Live Rahu Kaal for Melbourne — calculated from today's actual sunrise at -37.813600°N, 144.963100°E.
Precise for Melbourne. Not a generic IST lookup.
Most Vedic apps show the same Rahu Kaal for all of India — calculated from a generic IST formula. But Rahu Kaal is 1/8th of the actual daytime from today's sunrise at your location. Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST, UTC+10) in winter, AEDT (UTC+11) in summer (Southern Hemisphere) CosmosPandit uses precision astronomy (Jean Meeus, Astronomical Algorithms) to calculate the exact sunrise at Melbourne's coordinates (-37.813600°N, 144.963100°E), giving you the correct Rahu Kaal every day.
Melbourne is home to over 400,000 Indians, making Victoria's Indian community the second-largest in Australia. Box Hill, Dandenong, Point Cook, and Werribee host thriving Indian communities, while the CBD's Bourke Street and Elizabeth Street corridor is dotted with Indian restaurants, grocery stores, and jewellers. The BAPS Swaminarayan Mandir in Campbellfield and the Sri Vakrathunda Vinayagar Temple in St Albans are community landmarks.
Melbourne is at latitude 37.81°S — significantly further from the Equator than Sydney — meaning it has larger seasonal day-length variation. Sunrise ranges from 5:32 AM in December (Australian summer) to 7:36 AM in June (Australian winter), a 2-hour difference. CosmosPandit recalculates from Melbourne's exact coordinates (37.8136°S, 144.9631°E) every day — never approximated from Sydney or IST.
Melbourne's Indian community is diverse: strong Gujarati presence in Box Hill and Dandenong, significant Punjabi community, Tamil families in Springvale, Telugu professionals, and large Malayalam and Hindi-speaking populations. All 8 Indian languages are covered in CosmosPandit.
Melbourne's latitude of 37.81°S — further south than Sydney — creates a 2-hour seasonal variation in sunrise. This makes precise daily calculation essential, and means Melbourne's Rahu Kaal timing differs meaningfully from Sydney's even though they share the same timezone.
Melbourne's Indian community uses Vedic timing for property settlements (Victoria's property market is a primary investment vehicle for NRIs), business registrations (ASIC filings), medical consultations, and Griha Pravesh ceremonies. The CosmosPandit Muhurat Finder identifies the best Choghadiya for each occasion.
India uses a single timezone (IST, UTC+5:30) across 30° of longitude. But sunrise follows the sun, not the clock — every 1° of longitude – 4 minutes difference. Kolkata’s sunrise is 80 minutes earlier than Mumbai’s on the same IST day, so Rahu Kaal falls at genuinely different times in each city.
This Rahu Kaal page is just the start. The CosmosPandit app gives every Indian the full Vedic astrology toolkit — in their own language, with timings precise for their city:
No. Although both use the same timezone (Australia/Sydney and Australia/Melbourne are both AEST/AEDT), Melbourne is further south (37.81°S vs 33.87°S) and west (144.96°E vs 151.21°E), giving it different sunrise times. We have separate pages for both cities.
Yes. Victoria follows AEST (UTC+10) in winter and AEDT (UTC+11) in summer (Australian summer = October–April). CosmosPandit handles this automatically.
Yes. The CosmosPandit app generates a shareable Rahu Kaal card with today's timing, Tithi, and Vaara in your chosen language. Share directly to WhatsApp, iMessage, or any platform.
Astronomically precise Rahu Kaal timings for 25 major Indian cities.