A classical sidereal ephemeris built for serious daily work.
A desk‑ready ephemeris and Panchanga almanac for 2026. IST‑referenced, place‑aware, and built for verification.
Daily tables for practice and Muhurtha timing, plus worked manuals that teach the calculations, not just the results.
Sagar Ephemeris 2026 combines a classical sidereal ephemeris with a full working almanac: IST‑referenced (Mean Chitrapaksha) tables for nirayana longitudes and Panchanga endings (tithi, nakshatra, yoga, karana), plus Rahu–Ketu motion, month boundaries, eclipses, stations/retrogrades, and other key sidereal phenomena. It adds place‑dependent ascensional tables for seven major Indian cities, a dedicated Panchanga Muhurtha section, and worked examples with explicit formulae for varga (D‑chart) computation, Panchanga kalas, and Tajika/Varshaphala. This keeps the book fast for daily desk use and deep enough for teaching, audit, and confident verification.
Why it matters
When you’re timing decisions, checking transits, or teaching fundamentals, you need tables that are consistent, place‑aware, and easy to verify. You also need a reference that shows the underlying steps for learning, audit, and teaching.
Ephemeris + Panchanga, in one place
Daily nirayana longitudes and Panchanga endings (tithi, nakshatra, yoga, karana) laid out for fast scanning—so routine checks take seconds, not pages.
Place-aware tables when accuracy matters
Ascendant/MC and related timing tables built for real chart work, place-dependent references for seven major Indian cities, including sunrise/sunset and segment lengths.
Phenomena + Muhurtha + worked manuals
Eclipses, stations/retrogrades, aspects and other sidereal phenomena, plus Muhurtha timing tables and step-by-step calculation manuals (varga/D-charts, Panchanga kalas, Tajika/Varshaphala) for learning and verification.
What’s inside
A complete sidereal ephemeris for 2026 with Panchanga, Muhurtha, place‑dependent ascensional tables, and a calculation‑manual companion-built to stay open on your desk.
- Ephemeris (Daily): Principal daily tables plus nirayana longitudes (Mercury–Pluto + mean Rahu), with meridian passages and sunrise/sunset—consistently referenced to IST.
- Panchanga (Almanac): Tithi, nakshatra, yoga, and karana endings; lunar/solar month starts; year boundaries; and clear markers for next/previous civil day.
- Ascensional (Place‑dependent): Universal ascendant/MC tables, lagna start times, and day/segment lengths for seven Indian cities—built for practical chart work when location matters.
- Muhurtha + Manuals: Eclipse catalogues (with India visibility), stationary points, aspects, elongations, combustion (asta), out‑of‑bounds, and occultations—plus worked examples and formula manuals for varga (D‑chart) computation, Panchanga kalas, Tajika/Varshaphala methods, and supporting reference tables.
Quick snapshot
A yearly working reference designed for daily ephemeris + almanac use, and also step‑by‑step learning and verification. Designed as a permanent desk companion, not a disposable annual.
Who it’s for
Built for two speeds: fast daily scanning (Ephemeris + Panchanga), and deeper work when needed. Use Muhurtha timing, place‑dependent ascensional tables, and calculation manuals with worked examples for learning and verification.
Use it in two modes: scan daily tables in seconds, or open the manuals to learn, audit, and teach.
Practitioners
Use it as your yearly desk ephemeris and almanac: daily longitudes and Panchanga endings, Muhurtha tables, key phenomena, and place‑dependent ascensional tables when location matters.
Teachers & Students
A consistent reference for classes and self‑study: clear conventions, worked examples, and explicit calculation formulae (varga/D‑charts, Panchanga kalas, Tajika/Varshaphala) to learn the method—not just the result.
Researchers
Integrated catalogues and method notes for reviewing sources, rounding/date handling, and place‑dependence-useful for validation, comparisons, and reproducible checks.
Get Sagar Ephemeris 2026
Choose your preferred ordering method below.
Publisher
Sagar Publications
72, Ved Mansion
Janpath, New Delhi, Delhi 110001, India
Distributor
Prefer fewer purchase options. Keep the primary link first, then add alternates only if availability differs.
FAQ
Short answers up front. Details when you open a question.
What ayanamsa is used?
Mean Chitrapaksha Ayanamsa-used consistently across the 2026 tables (as stated on the cover).
Are values referenced to IST?
Yes. Tables are consistently referenced to IST (UTC+05:30), with conventions clearly marked to avoid day-boundary confusion.
Which cities have place-dependent tables?
Seven major Indian cities: Bangalore, Kanyakumari, Kolkata, Mumbai, New Delhi, Srinagar, and Ujjain-covering ascendant/MC work, sunrise–sunset timings, and related tables.
Does it include worked examples and calculation manuals?
Yes. Alongside the ephemeris and Panchanga tables, the book includes worked examples and calculation manuals-covering varga (D‑chart) computation, Panchanga kalas, and traditional Tajika/Varshaphala methods, plus supporting reference tables.
Can I use this as my primary yearly desk reference?
Yes-that’s the intent: an integrated yearly volume for daily ephemeris checks, Panchanga endings, ascensional work, and key phenomena without relying on auxiliary manuals.
Is this paperback or hardcover?
This edition is supplied as a professional print edition. Binding details will be confirmed on the store listing.
How do I use this day-to-day?
Open the daily ephemeris for longitudes and Panchanga endings, consult Muhurtha tables for timing, and use the manuals and worked examples when you want to verify or learn calculations.