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Love compatibility

Compare relationship dynamics, communication rhythm, conflict patterns, and long-term fit.

Test love compatibility

Enter both birth records to read relationship dynamics, communication rhythm, conflict patterns, and long-term fit.

Birth record time zoneUse UTC offset instead (no time-zone database lookup)
Birth record time zoneDefaults to your current automatic time zone. Search by city or time zone when the birth record uses another local zone. Clear this field to enter a UTC offset instead.

Second person for compatibility

Birth record time zoneUse UTC offset instead (no time-zone database lookup)
Birth record time zoneDefaults to your current automatic time zone. Search by city or time zone when the birth record uses another local zone. Clear this field to enter a UTC offset instead.

Generate the love reading and jump to relationship dynamics, communication, conflict pattern, and long-term fit.

The birth record time zone affects the hour pillar and solar-term boundary checks.

Enter your birth record first, then add the second person to read love compatibility. No example reading is loaded.

Glossary

This glossary explains the core terms shown in this result page, including table fields, chart labels, relationship checks, and missing-input notes. Each term tells you what it is and how to read it in the result.

Compatibility
A two-chart comparison, not a final verdict on the relationship.
Day Master relation
How the two 'me' characters interact by element.
Day branch
The lower character of the day pillar. It is often used for close relationship rhythm.
Branch combination
Two branches that tend to move together more easily.
Branch clash
Two branches that tend to push against each other. It means friction or movement.
Element support
Whether one chart supplies what the other chart lacks.
Communication rhythm
How the two charts may differ in pace, reaction, and conflict style.
Relationship dynamic
The main push-pull or support pattern between the two charts.
Long-term fit
The shared strengths and shared gaps when two charts are combined.
Second chart
The partner's birth chart used for comparison.
Compact result table
The first table to read on a result page. The left column names the item, the middle column gives the result, and the right column explains how to read it.
Item
The left column in the result table. It tells you what this row is checking, such as the main anchor, timing, relationship, or chart source.
Result
The middle column in the result table. It gives the calculated answer or current state without making you hunt through long text.
Reading
The right column in the result table. It explains what the result means and why that row matters.
Conclusion
The first judgment on the page. Read it first to get the direction, then use the rows below to check the details.
Result note
Extra context for the conclusion. It explains how to read the result without treating one term as an absolute verdict.
Chart label
A name, number, or position shown in a visual chart. It turns table data into a faster visual check.
Missing-input note
A note that explains why part of the result cannot be completed yet, usually because birth time, gender, or second-person data is missing.
First person
The primary chart in the comparison, usually the first person entered.
Second person
The other chart used for comparison.
First reads second
How the second person's Day Master appears from the first person's Day Master.
Second reads first
How the first person's Day Master appears from the second person's Day Master.
Day Master element interaction
Whether the two Day Master elements are same, generating, generated by, controlling, or controlled.
First day branch
The lower character of the first person's day pillar, often used for close relationship rhythm.
Second day branch
The lower character of the second person's day pillar, used against the first day branch.
Pillar-by-pillar check
A comparison of year to year, month to month, day to day, and hour to hour.
Same-position check
A check between the same pillar positions in two charts.
Full cross-chart relations
All pillar positions compared across both charts to find repeated connections or friction.
Stem relation
How visible stem roles between the two charts connect, repeat, or clash.
Branch relation
How timing and habit branches between the two charts harmonize, clash, harm, or repeat.
Element relation
Whether a matched position supports, drains, controls, or repeats by element.
Combined elements
The element distribution after both charts are combined.
Shared gap
The element still light after the two charts are combined, often a habit or environment both people need to build.
Relationship chart
The visual that places two Day Masters, two day branches, and their element relation in one view.
Second chart required
The page needs two charts before it can compare relationship signals.
Second chart missing
The second person's birth data has not produced a chart yet, so relationship signals are incomplete.
Both Day Masters
The two heavenly stems that represent each person's self-reference.
Both day branches
The two earthly branches under the day pillars, often used for daily closeness and rhythm.

Tool FAQ

Does BaZi compatibility give one final score?

This tool avoids a single fixed score. It shows the main chart signals so attraction, support, tension, and rhythm can be read separately.

Which parts of the two charts matter most?

The tool focuses on Day Master relation, day-branch interaction, element support, and repeated conflict or harmony signals.

Do branch clashes mean a relationship is bad?

No. A clash shows movement or tension. It can be stressful, but it can also create momentum when both people handle it consciously.

Do both people need exact birth times?

Exact times improve the full comparison. If one time is unknown, the hour pillar and some hidden signals are incomplete.