What Is a Jodi in Satta Matka?
In Satta Matka, a Jodi (also spelled "Jori") is simply a two-digit number formed by combining the open single digit and the close single digit of a result. For example, if the open result yields the single digit 4 and the close result yields 7, the Jodi for that draw is 47.
There are exactly 100 possible Jodis — from 00 to 99 — making this one of the most trackable and analyzable components of any matka market.
How a Jodi Is Calculated
- Three open numbers are drawn (e.g., 1, 5, 3). Their sum = 9. Open single = 9.
- Three close numbers are drawn (e.g., 2, 4, 6). Their sum = 12. Last digit = 2. Close single = 2.
- Combine the two singles: Jodi = 92.
Jodi Categories Worth Knowing
Chart analysts often group Jodis into meaningful categories for easier tracking:
1. Same-Digit Jodis (Doublets)
These are Jodis where both digits are identical: 00, 11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66, 77, 88, 99. There are 10 such Jodis. Analysts often track how frequently doublets appear in a given market.
2. Mirror Jodis
A mirror Jodi pair consists of two Jodis that are reverses of each other — for example, 37 and 73, or 18 and 81. Many chart readers look for mirror appearances within a short time window.
3. Family Jodis (Same Sum Group)
Jodis that share the same digit sum are grouped into "families." For instance, all Jodis whose digits add up to 7: 07, 16, 25, 34, 43, 52, 61, 70. These 8 numbers form a family and are often tracked together.
| Sum | Jodi Family Members |
|---|---|
| 1 | 01, 10 |
| 5 | 05, 14, 23, 32, 41, 50 |
| 9 | 09, 18, 27, 36, 45, 54, 63, 72, 81, 90 |
What Are Panel Combinations?
Every Jodi can be produced by multiple different panel (Panna) combinations. For example, the Jodi 35 can come from dozens of different open and close panel pairs. Understanding which panels can generate a particular Jodi is valuable for deeper analysis.
Common panel groupings are:
- Single Panna: Panels with all three unique digits (e.g., 1-2-3, 4-6-8)
- Double Panna: Panels with one repeated digit (e.g., 1-1-2, 3-3-7)
- Triple Panna: All three digits identical (1-1-1, 5-5-5) — rare and notable when they appear
The Relationship Between Jodi and Open/Close Singles
One important insight: the Jodi tells you both single digits. If the Jodi is 64, you know the open single is 6 and the close single is 4. This means analysts who track singles can work backward from Jodi charts to understand open/close single frequency.
How to Analyze Jodi Frequency
Here is a simple process for analyzing Jodi frequency over a period:
- Collect results for a specific market over 30–90 days.
- Create a tally for each Jodi (00–99) that appeared.
- Identify the top 10 most-frequent Jodis and the 10 least-frequent.
- Look for any Jodi that has not appeared in more than 20 consecutive results — these are sometimes called "pending" Jodis in analysis communities.
- Track whether Jodi family groups show any clustering tendency.
Key Takeaways
- A Jodi is simply the two-digit combination of open and close single digits.
- There are exactly 100 possible Jodis (00–99).
- Grouping Jodis by doublets, mirrors, and sum families makes pattern analysis more structured.
- Panels and Jodis are connected — every Jodi can be traced back to specific panel combinations.