What a 32/36 Temperamental Match Score Really Means in Kundli Milan

A couple walks into a pandit's office in Bangalore last month. Horoscopes match beautifully: 32 out of 36 gunas. Families are thrilled. Then the astrologer pauses at one number buried in the Indastro report—temperamental match score shows tension in the Bhakoot and Nadi categories. The wedding date gets postponed.

This happens more often than matchmaking websites admit. A high overall guna milan score can mask critical friction points that show up specifically in temperamental compatibility. The 32/36 score looks reassuring until you understand what those missing four points represent.

Here's what most kundli matching tools won't tell you about that specific score—and why the temperamental subscores matter more than the headline number.

Why 32/36 Is Not Automatically a Green Light

Ashtakoot milan awards up to 36 points across eight categories. Conventional wisdom says anything above 18 is acceptable, 24-32 is good, and above 32 is excellent. Indastro and similar platforms flash that 32/36 with celebratory colors.

But Vedic astrology doesn't work like a school exam where 89% equals 89% regardless of which questions you missed. If you score zero in Nadi (8 points) but perfect in Varna, Vashya, and Tara, you have a 28/36 that carries serious health and progeny concerns. Compare that to a 28/36 where you lost points across Graha Maitri and Yoni—completely different implications.

The temperamental match score isolates how the couple will handle day-to-day emotional friction, conflict resolution, and psychological compatibility. It pulls from Bhakoot (7 points), Gana (6 points), and sometimes Yoni (4 points) depending on the calculation method. When Indastro or other tools break this out separately, they're flagging: "Your gunas look fine on paper, but here's where you'll actually fight."

A 32/36 with weak temperamental subscores typically means you lost heavily in one or two categories that govern marital harmony. Let's get specific.

The Three Categories That Build Temperamental Compatibility

Bhakoot (7 points) examines moon sign relationships. Certain positions—like 6/8 (shashtashtaka) or 2/12—create chronic financial stress, health issues, or power struggles. Zero points here doesn't mean inevitable divorce, but it does mean the couple will need conscious strategies to avoid the specific patterns their moon signs trigger. A 32/36 score that includes Bhakoot dosha is fundamentally different from one that doesn't.

Gana (6 points) sorts people into deva (divine), manushya (human), or rakshasa (demonic) temperaments based on birth nakshatra. The terminology sounds harsh, but it maps to conflict styles. Deva-deva pairs avoid confrontation sometimes to a fault. Rakshasa-rakshasa pairs fight intensely but recover quickly. Deva-rakshasa combinations—the zero-point pairing—create mismatched expectations about how disagreements should unfold. One partner wants calm discussion; the other needs to blow off steam loudly first.

Yoni (4 points) governs sexual compatibility and physical intimacy through animal symbolism. Elephant and lion, for example, score poorly—different rhythms, different needs. Some North Indian traditions weight this heavily in the temperamental score; others separate it into physical compatibility. Either way, consistently low Yoni scores show up as bedroom frustration five years into marriage.

When Indastro displays a temperamental match score alongside your 32/36, they're essentially saying: "You have enough points to proceed, but these specific areas will require work." The question becomes whether both individuals have the maturity and tools to do that work.

What the Missing Four Points Actually Cost You

Let's model two real scenarios that both produce 32/36:

Scenario A: Couple loses 2 points in Tara (health compatibility), 1 point in Vashya (dominance dynamics), 1 point in Graha Maitri (intellectual compatibility). Temperamental score: strong. Bhakoot and Gana are solid. They'll have minor friction around who makes decisions and occasional intellectual mismatches, but their conflict resolution style aligns. They fight fair.

Scenario B: Couple loses 4 points entirely in Bhakoot due to 6/8 moon position. Everything else is perfect. Temperamental score: weak despite high total. They will face recurring financial anxiety, health scares that create tension, and a pattern where good periods alternate with stressful ones. Their fights will feel cyclical and unresolvable because the dosha operates at a karmic level.

Same headline number. Completely different marriages. Scenario B needs proactive dosha remedies—Vedic rituals, charity on specific days, sometimes gemstone recommendations. Scenario A just needs basic communication skills most couples develop naturally.

This is why experienced astrologers don't stop at the total. They map where the points were lost, cross-reference that with dasha periods (planetary cycles) both individuals will experience in the first decade of marriage, and then assess: "Can this couple handle the specific challenges their chart combination creates?"

When 32/36 With Temperamental Issues Still Works

Not every temperamental red flag is a dealbreaker. Three factors determine whether a couple should proceed despite moderate temperamental scores:

Dasha compatibility. If both partners are entering favorable dasha periods—Venus, Jupiter, Mercury depending on individual charts—they'll have psychological resilience and external support to weather inherent temperamental friction. A couple entering Rahu or Ketu mahadasha with existing Gana mismatch faces compounded difficulty.

Navamsa strength. The D9 chart shows the marriage's inner reality versus the outer appearance shown in the birth chart. Strong navamsa placements for both seventh houses can compensate for weak Bhakoot or Gana scores. This is advanced analysis most automated tools skip entirely.

Conscious commitment to remedies. Some couples take dosha remedies seriously—regular pujas, fasting on prescribed days, gemstone therapy. Others view it as superstition. Temperamental doshas respond to consistent remedy practices. Without that commitment, the mathematical score accurately predicts recurring problems.

Indastro's breakout of temperamental scoring is actually useful here—it tells you exactly which remedies to prioritize. Weak Bhakoot requires different interventions than weak Gana.

How to Read Beyond the Algorithm

Most online kundli matching tools, including Indastro, use standardized algorithms. They can't account for regional variations (South Indian versus North Indian weighting), family-specific traditions (some communities ignore Nadi dosha if other factors align), or the qualitative strength of individual planets.

A skilled astrologer looks at the 32/36 score as a starting point, not an answer. They check: Are the doshas cancelable through other planetary positions? Does the seventh lord in both charts have dignity and strength? What does the couple's composite chart (chart created by midpoint method) reveal about the relationship entity itself?

If you're seeing a 32/36 with temperamental concerns flagged, three questions to ask any astrologer:

1. Which specific category lost us the four points? Don't accept vague answers. Get the technical breakdown.

2. What remedies address this specific dosha? Generic recommendations like "pray more" are useless. You want targeted practices: which deity, which day, which mantra.

3. How do our individual dashas interact over the next ten years? Marriage timing matters enormously. A mediocre match during favorable dashas outperforms a perfect match during difficult planetary periods.

The couples who struggle most are those who see 32/36, assume they're set, and ignore the temperamental subscores entirely. Then three years in, they're blindsided by the exact patterns the lower scores predicted.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 32 out of 36 gunas a good score in kundli matching?

Yes, 32/36 is considered a strong match in traditional Ashtakoot milan. However, the overall score matters less than where you lost the four points. If the missing points come from Nadi or Bhakoot, the match requires careful evaluation and possible remedies despite the high total score.

What does temperamental match score mean in Indastro reports?

The temperamental match score isolates compatibility in emotional responses, conflict resolution, and daily psychological harmony. It typically combines Bhakoot (moon sign relationship), Gana (temperament category), and sometimes Yoni (physical compatibility). A low temperamental score with high overall gunas indicates the couple will face recurring friction in how they handle disagreements.

Can a marriage work with weak Bhakoot but high overall guna milan?

Yes, especially if both partners enter favorable dasha periods, have strong navamsa charts, and commit to specific Bhakoot dosha remedies. Weak Bhakoot typically manifests as financial stress, health concerns, or cyclical good-bad period patterns. Conscious awareness and remedial measures significantly reduce the negative effects.

Should we cancel our wedding if temperamental scores are low?

Not necessarily. Consult a Vedic astrologer who can analyze individual charts beyond the automated guna milan algorithm. Sometimes planetary strengths in the seventh house, favorable dasha timing, or simple remedy practices resolve temperamental incompatibility. The key is informed decision-making, not blind adherence to a single number.

Stop guessing about compatibility based on incomplete online reports. Get a detailed kundli analysis that examines guna milan, dasha periods, navamsa strength, and remedies specific to your charts. Check your compatibility free at Kundli Milan and understand exactly what your score means for your marriage.

Published March 31, 2026