
Many people know their weton name from family stories, but have never seen the full pattern behind it. Someone may know they are Friday Kliwon, Monday Legi, or Saturday Pahing, yet not realize that all Javanese weton are formed from the meeting of 7 weekdays and 5 pasaran.
This is why the 35 Javanese weton list is useful. It helps readers see every weton combination clearly, from Sunday Legi to Saturday Kliwon, together with each neptu value.
Still, this list should not be read as a list of fate. A larger neptu is not automatically better, and a smaller neptu is not a bad sign. In JavaSense, weton is read as a cultural map: a way to understand birth weekday, pasaran, neptu, and Javanese time with clearer awareness.
Quick Answer: What Is the List of 35 Javanese Weton?
The list of 35 Javanese weton is the complete set of combinations between the seven-day weekday cycle and the five-day Javanese pasaran cycle. Because 7 weekdays meet 5 pasaran, there are 35 weton combinations.
Each weton has a neptu value calculated from weekday neptu plus pasaran neptu. For example, Monday Legi has a neptu of 9 because Monday is 4 and Legi is 5. Friday Kliwon has a neptu of 14 because Friday is 6 and Kliwon is 8.
- There are 7 weekdays: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.
- There are 5 Javanese pasaran: Legi, Pahing, Pon, Wage, and Kliwon.
- The total number of weton combinations is 7 × 5 = 35.
- Neptu weton is calculated by adding weekday neptu and pasaran neptu.
- To find your weton from a birth date, use the JavaSense weton calculator.
Why Are There 35 Javanese Weton?
There are 35 Javanese weton because weton comes from the meeting of two time cycles. The first is the seven-day weekday cycle. The second is the five-day Javanese pasaran cycle.
The seven-day cycle consists of Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. The five-day pasaran cycle consists of Legi, Pahing, Pon, Wage, and Kliwon.
When 7 weekdays meet 5 pasaran, the result is 35 possible combinations. That is why Javanese culture recognizes weton such as Monday Legi, Tuesday Pahing, Wednesday Pon, Friday Kliwon, Saturday Wage, and many others.
For the wider foundation, read the guide to Javanese weton.
Weekday Neptu Values
In weton calculation, each weekday has a neptu value. This value is added to the Javanese pasaran value to form the total neptu weton.
| Weekday | Javanese / Indonesian Name | Neptu Value |
|---|---|---|
| Sunday | Minggu | 5 |
| Monday | Senin | 4 |
| Tuesday | Selasa | 3 |
| Wednesday | Rabu | 7 |
| Thursday | Kamis | 8 |
| Friday | Jumat | 6 |
| Saturday | Sabtu | 9 |
Javanese Pasaran Neptu Values
Javanese pasaran also has neptu values. These pasaran values are added to weekday values when calculating weton.
| Javanese Pasaran | Neptu Value |
|---|---|
| Legi | 5 |
| Pahing | 9 |
| Pon | 7 |
| Wage | 4 |
| Kliwon | 8 |
To understand the five-day cycle more clearly, read Javanese pasaran. To focus on the number side, continue to neptu weton values.
Complete Table of 35 Javanese Weton and Neptu
The table below shows the complete list of 35 Javanese weton, including weekday, pasaran, and total neptu.
| No | Weton | Weekday | Pasaran | Neptu |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sunday Legi | Sunday | Legi | 10 |
| 2 | Sunday Pahing | Sunday | Pahing | 14 |
| 3 | Sunday Pon | Sunday | Pon | 12 |
| 4 | Sunday Wage | Sunday | Wage | 9 |
| 5 | Sunday Kliwon | Sunday | Kliwon | 13 |
| 6 | Monday Legi | Monday | Legi | 9 |
| 7 | Monday Pahing | Monday | Pahing | 13 |
| 8 | Monday Pon | Monday | Pon | 11 |
| 9 | Monday Wage | Monday | Wage | 8 |
| 10 | Monday Kliwon | Monday | Kliwon | 12 |
| 11 | Tuesday Legi | Tuesday | Legi | 8 |
| 12 | Tuesday Pahing | Tuesday | Pahing | 12 |
| 13 | Tuesday Pon | Tuesday | Pon | 10 |
| 14 | Tuesday Wage | Tuesday | Wage | 7 |
| 15 | Tuesday Kliwon | Tuesday | Kliwon | 11 |
| 16 | Wednesday Legi | Wednesday | Legi | 12 |
| 17 | Wednesday Pahing | Wednesday | Pahing | 16 |
| 18 | Wednesday Pon | Wednesday | Pon | 14 |
| 19 | Wednesday Wage | Wednesday | Wage | 11 |
| 20 | Wednesday Kliwon | Wednesday | Kliwon | 15 |
| 21 | Thursday Legi | Thursday | Legi | 13 |
| 22 | Thursday Pahing | Thursday | Pahing | 17 |
| 23 | Thursday Pon | Thursday | Pon | 15 |
| 24 | Thursday Wage | Thursday | Wage | 12 |
| 25 | Thursday Kliwon | Thursday | Kliwon | 16 |
| 26 | Friday Legi | Friday | Legi | 11 |
| 27 | Friday Pahing | Friday | Pahing | 15 |
| 28 | Friday Pon | Friday | Pon | 13 |
| 29 | Friday Wage | Friday | Wage | 10 |
| 30 | Friday Kliwon | Friday | Kliwon | 14 |
| 31 | Saturday Legi | Saturday | Legi | 14 |
| 32 | Saturday Pahing | Saturday | Pahing | 18 |
| 33 | Saturday Pon | Saturday | Pon | 16 |
| 34 | Saturday Wage | Saturday | Wage | 13 |
| 35 | Saturday Kliwon | Saturday | Kliwon | 17 |
This table helps readers see every weton and its total neptu quickly. Still, the number should not be read as a rank of human worth. A larger neptu is not a guarantee of goodness, and a smaller neptu is not a bad sign.

How to Use the 35 Weton List
This list is safest when used as a quick reference table. Readers can search for a weton name, see the weekday and pasaran, then check the total neptu.
For example, Friday Kliwon has a neptu of 14. Tuesday Wage has a neptu of 7. Saturday Pahing has a neptu of 18.
But this list does not replace checking weton from a birth date. If you only know the birth date but do not know the weekday and pasaran, use the JavaSense weton calculator so the pasaran is not guessed incorrectly.
Why Neptu Should Not Be Read as Human Worth
In Javanese cultural reading, neptu is a symbolic number. It helps people understand the relationship between weekday and pasaran, but it should not be used to measure a person’s dignity.
A smaller neptu does not mean someone is unlucky. A larger neptu does not mean someone is superior. Every weton has its own learning space and should be read with context.
For that reason, the 35 weton list is best used as an opening map. If readers want to understand weton more deeply, they still need to consider wider context: family, environment, choices, daily conduct, and the way a person keeps improving.
Ky Tutur’s reflection: Neptu is not a measure of human worth. Weton can become a cultural mirror, but daily conduct is what shows the direction of a person’s life.
To understand this boundary more clearly, read weton is not fortune telling and Javanese weton myths.
35 Weton List and the Weton Calculator
The 35 weton list helps readers see all combinations quickly. But to find weton from a birth date, readers still need the correct weekday and Javanese pasaran.
The hardest part is usually not adding the neptu values. The harder part is finding the correct pasaran from a birth date. Pasaran runs in a five-day cycle, so it is easy to make a mistake when checking manually.
That is why the JavaSense weton calculator is useful when you want to find the birth weekday, pasaran, weton, and neptu directly from a date. For a guide to using it, read check weton online from a birth date.
35 Weton and the Javanese Calendar
Weton cannot be separated from the Javanese calendar. The calendar helps readers see how a Gregorian date meets weekday, pasaran, weton, neptu, and other time layers such as wuku.
If the 35 weton list shows all possible combinations, the Javanese calendar helps readers see which weton appears on a certain date.
For daily cultural context, use the calendar to see the Javanese date, pasaran, weton, and wuku together.
35 Weton and Relationship Reflection
In Javanese culture, weton is also often used in relationship reflection. Usually, the neptu values of two people are added or read through certain traditional patterns to understand compatibility, possible tension, or advice for caution.
Still, weton compatibility is not an absolute decision. A relationship is shaped by communication, family blessing, shared values, responsibility, and the maturity of two people walking together.
If you want to read relationships in a more structured way, use weton compatibility with care. If you want to understand the formula, read how to calculate weton compatibility.
35 Weton, Wuku, and Pawukon
Weton and wuku are often mentioned together, but they are not the same. Weton comes from the meeting of weekday and pasaran. Wuku comes from the Pawukon cycle, which consists of 30 wuku.
Weton gives the foundation of weekday and pasaran. Wuku gives another layer of cultural time. Both can complement one another, but they should not be mixed as if they were one identical formula.
To understand this wider layer, read Pawukon and the 30 wuku cycle.
A Simple Case: Knowing the Birth Date but Not the Pasaran
Imagine someone preparing for a family event. They know their birth date, but when the family asks for their weton, they only remember the ordinary weekday. They do not know whether the pasaran was Legi, Pahing, Pon, Wage, or Kliwon.
In this situation, the 35 weton list is not enough if the pasaran is still unknown. The best step is to check the birth date through the Javanese calendar or the weton calculator.
After the weekday and pasaran are known, the 35 weton list can be used to see the total neptu. That way, readers do not guess, and tradition is read with more care.
Learn Weton with JavaSense
If you want to begin from the larger concept, read Javanese weton. To find weton from a birth date, use the JavaSense weton calculator. To understand weekday and pasaran numbers, open neptu weton values and Javanese pasaran.
If you want to learn the manual process, read how to calculate weton. If you want to see Javanese time in daily context, open the Javanese calendar.
To explore related resources in one place, open JavaSense cultural tools. For a broader cultural map, JavaSense can also be read as a Javanese cultural platform for weton, calendar, Primbon reflection, Pawukon, wuku, and Javanese script.
Closing: The 35 Weton as a Cultural Map
The list of 35 Javanese weton is not a list meant to frighten people. It is a small map of how Javanese culture reads time: weekday, pasaran, neptu, and the feeling of cultural rhythm around them.
What matters most is not only knowing the weton name, but understanding how to read it. If read with fear, weton can feel heavy. If read with clarity, weton can become a mirror for improving conduct.
So read this list with a calm heart. Respect the tradition, understand its limits, and use it as a reminder that life is still shaped by choices, effort, and wisdom.
To learn weton, pasaran, neptu, compatibility, the Javanese calendar, and script in a lighter way, you can also open JavaSense on Google Play.
FAQ About the 35 Javanese Weton
What is the list of 35 Javanese weton?
The list of 35 Javanese weton is the complete set of combinations between 7 weekdays and 5 Javanese pasaran, such as Monday Legi, Friday Kliwon, Saturday Pahing, and others.
Why are there 35 Javanese weton?
There are 35 weton because weton comes from the meeting of 7 weekdays and 5 Javanese pasaran. The calculation is 7 × 5 = 35.
What is neptu weton?
Neptu weton is the total numerical value of a weekday and Javanese pasaran. For example, Monday Legi has a neptu of 9 because Monday is 4 and Legi is 5.
How do you calculate neptu weton?
To calculate neptu weton, add the weekday neptu and the pasaran neptu. For example, Friday Kliwon is Friday 6 plus Kliwon 8, so the result is 14.
Is a higher neptu better than a lower neptu?
No. A higher neptu is not automatically better, and a lower neptu is not bad. Neptu should be read as a cultural symbol, not as a measure of human worth.
How can I find weton from a birth date?
The most practical way is to use the JavaSense weton calculator. Enter a birth date to find the weekday, pasaran, weton name, and neptu.
Can the 35 weton list be used for compatibility?
In Javanese culture, weton is often used as part of relationship reflection. But compatibility results should not be treated as absolute decisions about a relationship.
Does weton determine fate?
No. Weton is better understood as cultural reflection and a way to read Javanese time, not as fixed fate or a final decision about life.