Free Career Astrology
Why does your career keep stalling despite the hard work?
AI Kundali Analysis
Why does this pattern keep repeating in your life?
Your kundali names the house, planet, and dasha behind it. Then it gives the upay you can actually follow.
Ask your chart: Which pattern in my kundali is affecting me the most?
What your kundali report will show
- Which house and planet explain the pattern you keep seeing.
- How your active dasha changes the timing of career, marriage, and money.
- Which upay fits your chart before you guess or overspend.
What your 10th house says about your career
In Vedic astrology your career runs through the 10th house — the karma bhav. The sign on your 10th, the planet that rules it (your career lord), and where that lord sits together describe the kind of work your chart supports and what has been quietly holding your growth back. This tool reads those placements straight from your kundali so you start from your actual chart, not a generic horoscope.
The free snapshot above names your 10th-house sign, your career lord and its house placement, and any grahas sitting in the 10th. That is the foundation. The timing of a job change or a rise depends on your active mahadasha and the Saturn and Jupiter transits moving over your career houses — which is what the full Career Report works out, along with the D10/Dasamsa read, career yogas, and the upays that strengthen your 10th house.
How to read your career snapshot
Start with the 10th-house sign — it sets the flavour of your profession. Then look at your career lord: a lord placed in a strong, supportive house tends to make career energy flow, while a debilitated or afflicted lord points to the patterns a remedy addresses. Planets sitting in the 10th add their own colour. None of this is destiny — it is the chart promise; the dasha and transit timing tell you when it activates, which is exactly what the full report and the AI Jyotishi help you read.
Career Astrology FAQs
What does the free career astrology snapshot show?
It shows your 10th house (karma bhav) — the house of career and profession — including the zodiac sign on the 10th, the planet that rules it (your career lord), where that lord is placed in your chart, and any planets sitting in the 10th. All of these are computed from your birth details using the Swiss Ephemeris with Lahiri ayanamsa, the same method a traditional Jyotishi follows.
Is the 10th house really the career house in Vedic astrology?
Yes. In Jyotish, the 10th bhava (karma bhav) governs profession, public work, status, and the kind of responsibility you are repeatedly asked to carry. The sign on the 10th, the placement and strength of its lord, and the planets influencing it together describe your natural career direction and what tends to block or support growth.
What is the career lord (10th lord)?
The career lord is the planet that rules the zodiac sign on your 10th house. Where that lord sits in your chart — which house and sign, and whether it is exalted, debilitated, or retrograde — shapes how your career energy expresses. The free snapshot names your career lord and its placement; the full Career Report interprets what that placement means for timing and remedies.
Do I need my birth time for the career snapshot?
Birth time sets your Lagna (Ascendant), which fixes the house framework — including the 10th house. With an accurate birth time the 10th-house sign and career lord are precise. If your time is unknown the house layout becomes approximate, so the snapshot shows what it can and the full report flags any time-sensitivity.
What does the full Career Report add beyond the free snapshot?
The free snapshot is a thin teaser of the 10th house and its lord. The full Career Report adds the D10 (Dasamsa) divisional chart read, your career-supporting yogas, the current mahadasha and antardasha timing for job changes or a rise, Saturn and Jupiter transit windows, and the specific upays for career momentum — matched to your chart, not generic advice.
Get a Detailed PDF Report
Free chat answers the moment. The PDF is what you keep — share with family, revisit in 6 months.