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Career Path Finder

5 specific careers matched to your strengths and constraints.

Free

The Career Path Finder suggests five specific careers matched to your interests, strengths, and real-world constraints. Each comes with a salary range, why it fits you, and the first concrete step to take — so it ends with action, not just ideas.

Your birth details

Add your exact birth time (and place) to unlock your Ascendant, Nakshatra & Dasha. Without it you get a sign-only reading.

Reading details

Sign in for 5 free readings a day.

How to read your career path finder

  1. Tell Astrava what you enjoy, what you are good at, and your constraints.
  2. It matches those against five concrete career paths (not vague categories).
  3. Each path shows a salary range and why it suits you.
  4. Each ends with a clear "first step" so you can move today.

How it's calculated & how accurate it is

These are well-matched starting points, not a destiny. Use the salary ranges and first steps as research leads — the right path is the one you test and refine.

Five specific career paths matched to your interests, strengths, and constraints — with salary range, entry path, and the first concrete step for each.

Questions about career path finder

How does the career finder work?

It matches your interests, strengths, and constraints to five specific roles, each with a salary range and a concrete first step.

Is this based on my birth chart or my inputs?

Primarily your inputs (interests, strengths, constraints). Your profile adds light personal context, but the matching is practical.

Will it give realistic options?

Yes — you give it your constraints (location, budget, time), and it works within them rather than suggesting anything generic.

Is it free?

Yes, free up to your daily limit.

More readings

Astrava is a mirror for reflection and self-discovery — for entertainment, not a crystal ball. It does not give medical, legal, financial, or mental-health advice; for those, please talk to a qualified professional.

← All Astrava readings · by Hardik Trehan