Shadbala is the classical Vedic system for scoring planetary strength. It computes six independent sources of strength and aggregates them in Virupas, the unit of measurement. This piece walks through the six sources, the Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra threshold table, and how the framework is read for charts where leadership is in question.
Most astrological analysis asks: what does this planet promise? Shadbala asks a prior question: how capable is this planet of delivering whatever it promises? A planet in its own sign may carry the promise of authority or wealth — but if the planet's aggregated strength sits below the conventional threshold, classical teaching reads the placement as carried but not delivered. The promise is on the chart; the structural permission to manifest it is not.
Shadbala converts that judgement from qualitative to scalar. Six independent sources of strength are computed, each in Virupas. The total is the planet's Shadbala. The classical texts specify a per-planet threshold; meeting the threshold is conventionally read as adequate strength to deliver the planet's significations, falling below it as inadequate.
The six components of Shadbala, as elaborated in Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra:
| Component | What it measures | Where it is high |
|---|---|---|
| Sthana Bala | Positional strength from sign placement | Own sign, exaltation, moolatrikona, friend's sign |
| Dig Bala | Directional strength from house placement | Sun & Mars in the 10th; Jupiter & Mercury in the 1st; Moon & Venus in the 4th; Saturn in the 7th |
| Kala Bala | Temporal strength from time-of-birth factors | Day vs night birth, lunar paksha, hora and weekday rulership, year and month lords |
| Cheshta Bala | Motional strength from apparent motion | Retrogression, conjunction with the Sun, planetary war considerations |
| Naisargika Bala | Natural strength — a fixed ranking, independent of any chart | Sun strongest, then Moon, Venus, Jupiter, Mercury, Mars, with Saturn weakest |
| Drik Bala | Aspectual strength from aspects received | Benefic aspects add; malefic aspects subtract |
Naisargika Bala is the only component that is independent of the chart — the Sun is conventionally read as inherently the strongest of the seven, Saturn as inherently the weakest, regardless of placement. The other five components are chart-specific and require a precise birth time to compute reliably. The total Shadbala for a planet is the sum of its six component scores, all expressed in Virupas.
Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra specifies a minimum required Shadbala for each planet. A planet meeting or exceeding its threshold is conventionally read as structurally capable of delivering its significations. A planet below threshold carries the placement but is not read as delivering strongly — the promise sits on the chart, the permission to manifest is absent.
| Planet | Conventional minimum (Virupas) | Karaka domain |
|---|---|---|
| Sun | 390 | Self, authority, command, standing |
| Moon | 360 | Mind, perception, public reception |
| Mars | 300 | Action, courage, decisiveness in conflict |
| Mercury | 420 | Intelligence, communication, calculation |
| Jupiter | 390 | Wisdom, dharma, expansion, counsel |
| Venus | 330 | Relationship, refinement, diplomacy |
| Saturn | 300 | Structure, discipline, durability, time |
Mercury carries the highest threshold (420) because Mercury's significations — intellect, calculation, communication — are unusually sensitive to weakness; the texts treat sub-threshold Mercury as a more compromising condition than sub-threshold Mars or Saturn. The Sun and Jupiter sit at 390. The malefics Mars and Saturn carry the lowest thresholds (300) — not because they are easier planets, but because the system reads them as needing less aggregated strength to deliver their (often restrictive) significations.
When the framework is applied to a chart where authority, command, or executive standing is in question, the conventional reading concentrates on four karakas:
| Karaka | Above threshold reads as |
|---|---|
| Sun | Leadership authority — the karaka of self, command, and standing. Strong Sun is the central leadership signature. |
| Mars | Decisive action and courage in conflict — the operational executor; the willingness to spend energy on contested ground. |
| Jupiter | Wisdom and dharmic legitimacy — counsel, judgement, the moral standing that earns durable consent. |
| Saturn | Sustained discipline and durability — the structural endurance that converts authority into institution over time. |
Combined high Shadbala across Sun, Mars, and Jupiter is conventionally read as a leadership signature — authority, executor, and counsel all structurally present. Saturn above threshold then reads as the durability layer: the same authority that holds across decades, not just under favorable conditions. Sub-threshold readings on any of these reverse the implication for that specific axis: a strong placement of the Sun in the 10th house with a sub-threshold Shadbala is read as the form of authority being carried but not delivered with full force.
Dig Bala, considered as a sub-component, sits closest to leadership in its construction. Dig Bala maxima are direction-specific: the Sun and Mars score maximum Dig Bala in the 10th house — the house of standing and public action. Jupiter and Mercury score maximum Dig Bala in the 1st — the house of self. Saturn maxes in the 7th, Moon and Venus in the 4th. A Sun in the 10th with high Dig Bala carries a karaka in its strongest directional position; this is one of the conventional configurations classical texts list as a structural leadership marker.
Two cautions are worth holding alongside the framework. First, Shadbala is a strength score, not a benefic-vs-malefic score. A high-Shadbala Saturn is a strong Saturn — durable, structurally capable of delivering Saturn's nature. That nature, in classical teaching, includes restriction, slowness, and consequence. High Shadbala on a malefic placed in a difficult house can deliver more of the difficulty, not less. The score answers how capable; it does not answer capable of what.
Second, Shadbala is read alongside dasha and transit, not in place of them. A planet meeting its threshold but not running its dasha is conventionally read as a structural disposition that has not yet entered its window of operation. The same planet during its Mahadasha or Antardasha is read as the disposition becoming active. Shadbala describes the structure; dasha describes the timing. Reading either in isolation produces a partial chart.
The sequence Tempora uses when Shadbala is the relevant lens for a chart consultation:
Shadbala is the classical Vedic system for scoring planetary strength. Six sources, one total, expressed in Virupas. Each planet has a conventional threshold from Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra; meeting the threshold is read as the planet being structurally capable of delivering its significations. For leadership charts, the readings concentrate on Sun, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn — the karakas of authority, action, counsel, and durability. The chart describes structural disposition. Outcome involves many factors the chart does not encode.
This article was first published on 2026-04-15 with case-study claims (n=120 Indian CEO career dataset, 2.1× peak performance lift in high-Shadbala dashas, 0.7× suppression in sub-threshold dashas, named correlation coefficients for Sun/Mars/Jupiter/Mercury/Saturn Dig Bala, per-planet above- and below-threshold peak rates, and a 9-of-12 prospective accuracy claim) that were not supported by a workings file or source dataset. On 2026-05-06, a Tier 2 audit of the methodology surface identified the issue across this batch; this article was rewritten as a method piece on the same date — case numbers dropped, conventional Vedic teaching preserved. The threshold table (Sun 390, Moon 360, Mars 300, Mercury 420, Jupiter 390, Venus 330, Saturn 300 Virupas) is retained as conventional method statement from Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra, not as a statistical claim about Tempora data. Audit log: docs/principles/legacy_content_audit.md. This article represents conventional Vedic teaching and Tempora Research method documentation; it does not constitute medical, financial, legal, or professional advice.