Destination weddings in places like Bali, Mexico or Thailand are popular precisely because they are neutral ground, not tied to either family’s home city. That neutrality is also exactly why muhurat timing needs extra care.

The muhurat itself does not depend on the venue

Tithi, nakshatra and the overall auspicious date come from the couple’s birth charts and the panchang, not from the wedding location. A date that works astrologically works the same way whether the ceremony happens in Delhi or Bali.

What does depend on the venue: the clock time

Rahu Kaal, Abhijit Muhurat and sunrise/sunset all shift with the venue’s actual local time and coordinates. A muhurat window computed for the wrong city gives you the wrong clock time for the actual ceremony, even if the date itself is correct.

Checking the venue’s timing

Look up the venue city (or the nearest major city with the same time zone) on the muhurat page to get accurate Rahu Kaal and Abhijit Muhurat for the actual wedding day and location.

Coordinating with a remote priest or planner

Share the confirmed local-time window with whoever is running the ceremony on the ground, since they may be working from a different source or a general online panchang that assumes India.

This information is descriptive; it does not make the marriage decision for you.