Generate your complete natal chart with planetary positions, aspects, and interpretations
Your birth chart — also called a natal chart — is a snapshot of the sky at the exact moment you were born. It maps the precise positions of the Sun, Moon, and planets across the twelve zodiac signs and twelve astrological houses, creating a unique cosmic blueprint that astrologers have used for thousands of years to describe personality, life themes, strengths, and challenges. Every person's birth chart is completely unique. Even twins born minutes apart can have meaningful differences in their charts, particularly in the house cusps and Ascendant (rising sign). The three most important points in any natal chart are often called the 'Big 3': your Sun sign (your core identity and conscious self), your Moon sign (emotional nature and inner world), and your Rising sign or Ascendant (how others see you and your outer personality). Beyond the Big 3, a complete birth chart includes the positions of Mercury (communication and thinking), Venus (love, beauty, and values), Mars (drive, ambition, and how you take action), Jupiter (expansion, luck, and growth), Saturn (discipline, lessons, and karma), Uranus (innovation and rebellion), Neptune (dreams, spirituality, and illusion), and Pluto (transformation, power, and regeneration). Modern astrology also considers Chiron (the wounded healer), the Lunar Nodes (karmic direction), and Black Moon Lilith (the wild, untamed feminine). Planets are placed in one of twelve zodiac signs, which color how a planet's energy is expressed. A planet in its ruling sign is particularly powerful (such as Mars in Aries or Venus in Taurus). When a planet is retrograde — appearing to move backward from Earth's perspective — its energy is said to be more internalized and reflective. Retrograde Mercury, for instance, is famous for communication mix-ups and travel delays. The twelve houses of the birth chart divide the sky into areas of life: identity, resources, communication, home, creativity, health, relationships, transformation, philosophy, career, community, and spirituality. Where planets fall in your chart shows which life areas receive their energies. A stellium — three or more planets in one sign or house — concentrates intense focus in that area. Aspects are the angular relationships between planets and are among the most important factors in chart interpretation. The five major aspects are the conjunction (0°, planets blend and intensify), sextile (60°, opportunity and ease), square (90°, tension that drives growth), trine (120°, natural talent and flow), and opposition (180°, balance and tension between opposing forces). Minor aspects such as the quincunx (150°) and semi-sextile (30°) add nuance. This calculator uses simplified astronomical algorithms based on mean orbital elements and the Swiss Ephemeris approach to calculate planetary longitudes for any birth date from 1900 onward. When you provide a birth time and geographic coordinates, we also calculate your Ascendant, Midheaven (MC), Part of Fortune, and Black Moon Lilith. The calculations are approximate — for professional-grade precision with exact house cusps, a full ephemeris library is recommended. Nevertheless, this tool provides accurate sign placements for all major planets, meaningful aspect analysis, element and modality breakdowns, chart pattern detection, your moon phase at birth, life path number, and Chinese zodiac sign.
Understanding Your Birth Chart
What Is a Birth Chart?
A birth chart (natal chart) is a circular diagram showing the position of the Sun, Moon, and planets in the zodiac at the moment of your birth. The chart is divided into twelve sections called houses, each ruling a different area of life. The zodiac signs provide the backdrop — each of the twelve signs occupies exactly 30 degrees of the 360-degree wheel. Every planet's position is described by its sign (where it is in the zodiac), its degree (how far into that sign), and its house (which area of life it influences). The Ascendant — the zodiac sign rising over the eastern horizon at birth — is the cusp of the 1st house and one of the most personal points in the chart. The Midheaven (MC) is the highest point of the chart, associated with career and public reputation. Together, these points create a map unique to you.
How Are Planetary Positions Calculated?
Planetary positions are calculated using astronomical algorithms derived from centuries of observation and mathematics. The Julian Day Number converts your birth date and time to a continuous day count from a fixed starting point (January 1, 4713 BC). From this, astronomers calculate each planet's mean anomaly (average position in its orbit), then apply the equation of center to correct for orbital eccentricity, giving the true longitude. The Ascendant calculation additionally requires the Local Sidereal Time — derived from the Greenwich Mean Sidereal Time plus your longitude — and the obliquity of the ecliptic (the tilt of Earth's axis). The house cusps are then calculated according to your chosen house system. This calculator uses simplified mean orbital elements suitable for dates from 1900 to 2050.
Why Does the Birth Chart Matter?
Whether you approach astrology as a symbolic language for self-reflection or as a spiritual tradition, the birth chart serves as a profound tool for self-understanding. The element distribution (Fire, Earth, Air, Water) reveals your natural temperament and energy style. The modality breakdown (Cardinal, Fixed, Mutable) shows how you initiate action, sustain effort, and adapt to change. Aspects between planets describe inner psychological dynamics — for instance, a Sun-Saturn square might describe someone who works hard to overcome feelings of self-doubt, while a Venus-Jupiter trine can indicate natural charm and good fortune in relationships. Chart patterns like Grand Trines, T-Squares, and Yods point to major life themes. Millions of people worldwide use natal astrology for career guidance, relationship compatibility, timing decisions, and personal growth.
Limitations and Accuracy Notes
This calculator uses simplified astronomical algorithms and is suitable for most astrological purposes, but has several limitations worth noting. Planetary positions may have an error margin of up to 1-2 degrees compared to professional ephemeris software, which is significant for planets near sign cusps. The Ascendant calculation requires an accurate birth time (within 15 minutes) and geographic coordinates — an error of even 4 minutes in birth time can shift the Ascendant by about 1 degree. Without a known birth time, the Ascendant, Midheaven, house cusps, and Part of Fortune cannot be calculated. Retrograde status uses an approximation based on synodic periods rather than true velocity calculations, so it may be incorrect for planets near their stationary points. Chinese Zodiac uses an approximate New Year cutoff and may be off by a year for late January / early February birthdays. For professional astrological work, we recommend using Swiss Ephemeris or a dedicated ephemeris library.
Fórmulas
Calculates the zodiac degree rising on the eastern horizon at the moment of birth. GMST is Greenwich Mean Sidereal Time, obliquity is Earth's axial tilt (23.4393 degrees), latitude and longitude are the birth location coordinates. The Ascendant changes sign approximately every 2 hours.
Calculates the Sun's ecliptic longitude for Julian century T (measured from J2000.0 epoch). After applying the equation of center correction for orbital eccentricity, this determines which zodiac sign the Sun occupies — your Sun sign.
The Moon's mean longitude plus perturbation corrections. M' is the Moon's mean anomaly. The Moon moves approximately 13.2 degrees per day through the zodiac, completing one full circuit in 27.32 days (sidereal month).
The angular separation between two planets on the ecliptic. Major aspects occur at 0 degrees (conjunction), 60 degrees (sextile), 90 degrees (square), 120 degrees (trine), and 180 degrees (opposition), with allowable orbs typically 6-10 degrees for major aspects.
Reference Tables
Zodiac Signs, Elements, and Modalities
| Signo | Dates (Tropical) | Element | Modality | Ruling Planet |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aries | Mar 21 - Apr 19 | Fuego | Cardinal | Mars |
| Tauro | Apr 20 - May 20 | Tierra | Fixed | Venus |
| Géminis | May 21 - Jun 20 | Aire | Mutable | Mercury |
| Cáncer | Jun 21 - Jul 22 | Agua | Cardinal | Luna |
| Leo | Jul 23 - Aug 22 | Fuego | Fixed | Dom |
| Virgo | Aug 23 - Sep 22 | Tierra | Mutable | Mercury |
| Libra | Sep 23 - Oct 22 | Aire | Cardinal | Venus |
| Escorpio | Oct 23 - Nov 21 | Agua | Fixed | Pluto / Mars |
| Sagitario | Nov 22 - Dec 21 | Fuego | Mutable | Júpiter |
| Capricornio | Dec 22 - Jan 19 | Tierra | Cardinal | Saturn |
| Acuario | Jan 20 - Feb 18 | Aire | Fixed | Uranus / Saturn |
| Piscis | Feb 19 - Mar 20 | Agua | Mutable | Neptune / Jupiter |
Major Aspects
| Aspect | Ángulo | Orb | Naturaleza | Keywords |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conjunction | 0 degrees | 8-10 degrees | Neutral (blending) | Fusion, intensity, new beginnings |
| Sextile | 60 degrees | 4-6 degrees | Harmonious | Opportunity, ease, talent |
| Square | 90 degrees | 6-8 degrees | Challenging | Tension, drive, growth through friction |
| Trine | 120 degrees | 6-8 degrees | Harmonious | Flow, natural talent, ease |
| Opposition | 180 degrees | 8-10 degrees | Challenging | Polarity, balance, awareness |
Worked Examples
Determining Sun Sign for a January 19 Birth
Capricorn spans approximately 270 to 300 degrees ecliptic longitude (Dec 22 - Jan 19)
Aquarius begins at approximately 300 degrees (Jan 20)
Calculate the Sun's longitude for January 19: L ~ 299.5 degrees
299.5 degrees falls within Capricorn's range (270 - 300 degrees)
However, the exact cusp varies by year due to the Sun's apparent speed — some years the Sun enters Aquarius late on January 19
Calculating the Ascendant for a Morning Birth in London
Convert birth date/time to Julian Day: JD ~ 2448000.79
Calculate Greenwich Mean Sidereal Time (GMST) for that JD
Add longitude correction: Local Sidereal Time = GMST + (-0.1 / 15) hours
Apply the Ascendant formula with latitude = 51.5, obliquity = 23.44 degrees
At approximately 7:00 AM in London in mid-April, the ecliptic degree rising is near 20-25 degrees Gemini
Identifying a T-Square Pattern
Check Sun-Moon angle: |15 Aries - 12 Cancer| = |15 - 102| = 87 degrees (within 8-degree orb of 90-degree square)
Check Sun-Saturn angle: |15 Aries - 197 Libra| = 182 degrees (within 8-degree orb of 180-degree opposition)
Check Moon-Saturn angle: |102 Cancer - 197 Libra| = 95 degrees (within 8-degree orb of 90-degree square)
All three aspects are present: two squares and one opposition forming a T-shape
The focal planet (at the apex of the T) is Moon in Cancer
How to Use the Birth Chart Calculator
Ingresa Tu Fecha de Nacimiento
Click the date field and select your birth date using the calendar picker. The calculator supports dates from 1900 to 2025. Your birth date is required to calculate your Sun sign, Moon sign, and planetary positions.
Add Birth Time and Location
For the most complete chart, enter your birth time (hour and minute) and your birth location coordinates. You can find your city's latitude and longitude with a quick search. Without birth time, your Rising sign and house placements cannot be calculated.
Choose a House System
Select your preferred house system: Placidus is the most widely used in Western astrology; Whole Sign is popular in ancient and Hellenistic astrology; Equal House divides the chart into equal 30-degree houses. The default is Placidus.
Explore Your Chart
Click 'Generate Chart' to see your natal chart wheel and Big 3 placements. Use the Planets tab to explore each placement (click any planet to read its interpretation), the Aspects tab to review planetary relationships, and the Analysis tab for element and modality breakdowns, chart patterns, moon phase, life path number, and Chinese zodiac.
Preguntas Frecuentes
What are the 'Big 3' in astrology?
The Big 3 refers to your Sun sign, Moon sign, and Rising sign (Ascendant) — the three most personal and influential placements in your birth chart. Your Sun sign represents your core identity and conscious ego; it is the sign most people know from horoscopes. Your Moon sign governs your emotional nature, instincts, and subconscious needs. Your Rising sign is the zodiac sign that was on the eastern horizon when you were born and describes how others perceive you and your outer persona. Together, these three placements give a much more complete picture of your personality than your Sun sign alone. To calculate your Rising sign accurately, you need your exact birth time and birth location.
Why do I need my exact birth time?
Your exact birth time is needed to calculate your Ascendant (Rising sign) and Midheaven (MC), as well as the twelve house cusps. The Ascendant changes sign approximately every two hours, so even a small error in birth time can change your Rising sign entirely. House cusps shift continuously throughout the day, affecting which life areas are activated by each planet. Without a birth time, the calculator will set the time to noon and skip the Ascendant, Midheaven, house placements, and Part of Fortune. If you do not know your birth time, check your birth certificate, hospital records, or ask a parent. Even an approximate time (morning, afternoon, evening) is better than nothing for determining the Rising sign.
What does retrograde mean for a planet?
A retrograde planet appears to move backward through the zodiac from Earth's vantage point. This is an optical illusion caused by the relative speeds of Earth and the planet in their orbits around the Sun — like passing a slower car on the highway, the slower car appears to move backward relative to you. In astrology, retrograde planets are said to turn their energy inward rather than expressing it outwardly. Mercury retrograde (about three weeks, three times per year) is associated with communication delays and miscommunications. Venus retrograde (about six weeks every 18 months) relates to re-evaluating relationships and values. Planets retrograde in your natal chart are a permanent feature of your chart, not a temporary transit influence.
What is the difference between tropical and sidereal astrology?
Western astrology uses the tropical zodiac, which is fixed to the seasons — Aries always begins at the Spring Equinox (approximately March 21) regardless of where the stars actually are. Vedic astrology uses the sidereal zodiac, which tracks the actual positions of planets against the background constellations. Due to a phenomenon called precession of the equinoxes, the tropical and sidereal zodiacs are currently about 23-24 degrees apart (this gap is called the ayanamsa). This means your sidereal Sun sign may be one sign earlier than your tropical Sun sign. This calculator uses the tropical zodiac, which is standard in Western astrology. If you prefer sidereal calculations, subtract approximately 23-24 degrees from each planetary longitude.
What are aspects and why do they matter?
Aspects are specific angular relationships between two planets in your birth chart, measured in degrees along the ecliptic. The five major aspects are: Conjunction (0°) — planets combine their energies, for better or worse; Sextile (60°) — a gentle, supportive energy of opportunity; Square (90°) — tension and challenge that drives growth through friction; Trine (120°) — harmonious, flowing talent and ease; Opposition (180°) — a pull between opposing forces requiring balance. Minor aspects like the Quincunx (150°) and Semi-square (45°) add nuance. Aspects are evaluated with orbs — an allowable margin of a few degrees. Tight orbs (within 1-2°) indicate very powerful aspects. The pattern of aspects in your chart describes the inner psychological dynamics you work with throughout your life.
How accurate are the planetary calculations in this tool?
This calculator uses simplified mean orbital elements and the equation of center to calculate planetary positions. For the Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, and Mars, accuracy is typically within 1-2 degrees for dates between 1950 and 2050. Outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto) have somewhat larger potential errors due to the simplified models used. The Ascendant calculation requires an accurate birth time and location — errors in either will affect its accuracy. Retrograde status uses synodic period approximations and may be incorrect for planets near their stationary points. For professional astrological work or precise research, we recommend using Swiss Ephemeris or AstroSeek which uses full-precision ephemeris tables. This tool is best used for learning, self-exploration, and approximate chart work.