Daily Gita Meditation

One verse. One guided sit. One reading. Every day.

A 108-day journey through the Bhagavad Gita — a guided voice meditation and a five-minute reading, grounded in the classical commentaries, in plain language. Free, in 17 languages.

Get it on Google Play

Free forever · No ads · No account · Android today, iOS soon

What a day looks like

  1. 1 · Settle

    A breathing circle steadies you — eyes open, five to fifteen minutes, your choice.

  2. 2 · Sit

    Close your eyes. A calm voice carries the breath and unfolds the day’s verse — a meditation written for that verse alone, never a generic script.

  3. 3 · Read

    A five-minute reading opens the verse up: what it says, what the great commentators saw in it, and one small thing to carry into your day. A new day unlocks each morning.

What’s inside

About

Daily Gita Meditation is a free app — on Android today, with iOS coming soon — that turns the Bhagavad Gita into a daily practice: a 108-day journey where each day brings one verse, one guided voice meditation, and one five-minute reading written from the verse’s classical commentaries in plain, modern language. It includes the complete Gita — 18 chapters and 700 verses with Sanskrit, transliteration, translations in 17 languages, and commentaries from the Advaita, Vishishtadvaita, Dvaita, and Kashmir Shaiva traditions alongside modern teachers. There are no ads, no accounts, and no charges; practice data stays on the user’s device.

Questions, answered

Is Daily Gita Meditation free?
Yes — completely. There are no ads, no paywall, and no premium tier. The app follows the dana (gift) tradition: everything is free for everyone.
Do I need an account?
No. There is no sign-up. Your practice — sits, reflections, journey progress — stays on your device.
What is the 108-day journey?
A curated path through 108 verses of the Bhagavad Gita, one per day. Each day pairs a guided voice meditation on the verse with a five-minute editorial written from the verse's classical commentaries. A new day unlocks each morning.
Where do the daily readings come from?
Each reading is written from the verse's own commentaries — Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhva, Abhinavagupta, Sivananda, Chinmayananda, and Ramsukhdas — explained in plain language that anyone can understand on the first read.
Which languages does it support?
The app and all 700 verse translations are available in 17 languages: English, Hindi, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, Tamil, Telugu, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati, and Malayalam. The guiding voice is in English for now.
Is it a religious app?
It is a meditation app built on the Bhagavad Gita's wisdom. Verses and scholarly commentary are presented as literature and philosophy — different traditions' readings are shown side by side, and nothing asks for belief.
Is it available on iPhone?
Daily Gita Meditation is available on Android today, and an iOS version is coming soon. The full Bhagavad Gita — 18 chapters, 700 verses with commentary — is included in the app.

Day one is a five-minute sit.

Start on Google Play