Two signs in one tattoo is harder to do well than two separate tattoos. This guide is about the approaches that actually work — and the ones that end up looking like two unrelated designs that happened to end up on the same person.
✦ Generate My Design FreeThere's a specific problem with combining zodiac signs in one tattoo that people don't think about until they're already in the artist's chair: two different sign symbols rarely have a natural visual relationship with each other. A Scorpio ♏ and a Pisces ♓ are both water signs and deeply compatible — but their glyphs look nothing alike and don't combine elegantly. Two symbols side by side is not a unified tattoo; it's two tattoos squeezed together.
The approaches that work are the ones that find the shared meaning between the signs rather than stacking their symbols. What do these two signs share? What does the relationship between them look like as an image? That question produces a much better tattoo than "put both glyphs next to each other."
This guide covers family zodiac tattoos for every group — couples, parent-child, siblings, three or more people — with specific design approaches for each. The Compatibility Calculator on this site will show you the astrological relationship between any two signs, which is a useful starting point for finding the visual connection.
Before anything else: Know all the signs you're working with — not just sun signs. If you want to represent two people fully, consider birth chart elements beyond the sun: moon sign, rising sign, or the sign of the moon phase each person was born under. These give you more specific and more personal material to work with than sun signs alone.
Ranked from most conceptually unified to most straightforward. The top approaches take more thought but produce far better tattoos.
If both signs share an element (fire, earth, air, water) or a quality (cardinal, fixed, mutable), build the tattoo around that shared ground. A Cancer and a Scorpio are both water signs — design from the water element rather than from the individual sign symbols. The element IS the shared visual language. See the element tattoos guide for specific imagery.
What does the connection between these two people look like astrologically? Run the Compatibility Calculator and look at how these signs interact — do they complement, challenge or mirror each other? That dynamic, translated into an image, is more specific and more meaningful than two symbols.
Both people's constellations — the actual star patterns — placed within the same night sky composition. Not adjacent, but as part of a continuous sky. This works particularly well when the constellations are different sizes and have different shapes, creating visual variety within a unified field. See the constellation tattoo guide for the shape of each constellation.
Some zodiac glyphs share lines, curves or visual elements that allow them to be partially merged. A ♈ and a ♓ share arc shapes. A ♌ and a ♒ can be drawn so the tail of the Leo glyph flows into the Aquarius waves. This requires a skilled artist and doesn't work for every combination — but when it does work it's the most elegant solution.
Instead of the sign symbols, use the symbols of the signs' ruling planets. Mars for Aries, Venus for Taurus, the Moon for Cancer, the Sun for Leo. Planetary sigils tend to combine more gracefully than zodiac glyphs, and using the rulers adds a layer of astrological depth that most people won't immediately recognize.
Two separate tattoos in the same style, same artist, same visual language — each person wearing their own sign but clearly part of a matched set. This is the most straightforward approach and often the most honest: it represents two people who are connected but distinct, which is usually what the relationship actually is.
Different relationships call for different approaches. What works for a couple is different from what works for a parent and child.
If you're a compatible elemental pairing — fire + air (they fuel each other) or earth + water (they nourish each other) — use the two alchemical symbols in their natural relationship. Fire and air triangles pointing toward each other. Earth and water triangles nested. The astrological compatibility made geometric. Works as matching pieces or a single shared piece.
Both constellations within a circular sky frame — a round piece where each constellation occupies its own hemisphere of the circle. The frame creates unity; the constellations retain their individual shapes. The circle itself can reference a moon, a porthole, or simply a boundary that says "this is the sky we share."
Each person's exact birth moon phase — the moon as it appeared on each birth date — rendered as two circles side by side. Not symbols but real astronomical data. A waning gibbous next to a new moon crescent. The phases are almost certainly different, which creates visual contrast within a unified concept. Use the Moon Phase Finder to get both phases.
Each person's chart ruler (the planet ruling their rising sign) drawn as complementary sigils. A Venus ♀ and a Mars ♂ for a Libra rising and Scorpio rising couple — which also happens to be the universal male/female symbol combination, adding another layer. Look up each other's rising signs first with the Birth Chart Generator.
The moon as it appeared on the child's birth date and time. Not a symbol of the child's sign — the actual astronomical event of their arrival. Precise to the hour if you know the birth time. This is the most specific and most beautiful single-symbol option for a parent. It's not generic in any way because it belongs only to that child.
The parent's zodiac constellation drawn at full size, with the child's constellation appearing inside or beside it as if it's a part of the same sky — smaller, newer, but already part of the same star field. The size difference speaks to the relationship without needing to be stated.
The parent's zodiac symbol drawn larger, with the child's glyph positioned close to or within it — the smaller glyph held, sheltered, near the larger one. The spatial relationship says what words would — protection, proximity, the way a parent holds a child. Simple, immediate and always true.
For more than one child: each child's brightest star from their zodiac constellation, rendered as a dotwork star, in a trail or constellation pattern unique to that family. Three children = three stars arranged as a new "constellation" that exists nowhere in the sky but belongs entirely to that family.
Each sibling gets their own zodiac constellation — in exactly the same visual style, same size, same artist. Not combined in one piece but clearly matching. The best version of this uses an unusual stylistic treatment (dotwork, geometric line, Japanese engraving style) so the match is obvious to anyone who sees both.
If siblings share an element (two fire signs, two earth signs), each wears the elemental alchemical symbol, but with their specific sign's visual language applied to it. The fire triangle for both — but one has a ram horn detail, the other has a lion mane detail. Same foundation, individual expression. See the element tattoos guide.
If siblings are consecutive zodiac signs — a Taurus and a Gemini, a Scorpio and a Sagittarius — their constellations appear adjacent in the sky, which creates a natural compositional logic. Both constellations in a single landscape where they're actually neighbors in the night sky. The sky makes the connection.
One star for each person — sized to represent their brightest zodiac constellation star, positioned to form a new constellation pattern that belongs only to this family. The arrangement is designed by an artist working with the actual star magnitudes. No official constellation looks like it; it's entirely yours. Four people, four stars, one new shape.
If a family of four happens to cover all four elements — one fire, one earth, one air, one water — the four alchemical symbols arranged in a balanced composition is a complete design. The elemental square (earth bottom-left, water bottom-right, air top-left, fire top-right, the classical arrangement) with each person's sign indicated inside its element.
A snapshot of the sky at a specific moment that belongs to all of them — the night of a wedding, the night the family was last all together, a birthday. Using a planetarium app, you can generate the exact sky for any date, time and place. Every family member's sign appears somewhere in that sky. One image, everyone included.
The moon as it appeared on the day they were born. The most specific, most personal single image you can carry that belongs to them. It's astronomical — it's real data, not a symbol someone invented — and it exists nowhere else in the same form.
The star at the heart of their constellation — Regulus for Leo, Antares for Scorpio, Spica for Virgo — drawn as a precise dotwork star with the star's name in small serif type. Not generic starry imagery. The specific star that sits in the center of their sign's sky.
Your zodiac constellation with their constellation's key star placed within it — not their full constellation, just their most significant star. Your sign holds their light. Requires an artist who understands the astronomical reference, but the resulting image is both legible and deeply personal.
The element each sign belongs to determines how naturally its imagery combines with another sign's. Same-element pairings are the easiest to unify visually.
| Pairing | Signs | Design Logic | Visual Bridge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fire + Fire | Aries, Leo, Sagittarius | Same element — the easiest combination. The fire triangle works for all three; the difference is in the sign-specific details added to it. | Shared flame, solar imagery, upward triangles |
| Earth + Earth | Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn | Same element — botanical and geological imagery unifies naturally. All three signs relate to the physical, crafted, enduring world. | Shared botanical, crystal, mountain-root imagery |
| Air + Air | Gemini, Libra, Aquarius | Same element — the most challenging same-element combination because air has no fixed form, but wind and motion create a visual thread. | Feathers, wave patterns, movement lines |
| Water + Water | Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces | Same element — water imagery is the richest visual language of the four. Depth, tides, ocean and current all unite without forcing it. | Shared water imagery, moon + water, tidal patterns |
| Fire + Air | Mixed | Compatible elements — air feeds fire. The two upward-triangle element symbols point in the same direction. Wind + flame as a combined image. | Flame carried by wind, feather near fire |
| Earth + Water | Mixed | Compatible elements — water nourishes earth. Both triangles point downward. Root reaching toward water, wave shaping stone over time. | River and bank, root into water, tide and shore |
| Fire + Water | Mixed | Opposing elements — creates tension that can be used deliberately. Steam is the visual product of their meeting. Dramatic, high-contrast. | Steam at the boundary, lava hitting ocean |
| Earth + Air | Mixed | Opposing elements — but the most natural interaction in the visible world: wind through a field, seeds carried by air. Less dramatic than fire-water. | Wheat in wind, dandelion seeds, dust in air |
The most common failure is designing the tattoo before deciding on the concept. People come to an artist with "I want my sign and my daughter's sign in one tattoo" and let the artist make all the conceptual decisions. The result is usually two symbols placed side by side with a decorative element connecting them — technically done, emotionally hollow.
The second issue is that family tattoos are often done in the period of highest emotion about the relationship — right after a birth, right after a death, right after falling in love. That's understandable but it's worth waiting until the initial rush has passed so you design something that represents the relationship as it is rather than how it feels in that particular moment.
Third: scale mismatch. If you combine two signs where one has a dramatically more complex visual symbol than the other (Scorpius vs. Aries, for instance), one symbol will visually dominate the other — which can feel like the relationship itself is unequal. Either simplify the more complex one or choose a design approach that doesn't rely on the symbols at all.
Memorial zodiac tattoos done in the immediate grief period are sometimes regretted later — not because the feeling wasn't real but because the person was designing from pain rather than from the relationship. There's no urgency. The star that represents them in the sky isn't going anywhere. Take the time to find the right symbol, and the right moment, before committing to it.
For individual sign design ideas to draw on when building a family piece, the horoscope tattoo guide has specific concepts for all 12 signs — and the complete star sign guide covers the symbols, mythology and visual vocabulary of each one in depth.
Generate a custom SVG design for any sign as a starting point — then bring it to your artist consultation with the style and intention already worked out.