Kundli matching, or Guna Milan, is a long tradition — and one that's easy to misuse. A chart can offer reflection on two temperaments, but a match score is never a verdict on a relationship.
What a chart looks at for compatibility
Matching compares two charts, often scoring them across the nakshatras in a system called Guna Milan, and weighs the house of marriage and partnership along with ideas like Manglik from the much-feared placements called doshas. It sits right beside what a chart reflects about marriage.
What a reading can offer
Held honestly, matching can be a gentle prompt to reflect on two temperaments — where they might harmonise, where they might need patience. As a conversation-starter for reflection, that can have real value.
What it can't do
But the honest line is firm: a score cannot decide whether a relationship will work, and it is not a verdict on two people. No chart should ever be used to pressure someone into or out of a relationship, or to frighten a couple with doom they must "fix" through costly remedies. A relationship is built by the people in it — never by a number.
A gentle way to use it
Take a match as a prompt for reflection and conversation, never a ruling — and let the two people involved decide their own story.
How Kalm does it
At Kalm, a gifted reader reads compatibility, honestly in the context of your whole chart and the question on your mind, then writes you a thoughtful, personal interpretation — saved to your dashboard usually within the hour.
When you're ready, you can start a Vedic astrology reading here.
Readings on Kalm are for guidance, insight, and entertainment. They are never a guaranteed prediction of the future, and they are not a substitute for professional medical, legal, financial, or psychological advice.