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Vedic vs Western astrology
Two systems looking at the same sky, using different math. Here is what actually differs and why it matters.
The 23-degree shift
About 2,000 years ago, the tropical and sidereal zodiacs were aligned. Since then, the Earth’s axis has slowly wobbled — a phenomenon called the precession of the equinoxes. This has caused a gap of roughly 23 degrees between the two systems.
Western astrology chose to anchor signs to the seasons. When Western astrology says “Aries begins March 21,” it means the spring equinox — regardless of which constellation the Sun is actually in front of.
Vedic astrology chose to anchor signs to the stars. It applies a correction called the ayanamsa (the most widely used is the Lahiri ayanamsa) to align the zodiac with the actual constellations. The result: many people have a different Vedic Sun sign than their Western one.
Side-by-side comparison
| Aspect | Western | Vedic |
|---|---|---|
| Calendar system | Tropical (tied to seasons and equinoxes) | Sidereal (tied to actual star positions) |
| Key identity marker | Sun sign | Moon sign and Nakshatra |
| Zodiac signs | Same 12 signs, aligned to March equinox | Same 12 signs, shifted ~23 degrees to match constellations |
| House system | Placidus, Koch, and others | Whole sign houses |
| Timing system | Progressions and solar returns | Dasha system (planetary life chapters) |
| Unique features | Aspects, midpoints, asteroids | 27 Nakshatras, classical Yoga catalog, Muhurta timing |
| Philosophical lens | Psychological and personality-focused | Rhythmic and timing-focused |
Why Vedic astrology centers the Moon
Western astrology asks: “What sign was the Sun in when you were born?” Vedic astrology considers the Moon more significant. The Moon changes signs roughly every 2.5 days (compared to the Sun’s month-long transit), so it is far more precise as a timing marker.
Your Moon sign determines your Nakshatra — the specific lunar mansion you were born under. This is the foundation of the Dasha system, which maps your life into planetary chapters. It is also the basis of classical compatibility matching.
In practice, the Moon sign in Vedic astrology plays a similar role to the Sun sign in Western — it is your primary identifier.
Which system is “right”?
Neither is wrong — they are different lenses. Western astrology offers psychological insight tied to seasonal archetypes. Vedic astrology offers timing guidance tied to actual planetary positions.
Naksh uses the sidereal system because its focus is rhythm and timing — when to act, not personality typing. But if you find value in your Western chart, that is perfectly valid too.
What Vedic astrology has that Western does not
27 Nakshatras
Lunar mansions that divide the sky into finer slices than the 12 signs, giving more granular insight.
Dasha system
A 120-year cycle of planetary periods that maps your life into chapters — with clear start and end dates.
Muhurta timing
An electional system for choosing the best moment for important decisions, travel, and commitments.
Curious about your sidereal chart?
Naksh computes your Vedic chart from real planetary positions and shows you what your Moon sign, Nakshatra, and current Dasha chapter actually are.