Birth Chart Tattoos —
Beyond Your Sun Sign
Most people stop at their zodiac sign. But your birth chart has three major placements, ten planets and twelve houses — each one a different layer of who you are. Here's how to turn that into something worth wearing permanently.
✦ Generate My Birth Chart Tattoo — FreeYour sun sign — the one you've known since someone first asked "what's your star sign?" — is just the starting point. It tells you where the sun was when you were born, which is significant, but it's one data point out of dozens in your natal chart.
A birth chart tattoo takes that further. Instead of one zodiac symbol, you work with three primary placements (sun, moon, rising), up to ten planetary positions, and the symbolic geometry of the chart wheel itself. The result can be something genuinely unique — a piece of body art that no other person on earth could wear with the same meaning.
This page breaks down the different ways to approach a birth chart tattoo, from simple (sun + moon + rising as three symbols) to complex (a full chart wheel rendered as a sacred geometry piece). If you're not sure what your three placements are yet, the free Birth Chart Generator on this site calculates them instantly from your birth date.
Before you go further: A birth chart tattoo doesn't have to be literal. You don't need to reproduce an actual astrological chart wheel. The best birth chart tattoos take the meaningful data from your chart and translate it into visual language — symbols, geometry, constellation positions — rather than copying a diagram.
The Three Placements That Matter Most
In astrology, the "big three" are your sun sign, moon sign, and rising sign (also called the ascendant). Together they describe your core identity, your inner emotional world, and the face you present to others. For a birth chart tattoo, these three are the natural starting point because they give you three distinct symbols to work with — and three represents balance without becoming cluttered.
Sun, Moon & Rising — What Each Means
These are the three placements most worth incorporating into a birth chart tattoo. Each describes a different dimension of your personality.
Your Sun Sign
The sun's position at your birth. This is your core identity — the conscious self, your primary drive, what you're here to express. In a tattoo, it's usually the dominant element.
- Your sign's ruling planet sigil as the main symbol
- The constellation of your sun sign, star-mapped precisely
- Your sign's elemental symbol (fire triangle, earth square, etc.)
- The sun glyph ☉ combined with your sign's symbol
Your Moon Sign
The moon's position at your birth. This is your emotional inner world — how you feel, what you need, what you instinctively protect. Often more revealing than the sun sign.
- The moon phase you were born under (highly specific and personal)
- Your moon sign's symbol in a secondary, supporting position
- The crescent moon ☽ in the style of your moon sign's element
- Moon + ruling planet combined in one small composition
Your Rising Sign
The sign that was rising on the eastern horizon at the exact moment of your birth. This is your outer expression — first impressions, physical presence, how others instinctively read you.
- Your rising sign's symbol as a frame or border element
- The eastern horizon line with your rising sign above it
- A small glyph placed separately from the sun and moon elements
- Rising sign constellation as a background layer
The 10 Planetary Symbols & Their Tattoo Meanings
Every planet in your birth chart has a glyph — an ancient symbol used in alchemy and astrology for centuries. These are among the most underused and most meaningful elements in birth chart tattoo design.
Sun
Identity, will, the conscious self, creative force and vitality. The circle with a dot — one of the oldest symbols in human history.
Moon
Emotion, intuition, the unconscious mind, memory, the mother. The crescent — visible, mysterious, constantly changing.
Mercury
Communication, intellect, how you think and speak. The only planet whose glyph combines all four alchemical elements.
Venus
Love, beauty, values, what you find attractive and what attracts you. The mirror of the goddess.
Mars
Drive, courage, desire, how you take action and what you fight for. The shield and spear.
Jupiter
Expansion, wisdom, luck, beliefs and the search for higher meaning. The planet of growth and abundance.
Saturn
Discipline, time, limits, mastery and earned authority. The great teacher — nothing Saturn gives comes without work.
Uranus
Awakening, revolution, sudden change, originality. Uranus breaks structures that have outlived their purpose.
Neptune
Dreams, spirituality, dissolution, the longing for transcendence. Neptune blurs boundaries between self and everything else.
Pluto
Transformation, power, death and rebirth. Pluto governs whatever must end completely so something new can begin.
Most people have never looked at these glyphs properly. They're genuinely beautiful marks — centuries of alchemical and astrological refinement compressed into minimal forms. If you want a birth chart tattoo that carries real astrological depth without being a literal diagram, combining two or three of your key planetary sigils is one of the strongest approaches available.
The planets most worth incorporating are the ones that are prominent in your personal chart — either because they fall in the same sign as your sun (conjunct), or because they're in particularly strong houses. If you don't know which planets are dominant in your chart, the Birth Chart Generator will show you your key placements.
Birth Chart Tattoo Ideas — From Simple to Complex
These are specific, workable concepts — not vague descriptions.
Three Glyphs — Stacked Vertical
Your sun sign glyph at the top, moon sign glyph in the middle, rising sign glyph at the base. Three symbols, one column, connected by a thin line. No other decoration. This is the most distilled version of a birth chart tattoo — everything essential, nothing extra. Works at 2–3 inches as a spine piece or inner forearm.
Sun ☉ Moon ☽ Rising — Triptych
Three small circles in a horizontal row. The first holds the sun symbol for your sun sign inside it. The second holds the moon phase you were born under — not a symbol, the actual phase. The third holds your rising sign's element symbol. Three circles, three different interior languages, one unified piece. Clean, personal, and essentially unrepeatable.
Birth Date as Constellation Map
Not your zodiac constellation — the actual sky as it looked from your birthplace on your birth date. A small section of the night sky, hand-rendered in dotwork, showing the constellations that were visible overhead. No labels. Just the dots and lines of what was above you the moment you arrived. You'd need a planetarium app or astronomer to generate the exact map, but once you have it, any skilled dotwork artist can execute it.
Chart Wheel — Sacred Geometry Version
A literal birth chart wheel, but treated as a sacred geometry mandala rather than an astrological diagram. The 12 houses become 12 segments of a circle. The planetary positions become dots at their correct degree positions. The aspect lines (the lines connecting planets in your chart) become the interior geometry of the mandala. From a distance it looks like a complex geometric tattoo. Up close, it's your entire natal chart.
Dominant Planet + Sun Sign Combined
Find which planet is most prominent in your natal chart (usually the chart ruler — the planet that rules your rising sign). Combine that planet's sigil with your sun sign's primary symbol in one integrated design. If you're a Leo rising with a prominent Saturn, that's the sun glyph ☉ and Saturn's ♄ drawn as a single integrated mark. Unusual and deeply personal.
Birth Moon Phase — Large Standalone
The moon, rendered precisely as it appeared on your birth date. A waxing crescent, a gibbous moon, a full moon — whatever phase it was, drawn large (4–5 inches) with detailed shading that shows the terminator line (the shadow boundary) exactly as it was. No symbols, no glyphs, no text. Just the moon. The most personal birth chart tattoo you can get that requires no astrological knowledge to appreciate.
North Node — Your Soul's Direction
The North Node (☊) is the point in your chart that represents the direction your soul is meant to grow toward in this lifetime. It's not a planet — it's a mathematical point, but it's one of the most meaningful in the chart. The glyph is a pair of horseshoe curves that look like a headphone or a set of brackets. Small, unusual, and carries enormous personal significance for anyone who knows what it means.
Stellium — Multiple Planets in One Sign
A stellium is when three or more planets fall in the same zodiac sign in your natal chart. If you have one, it's the most concentrated energy in your chart — the place where multiple planetary forces converge. A stellium tattoo combines all the planets in that sign into one layered composition: their sigils interlocking, orbiting a central sign symbol, or arranged as a geometric cluster. Rare to have, extraordinary to wear.
How to Actually Plan a Birth Chart Tattoo
In the right order, so you don't waste time or money.
Get Your Actual Placements First
Before any design decisions, know your sun, moon and rising signs. You need your exact birth date, birth time (as accurate as possible) and birthplace. Birth time matters specifically for the rising sign — without it, you'll only know your sun and moon. Use the free Birth Chart Generator on this site, or a dedicated astrology app like Astro.com for the full chart.
Decide How Literal You Want to Be
There's a spectrum from "three small glyphs" to "full chart wheel as sacred geometry." Neither is better — it depends on how visible you want the astrological meaning to be, and how much skin you want to dedicate to it. A birth chart tattoo doesn't need to look like astrology to carry its full meaning. Some of the most powerful ones are just two or three carefully chosen symbols.
Choose Your Primary Symbol and Build Outward
Most successful birth chart tattoos have one dominant element and supporting details. Start with the symbol that carries the most meaning for you personally — your sun sign's constellation, your birth moon phase, your north node glyph — and build other elements around it. Don't start by trying to include everything. Start with the one thing that matters most.
Use a Reference Design Before Your Consultation
Walk into your artist consultation with something visual. Use the free tattoo generator to get a starting point based on your sun sign and intention. Download the SVG and the artist-ready prompt. This gives your artist a concrete reference to respond to — which produces a better first consultation than trying to describe everything in words.
Find an Artist Who Actually Does This Well
Birth chart tattoos require precision — especially constellation maps and geometric chart wheels. Search for artists who specifically show fine line work, sacred geometry, or astronomical illustration in their portfolios. Check Instagram with hashtags like #birthtchatttattoo or #astrologytattoo to find artists who specialize in this. A good artist for this style is worth waiting for.
Birth Chart Tattoo — What Works and What Doesn't
✅ What Works Well
- Three-symbol designs (sun, moon, rising) — clean, meaningful, versatile in size
- Birth moon phase as standalone — specific, visual, universally appreciated
- Single planetary sigil in geometric form — rare, personal, ages well
- Constellation map from birth date — completely unique to you
- North node glyph — tiny and carries enormous personal meaning
- Combining two planetary sigils that are significant in your chart
❌ What Tends to Go Wrong
- Trying to include too many elements — the chart has 10 planets, don't use all 10
- Copying a literal chart wheel without simplifying it — looks like a diagram, not art
- Text-heavy birth data (exact degrees, house numbers) — fades fast, hard to read
- Very small fine line constellation maps — beautiful at first, blurs within years
- Rushing to book an artist before knowing exactly what you want
- Not verifying your birth time — rising sign is wrong without it
The single most common mistake with birth chart tattoos is scope creep — starting with "my three placements" and ending up trying to fit your entire chart onto one piece of skin. Every addition dilutes the impact of everything else. Pick the elements that carry the most personal meaning and stop there. You can always add more later — a second tattoo for your north node, a third for a significant transit. The chart isn't going anywhere.
For more on how individual zodiac signs translate into tattoo design, see the complete star sign tattoos guide — it covers symbols, meanings and placement recommendations for all 12 signs in detail.
Start with Your Sun Sign Design
Enter your birth date, pick your intention and style — get a custom SVG tattoo, symbolic meaning and artist-ready prompt in seconds. A solid starting point for any birth chart tattoo consultation.