What is BaZi?
BaZi (Chinese: 八字; pinyin: bāzì; lit. ‘eight characters’), also known as the Four Pillars of Destiny (Chinese: 四柱命理; pinyin: sìzhù mìnglǐ), is a Chinese astrological and calendrical system used to analyse an individual’s destiny or life path based on the person’s date and time of birth. The system derives its name from its core structure: four “pillars”, each consisting of a pair of characters — one Heavenly Stem and one Earthly Branch — corresponding to the year, month, day, and hour of birth. Since each pillar contains two characters, the four pillars together yield eight characters, hence the alternative name BaZi (“eight characters”).
Unlike Western astrology’s zodiac-based personality typing, BaZi maps elemental forces — Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water — in specific configurations unique to the moment of birth. The chart is not a horoscope. It is not a personality profile. It is a structural map of the elemental forces that were in play at the moment you were born — forces that continue to shape how your life unfolds across decades. BaZi practitioners use these eight characters to assess tendencies in career, relationships, health, and timing of life events.
Origins & Lineage
The conceptual foundations of the Four Pillars system lie in the correlative cosmology that developed during the Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE), which systematically mapped correspondences between celestial phenomena, temporal cycles, and human affairs using the Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches, yinyang theory, and the Five Phases (五行, wǔxíng). The use of stem-branch pairs to record dates — a practice central to the Four Pillars method — dates to at least the Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE), as evidenced by oracle bone inscriptions that record the sexagenary (sixty-day) cycle.
The formal destiny analysis began somewhere in the Tang Dynasty (618-917 CE) via a scholar called Li Xuzhong, who first put down the Three Pillars method using the Year, Month, and Day of birth. The complete four-pillar system emerged during the Song Dynasty (960-1279 CE) when Xu Ziping (徐子平) added the hour pillar and refined the analytical framework. His contributions were so significant that Bazi is sometimes called “Ziping Bazi” (子平八字) in his honor.
The classical texts that codified BaZi methodology were written during the Ming and Qing dynasties. The classic text Yuan Hai Zi Ping (淵海子平), compiled during this era, remains one of the most authoritative references on Bazi methodology. The San Ming Tong Hui (三命通會), compiled by Wan Minying during the Ming Dynasty, is a comprehensive encyclopedia of Bazi containing over 600,000 characters. Another foundational text is Di Tian Sui (滴天髓, “Drops of Heavenly Essence”), which analyzes advanced chart patterns.
During the Ming and Qing dynasties, Four Pillars calculation was among the methods used by officials of the Qintianjian (欽天監, Imperial Astronomical Bureau) for court divination, including the selection of auspicious dates for state ceremonies and the assessment of compatibility for imperial marriages. While Four Pillars practice was not exclusively an imperial method — it was widely used by professional fortune-tellers (命理師, mìnglǐshī) throughout Chinese society — the court’s use of it lent the system prestige and institutional support.
How It’s Practiced
A BaZi consultation begins with the precise calculation of the birth chart. In the Four Pillars system, each of the four pillars is assigned the stem-branch pair that corresponds to the year, month, day, and hour of the individual’s birth according to the Chinese calendar. The month is determined by the solar terms (二十四節氣, èrshísì jiéqì) rather than the lunar month, making the Four Pillars system a solar-based calculation despite its use of traditional Chinese calendrical elements. The hour of birth is expressed in the traditional Chinese system of twelve double-hours (時辰, shíchén), each corresponding to one Earthly Branch and lasting approximately two hours by modern reckoning.
Each pillar corresponds to a different domain of life. The Year Pillar represents the characteristics that you may expect to share with the cohort of people who are born in the same year. This pillar comprises the elemental energy of the year’s Heavenly Stem and the typical manifestation of its Earthly Branch (the year’s Zodiac Sign). The Month Pillar reveals career potential and parental relationships. The day—often called the “Day Master”—reveals your core self, your truest essence. The Hour Pillar pertains to children, later life, and hidden potential.
Practitioners analyze the interactions between the ten Heavenly Stems and twelve Earthly Branches through the lens of the Five Elements theory. The pairing of the ten Heavenly Stems with the twelve Earthly Branches produces a repeating cycle of sixty unique combinations, known as the Sexagenary cycle (六十甲子, liùshí jiǎzǐ). This cycle has been used in China to count years, months, days, and hours since antiquity. Each Earthly Branch also contains hidden Heavenly Stems, adding layers of complexity to the interpretation.
Beyond the natal chart itself, BaZi readings incorporate Luck Pillars (大運, dàyùn)—ten-year cycles that shift throughout life—and Annual Pillars, which interact with the birth chart to reveal favorable and challenging periods for specific endeavors.
BaZi Today
The system remains widely practised in mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, and among Chinese diaspora communities. Regional variants are practised in Korea (where it is known as Saju, 사주) and Japan (where it is known as Shichū Suimei, 四柱推命).
Contemporary seekers typically encounter BaZi through professional consultants, online chart calculators, and metaphysical institutes offering courses. Some practitioners integrate BaZi with feng shui consultations to harmonize personal elemental profiles with living spaces. BaZi readings are sought for major life decisions: career changes, marriage compatibility, business timing, health assessments, and naming children.
The practice has evolved with technology—numerous apps and websites now generate BaZi charts instantly—but interpretation still requires deep knowledge of classical texts, elemental interactions, and symbolic star systems. Correct analysis of the Four Pillars of Destiny is an extremely complex subject. Fully understanding the complexities of a chart, and interpreting what it means for the person is much more difficult, and Four Pillars of Destiny readings could even be considered an art form.
Common Misconceptions
BaZi is not “Chinese zodiac animal” personality typing. It is a common misconception that the Chinese zodiac animal for the year you were born is your only sign and the most important. In fact, Four Pillars of Destiny Chinese astrology charts have a Heavenly Stem and an Earthly Branch (the correct name for the zodiac animal signs) for the year, month, day and hour you were born. Everything within the chart interacts and has an impact on your personal energy and fate. Your year animal is one of twelve factors, not your entire profile.
BaZi is not deterministic fatalism. While the chart reveals tendencies and timing, classical texts emphasize human agency. Understanding unfavorable periods allows one to prepare or mitigate, not simply resign. The tradition speaks of “three lucks”—Heaven Luck (your BaZi), Earth Luck (feng shui), and Human Luck (your choices and cultivation).
It is not the same as Zi Wei Dou Shu (紫微斗數). It shares its calendrical and cosmological foundations — the Heavenly Stems, Earthly Branches, Five Phases, and yinyang theory — with feng shui, Qimen Dunjia, Chinese astrology, and Zi Wei Dou Shu. While the Four Pillars system analyses an individual’s destiny through the lens of their birth time, Zi Wei Dou Shu (紫微斗數, “Purple Star Astrology”) uses a twelve-palace chart structure that provides a different analytical framework for similar questions.
It is not a lunar calendar system. The month is determined by the solar terms (二十四節氣, èrshísì jiéqì) rather than the lunar month, making the Four Pillars system a solar-based calculation despite its use of traditional Chinese calendrical elements.
How to Begin
For those new to BaZi, start by generating your free chart using reputable online calculators (ensure they account for solar terms and true solar time adjustments based on birthplace longitude). Many calculators provide basic elemental breakdowns but limited interpretation.
Reading recommendations include The Destiny Code by Joey Yap for contemporary accessible instruction, and for serious students, classical translations of Yuan Hai Zi Ping and Di Tian Sui offer the traditional foundation. Institutes such as the Feng Shui Institute and Joey Yap’s Mastery Academy offer structured courses from beginner to master-level.
If seeking a professional reading, look for practitioners trained in classical methodology who can explain Luck Pillars, elemental balance, and the interactions between stems and branches. A thorough consultation typically lasts 90–120 minutes and covers life themes, favorable/unfavorable periods, and practical timing advice.
Approach BaZi as a diagnostic tool for self-knowledge and strategic timing, not as scriptural prophecy. The chart reveals the weather patterns of your life; you still choose how to navigate them.