Synastry and composite charts are two distinct astrological methods for analyzing relationships. Synastry overlays two natal charts to reveal how two people interact, while a composite chart creates a single merged chart representing the relationship itself. Each technique answers different questions about partnership dynamics.
Relationship astrology — the study of how two charts interact — is one of the most sought-after applications of predictive and natal astrology. Whether you are exploring a romantic partnership, a business collaboration, or a family dynamic, understanding the astrological chemistry between two people provides a framework for navigating the relationship's strengths, friction points, and growth potential.
Synastry and composite charts both serve this goal, but they approach it from fundamentally different angles. Synastry preserves each individual's chart and examines the cross-connections. The composite chart dissolves both individual charts into a single entity. Using both techniques together gives you the most complete picture — one shows how the two people experience each other, while the other shows the character of the relationship as a third entity.
Synastry is the technique of placing one person's natal planets around the outside of the other person's natal chart (a "bi-wheel") and examining the aspects that form between them. When Person A's Venus lands on Person B's Ascendant, for example, there is a natural attraction and ease in how they perceive each other. When Person A's Saturn squares Person B's Moon, there may be emotional friction, a sense of restriction, or a dynamic where one person feels controlled or criticised by the other.
The power of synastry lies in its specificity. It tells you exactly which planets in each person's chart are activated by the other person, and what kinds of interactions result. Key synastry factors include:
Synastry is inherently asymmetric. Person A's experience of Person B is described by B's planets falling in A's houses and aspecting A's natal planets. Person B's experience of Person A is described by the reverse. This means that two people in the same relationship can have quite different subjective experiences of it — a fact that synastry captures elegantly and that the composite chart, by design, does not.
A composite chart is created by finding the midpoint of each pair of corresponding planets in the two natal charts. The composite Sun is the midpoint of both natal Suns. The composite Moon is the midpoint of both natal Moons. The same midpoint calculation is applied to every planet and the Ascendant, producing a single chart that represents the relationship as an entity in its own right.
The composite chart does not belong to either individual. It describes the "third thing" that comes into existence when two people form a connection. It has its own Ascendant (the style and identity of the relationship), its own Moon (the emotional needs of the relationship), its own house placements (the areas of life where the relationship is most active), and its own aspects (the internal dynamics between the relationship's different needs).
A composite chart with the Sun in the ninth house, for example, suggests a relationship oriented around shared beliefs, travel, education, and philosophical exploration. A composite Moon in the fourth house indicates that the relationship's emotional core revolves around home, family, and creating a sense of domestic security together. Challenging composite aspects — such as a composite Sun square composite Saturn — indicate structural tensions within the relationship that both people must navigate as a unit.
The composite chart is particularly useful for understanding the purpose and direction of a relationship. Pioneering astrologer Robert Hand, in his influential work on composite charts, emphasised that the composite reveals what a relationship is about at its deepest level — its essential nature and reason for being.
Understanding when to use each technique starts with recognising what each one reveals and where it falls short.
In practice, most astrologers use both techniques and choose their emphasis based on the question being asked.
Use synastry when:
Use the composite chart when:
For the most thorough relationship analysis, run both. Start with synastry to understand the interpersonal dynamics, then move to the composite to understand the relationship's deeper nature and trajectory.
PathFinder computes both synastry and composite charts from two sets of birth data. The synastry analysis identifies all cross-aspects between the two charts, highlights the most significant contacts, and explains how each person is likely to experience the other. The composite chart is calculated using precise midpoint computation and presented with full house placements, aspects, and interpretation.
PathFinder's AI interpretation layer goes beyond listing aspects. It synthesises the synastry and composite data into a coherent relationship narrative, identifying the core themes, potential growth areas, and friction points. For predictive work, PathFinder can overlay current transits onto the composite chart to identify periods of relationship intensification, challenge, or opportunity.
The integration with PathFinder's broader predictive framework means you can also see how each individual's progressions and solar returns are activating relationship themes — providing a multi-layered view of how the partnership is evolving over time.
Whether you are new to relationship astrology or refining your practice, these guidelines will help you get the most from synastry and composite analysis.
Relationship astrology is ultimately a tool for understanding, not judgment. The most valuable insight it offers is not whether a relationship is "good" or "bad" but what the specific dynamics are and how both people can work with them consciously.