. The planet is working entirely without support in this sign. Even a benefic planet transiting a sign with BAV 0 in its own table may produce little positive effect. Malefic planets here tend to produce their most difficult results.
The Key Principle — Self-Contributed Bindhu

The most important BAV rule is this: a planet transiting a sign where it contributed its own Bindhu at birth operates in an environment of self-created support. The reverse — a planet transiting a sign where it contributed no Bindhu — means it is working against the background of its own absence. This is why two people with the same Saturn position from Moon can have completely different Sade Sati experiences: their Saturn BAV scores in the three transited signs are different.

5 · Saturn BAV — The Most Practical Application

The single most valuable practical application of Ashtakavarga is refining Saturn transit predictions. Saturn spends 2.5 years in each sign — a long enough window that the BAV score has a visible, sustained effect on the native's life experience during that entire period.

Saturn BAV in the Three Sade Sati Signs

During Sade Sati, Saturn transits three signs consecutively — the 12th from Moon, the Moon sign, and the 2nd from Moon. Each phase lasts 2.5 years. The Saturn BAV score in each of those three signs directly determines the character of each phase:

Saturn BAV 5 or above in a phase sign
That Sade Sati phase tends toward constructive restructuring — the pressure is real but productive. Career changes made during this phase tend to stick. Spiritual growth is genuine and lasting.
Saturn BAV 3 or 4 in a phase sign
That phase is challenging but manageable. Effort and patience are required but the difficulties are workable rather than overwhelming.
Saturn BAV 1 or 2 in a phase sign
That phase of Sade Sati is the most difficult for this person — the Saturn transit lands in a sign where Saturn has almost no self-support. Obstacles accumulate faster, health and career take more hits, and the recovery takes longer.

This is why two people with the same Moon sign can have dramatically different Sade Sati experiences — their Saturn BAV scores in those three signs are different. Ashtakavarga resolves the question that general Saturn-from-Moon position analysis cannot: for whom will this Sade Sati phase be most difficult?

6 · Kakshya — Week-Level Precision Within Each Transit

Each of the 12 signs spans 30°. The Ashtakavarga system further divides each sign into 8 equal sub-divisions of 3°45' each, called Kakshyas (काक्ष्या). Each Kakshya is governed by one of the eight contributors in a fixed sequence: Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Sun, Venus, Mercury, Moon, Lagna — repeating through the 8 Kakshyas of each sign.

Within a transit through a sign, the transiting planet passes through all 8 Kakshyas sequentially. When it enters a Kakshya whose ruler contributed a Bindhu in the transiting planet's BAV for that sign, the transit is in a supportive micro-window — results activate more visibly. When it enters a Kakshya whose ruler did NOT contribute a Bindhu, the transit is in a resistant micro-window — results are suppressed or delayed for those few days or weeks.

Practical Use of Kakshya
Benefic Kakshya windows
When the transiting planet enters a Kakshya whose lord contributed a Bindhu in that planet's BAV table for the sign — the specific degree range where events in the transit's domain are most likely to crystallise. This is used for pinpointing the week within a 2.5-year Saturn transit when a specific event will trigger.
Malefic Kakshya windows
When the transiting planet enters a Kakshya whose lord did not contribute a Bindhu — suppressed results, delays, or the transit's negative significations becoming temporarily more prominent.

Kakshya is the finest timing layer within Ashtakavarga. Combined with Pratyantardasha and the daily Moon transit, it allows Jyotishis to narrow event timing to within a specific week inside a Dasha period that might last two years. It requires accurate birth time to within a few minutes for the Lagna Kakshya calculations to be reliable.

7 · Ashtakavarga and Longevity — The Pindayu Method

BPHS includes a longevity calculation method using Ashtakavarga called Pindayu (पिण्डायु). The sum of all Bindhu points across all 12 signs for a specific planet is called its Pinda. The Pinda of each planet contributes a proportional number of years to the native's longevity calculation. This is one of several classical ayurdaya (lifespan determination) methods and is used alongside Dasha analysis for broad longevity assessment.

The practical relevance of Pindayu for most users is indirect — it reveals which planets have the most concentrated Bindhu across the chart (high Pinda = that planet is a strong life supporter) and which have the least (low Pinda = that planet is a life-shortening influence if afflicted). A planet with a high Pinda is broadly supportive of vitality and longevity; its Dasha periods tend to be more life-sustaining. A planet with a very low Pinda may signal health vulnerability during its period, especially if the 8th house and its lord are also weak.

Sources
Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra
by Parashara (c. 600–800 CE). The Ashtakavarga Adhyaya (Ashtakavarga chapters) is the definitive and primary classical source for the entire system. BPHS establishes: the Bindhu contribution tables for all eight contributors (seven planets + Lagna), the Trikona Shodhana reduction method, the Ekadhipatya Shodhana reduction method, SAV construction, the Rekha (malefic point) system, and the Pindayu longevity calculation. The Kakshya sub-division is also described in BPHS as a refinement for precise transit timing.
Sarvartha Chintamani
by Venkatesa Daivagnya (c. 17th century CE). Provides detailed interpretive rules for applying Ashtakavarga scores in practice — specifically the Kakshya sub-division method for week-level transit timing, the interaction of SAV scores with concurrent Dasha periods, and the use of BAV scores for distinguishing which transits will deliver results from which will not. A standard secondary reference for practitioners applying Ashtakavarga to transit timing.
Ashtakavarga System of Prediction
by B.V. Raman (1941). A modern systematic exposition that operationalises the classical BPHS rules into a practical working framework. Raman popularised the SAV threshold values (30+ strong, 25–29 average, below 25 weak) that are now standard in contemporary Jyotish practice. Note: this is a 20th-century commentary and interpretation, not a classical source — but it has become the standard reference for practical Ashtakavarga application.
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