Sunrise, Daylight & Panchangam Timings in Kuala Lumpur
Kuala Lumpur lies at latitude 3.1°N. Across 2026, sunrise in Kuala Lumpur ranges from about 6:57 AM at its earliest (around Oct) to roughly 7:27 AM at its latest (around Feb). The longest day lasts about 12.3 hours near Jun, shrinking to roughly 11.9 hours around Dec.
Rahu Kalam, Yamagandam, Gulika Kalam and the daily Muhurthams are each measured as fixed fractions of the time between local sunrise and sunset. Because that span changes through the year in Kuala Lumpur, these windows shift too — and they differ from every city in India. That is why this page recomputes the full Panchangam for Kuala Lumpur’s own coordinates and timezone each day, instead of reusing timings calculated for another location.
Common Questions — Panchangam in Kuala Lumpur
What time is sunrise in Kuala Lumpur?
Sunrise in Kuala Lumpur is not fixed — it varies from about 6:57 AM at its earliest (around Oct) to roughly 7:27 AM at its latest (around Feb). This page computes sunrise daily for Kuala Lumpur’s coordinates (3.1°N), so the Tithi, Nakshatram, Rahu Kalam and Muhurtham windows always reflect the real local day.
Why does Kuala Lumpur’s Rahu Kalam differ from the Panchangam my family uses in India?
Rahu Kalam is one-eighth of the daytime, measured from local sunrise to sunset. Kuala Lumpur runs about 2.5 hours ahead of India and sits at latitude 3.1°N, so its sunrise and day length are different — which means the eight Rahu Kalam slots land at different clock times. A Panchangam printed for Hyderabad or Vijayawada will not line up with Kuala Lumpur.
Can Telugu festival dates differ in Kuala Lumpur?
Yes, sometimes. Festivals are fixed by the Tithi at local sunrise (or moonrise/midday for some). Because Kuala Lumpur is about 2.5 hours ahead of India, a Tithi can begin or end on a different local date — so festivals such as Deepavali or Vinayaka Chavithi occasionally fall a day earlier or later than in India. Each festival date on this page is computed for Kuala Lumpur’s own timezone.