Skip to content
  1. Home
  2. /Cities
  3. /Los Angeles

Planetary Hours in Los Angeles Today

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

United States · 34.0522°N, 118.2437°W

Sunrise

☀️ 5:42 AM

Sunset

🌅 8:05 PM

Day Ruler

Mercury

Timezone: America/Los_Angeles

Los Angeles sits at 34°N, giving it milder seasonal swings in planetary hour durations compared to cities farther north, with consistently pleasant day-night ratios.

Current Planetary Hour

Venus·8:53 PM 9:41 PMNighttime
Good for: Love, beauty, art, social activities, pleasure
Avoid: Conflict, hard work, isolation

☀️ Daytime Planetary Hours

#PlanetTime
1Mercury5:42 AM6:54 AM
2Moon6:54 AM8:06 AM
3Saturn8:06 AM9:18 AM
4Jupiter9:18 AM10:30 AM
5Mars10:30 AM11:41 AM
6Sun11:41 AM12:53 PM
7Venus12:53 PM2:05 PM
8Mercury2:05 PM3:17 PM
9Moon3:17 PM4:29 PM
10Saturn4:29 PM5:41 PM
11Jupiter5:41 PM6:53 PM
12Mars6:53 PM8:05 PM

🌙 Nighttime Planetary Hours

#PlanetTime
1Sun8:05 PM8:53 PM
2VenusNow8:53 PM9:41 PM
3Mercury9:41 PM10:29 PM
4Moon10:29 PM11:17 PM
5Saturn11:17 PM12:05 AM
6Jupiter12:05 AM12:53 AM
7Mars12:53 AM1:41 AM
8Sun1:41 AM2:30 AM
9Venus2:30 AM3:18 AM
10Mercury3:18 AM4:06 AM
11Moon4:06 AM4:54 AM
12Saturn4:54 AM5:42 AM

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the planetary hours in Los Angeles today?

Today, planetary hours in Los Angeles begin at sunrise (5:42 AM) and are ruled by Mercury. Each daytime planetary hour lasts about 72 minutes, while each nighttime hour lasts about 48 minutes.

What planet rules today in Los Angeles?

The day ruler in Los Angeles today is Mercury. The day ruler is the planet that governs the first planetary hour after sunrise. In the Chaldean order, each day of the week is ruled by a specific planet: Sun (Sunday), Moon (Monday), Mars (Tuesday), Mercury (Wednesday), Jupiter (Thursday), Venus (Friday), and Saturn (Saturday).

How are planetary hours calculated for Los Angeles?

Planetary hours for Los Angeles are calculated using the city's precise coordinates (34.0522°N, 118.2437°W) and timezone (America/Los_Angeles). The time between sunrise and sunset is divided into 12 equal daytime planetary hours, and the time between sunset and the next sunrise is divided into 12 equal nighttime hours. Each hour is assigned a planet following the Chaldean order.

Want to calculate planetary hours for a custom location?

Open Full Calculator