Tiger
虎Chinese zodiac · 生肖
The Tiger (虎) — the popular zodiac label for the Earthly Branch Yín (寅), Wood in element.
The Tiger (虎) is the popular Chinese-zodiac (生肖) animal that corresponds to the Earthly Branch Yín (寅). Most people find their animal by birth year — recent Tiger years include 1950, 1962, 1974, 1986, 1998, 2010, 2022 — which is why the zodiac is the friendly, everyday entry point into Chinese astrology.
But the animal is the popular label, not the technical unit. What a Bazi (八字) chart actually reads is the branch Yín (寅) — its element (Wood), its hidden stems, and how it interacts with the other branches. The Tiger is one familiar face of that branch; the traits below are a long cultural tradition, not a fixed rule about anyone born in its year.
- Earthly Branch
- Yín (寅)
- Element
- Wood
- Polarity
- Yang (陽)
- Recent years
- 1998, 2010, 2022…
Popular traits
The popular tradition associates the Tiger with being bold, confident, and driven — a natural initiator with appetite for risk and a dislike of being hemmed in. These are cultural characterisations passed down in almanacs and folklore — a shared vocabulary people enjoy, not a deterministic personality test. Read them as a starting point for curiosity, not a verdict: plenty of people born in a Tiger year recognise little of this, because a whole chart (and a whole life) is far larger than one year-branch.
Compatibility & relationships
The zodiac's compatibility lore is really the relationships between Earthly Branches, told through the animals. The Tiger sits in a three-harmony trinity (三合) with the Horse and the Dog — branches that reinforce each other. Its six-harmony (六合) partner is the Pig (六合), a pairing said to combine smoothly. Its clash (六沖) is the Monkey — the branch directly opposite, a high-tension axis. These describe structural relationships between positions, not promises about specific people.
Birth years
Recent Tiger years (Gregorian): 1950, 1962, 1974, 1986, 1998, 2010, 2022, repeating every 12 years. One important caveat: the zodiac year turns at the start of the Chinese lunar year (late January to mid-February), not on 1 January — so anyone born in January or early February near a year boundary may actually belong to the previous animal. The only reliable way to know your true year-branch is to compute the chart, which uses the exact solar terms.
Across systems
| System | Maps to | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Earthly Branch (地支) | The branch Yín (寅) — the technical unit behind the animal | The Tiger is the popular face of the branch Yín (寅). The branch — its Wood element, hidden stems, season, and interactions — is what a Bazi chart actually reads. Same position, two registers: the animal is the folk label, the branch is the working part. |
| BaZi (八字 / Four Pillars) | Only your YEAR branch — one of four | In a full Bazi chart the Tiger is just the YEAR pillar's branch. The chart has four branches (year, month, day, hour) and four stems; your day stem (日主) is the real reference point for the self. The zodiac animal is roughly one-eighth of the picture — a popular slice, not the whole reading. |
| Western astrology | A loose parallel only — both are 12-fold, birth-based popular systems | There is no sign-to-animal mapping: the Chinese zodiac runs on a 12-year cycle, Western sun-signs on a 12-month one. The only real parallel is the shared idea of a twelvefold, birth-based popular framework — not a translation between them. |
Your birth-year animal — the Tiger (虎) — is the popular entry point into a much larger system, not a fixed personality and not a destiny. The traditional traits are cultural associations, never predictions, and the same animal plays out completely differently across different people and full charts. For what your chart actually says, read the Earthly Branch Yín (寅) and compute your full four-pillar chart.