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Planetary Hours in Singapore Today

Monday, March 2, 2026

Singapore · 1.3521°N, 103.8198°E

Sunrise

☀️ 7:15 AM

Sunset

🌅 7:21 PM

Day Ruler

Moon

Timezone: Asia/Singapore

Virtually on the equator at 1°N, Singapore experiences the most uniform planetary hours possible — daytime and nighttime hours are almost exactly 60 minutes every day of the year.

Current Planetary Hour

Saturn·3:19 PM 4:19 PMDaytime
Good for: Discipline, responsibility, long-term projects
Avoid: New ventures, spontaneity, risk-taking

☀️ Daytime Planetary Hours

#PlanetTime
1Moon7:15 AM8:16 AM
2Saturn8:16 AM9:16 AM
3Jupiter9:16 AM10:17 AM
4Mars10:17 AM11:17 AM
5Sun11:17 AM12:18 PM
6Venus12:18 PM1:18 PM
7Mercury1:18 PM2:18 PM
8Moon2:18 PM3:19 PM
9SaturnNow3:19 PM4:19 PM
10Jupiter4:19 PM5:20 PM
11Mars5:20 PM6:20 PM
12Sun6:20 PM7:21 PM

🌙 Nighttime Planetary Hours

#PlanetTime
1Venus7:21 PM8:20 PM
2Mercury8:20 PM9:20 PM
3Moon9:20 PM10:19 PM
4Saturn10:19 PM11:19 PM
5Jupiter11:19 PM12:18 AM
6Mars12:18 AM1:18 AM
7Sun1:18 AM2:17 AM
8Venus2:17 AM3:17 AM
9Mercury3:17 AM4:16 AM
10Moon4:16 AM5:16 AM
11Saturn5:16 AM6:16 AM
12Jupiter6:16 AM7:15 AM

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the planetary hours in Singapore today?

Today, planetary hours in Singapore begin at sunrise (7:15 AM) and are ruled by Moon. Each daytime planetary hour lasts about 60 minutes, while each nighttime hour lasts about 60 minutes.

What planet rules today in Singapore?

The day ruler in Singapore today is Moon. 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 Singapore?

Planetary hours for Singapore are calculated using the city's precise coordinates (1.3521°N, 103.8198°E) and timezone (Asia/Singapore). 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.

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