BaZi — literally "eight characters," also known as the Four Pillars of Destiny — is a Chinese system that converts your birth year, month, day, and hour into four pairs of traditional calendar signs. Each pair, called a pillar, consists of one Heavenly Stem and one Earthly Branch. Four pillars, two characters each: eight characters in total. Your chart is essentially a timestamp of the moment you were born, written in the classical Chinese calendar, and BaZi analysis is the practice of reading patterns of elemental energy from that timestamp.
The building blocks: Stems and Branches
There are ten Heavenly Stems (Jia, Yi, Bing, Ding, Wu, Ji, Geng, Xin, Ren, Gui) and twelve Earthly Branches (Zi through Hai, the same cycle behind the twelve zodiac animals). Each stem and branch carries one of the Five Elements — Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, or Water — plus a yin or yang polarity. Stems and branches pair up into a repeating cycle of sixty combinations, which the Chinese calendar has used to count years, months, days, and hours for centuries. Your four pillars are simply four coordinates pulled from that cycle.
The four pillars
- Year Pillar: the signs for your birth year. Note that the BaZi year begins at Li Chun, the "Start of Spring" solar term in early February — not on January 1st and not at Lunar New Year.
- Month Pillar: based on solar terms, which divide the year into twelve segments following the sun's position.
- Day Pillar: the signs for your birth date, cycling every sixty days.
- Hour Pillar: each traditional "hour" spans two clock hours, starting with the Zi hour at 11 p.m.
The Day Master: the chart is about you
The single most important character is the Heavenly Stem of your Day Pillar, called the Day Master. It represents you. Every other character in the chart is read in relation to it: elements that generate your Day Master act as support and resources; elements it generates are your output and expression; elements that control it represent rules and pressure; elements it controls represent wealth and resources you manage. Later, you will meet the Ten Gods — a system that names each of these relationships and turns your chart into a map of social roles.
What you need for an accurate chart
Three things: birth date, birth time, and birth place. Date and time determine the pillars themselves. Place matters because the hour should be reckoned by true solar time — the sun's actual position in the sky — rather than standardized clock time. Time zones are administrative conveniences; the sun does not observe them. If you were born near the boundary between two traditional hours, a longitude correction of even twenty minutes can change your Hour Pillar, so it is worth using a calculator that handles this properly.
How to read your chart, step by step
1. Identify your Day Master and its element — this is your baseline character.
2. Count the Five Elements across all eight characters to see the overall balance: what is abundant, what is scarce.
3. Learn the Ten Gods to translate stem-and-branch relationships into life themes: expression, wealth, discipline, support, peers.
4. Add the Luck Pillars (ten-year cycles) and annual signs to place the static chart on a timeline.
What BaZi is — and what it is not
BaZi does not hand down verdicts about your fate. A useful way to think about it: the chart is a factory specification sheet. It describes your default tendencies — how you process pressure, how you express yourself, what environments energize or drain you. It says nothing about what you must do with that configuration. Two people with similar charts can live very different lives; the chart describes the instrument, not the music. Approached this way, BaZi becomes a structured language for self-reflection rather than a source of anxiety, and its concepts — the Five Elements, the Ten Gods, the luck cycles — reward study the way any good framework does.
Want to see your own chart? You can generate one for free at MingLiTong.