Celestial Return Calculator

Pick any date, your birthday, an anniversary, or a moment in history, and see exactly where the Sun, Moon and planets sat in the zodiac that day. Then find when each one circles back to the same spot, from the Sun's yearly return to Saturn's, which comes around only about every twenty-nine and a half years.

Choose a date

Anything from 1700 to 2200. Everything is worked out live in your browser.

Where everything was

BodyIn the zodiac

When it comes back around

BodyReturns everyNext returnTimes back since

A return is the moment a body reaches the same point in the zodiac it held on your chosen date. Next return is the next one after today; times back since counts how many returns have already happened between your date and today. Mercury and Venus stay close to the Sun, so they pass their old spot about once a year.

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What a return is

Every body in the sky is on a loop. Watched from Earth, the Sun, Moon and planets each travel all the way around the ring of the zodiac and come back to where they started. A return is the moment a body arrives back at the exact point it occupied on a date you care about. The most familiar one is the Sun's: it returns to the same place once a year, which is why a birthday is really a small astronomical anniversary, a solar return.

Each body keeps its own pace. The Moon laps the zodiac in about 27.3 days, so it returns to a given spot almost every month. Mars comes back about every 1.9 years, Jupiter about every 12, and Saturn about every 29.5. The two outermost giants are slower still, and the Moon's orbital node drifts backward all the way around in about 18.6 years. This calculator finds the next of each and counts how many have already gone by.

The returns worth knowing

A handful of these returns line up neatly with a human life. The Jupiter return arrives about every twelve years, so most people pass one near ages 12, 24, 36, 48 and on. The Saturn return, near every 29.5 years, tends to fall around ages 29 or 30, then 59, then 88. A Uranus return, at about 84 years, comes only once in a long lifetime. The Moon's node returns roughly every 18.6 years, the same rhythm that paces the eclipse seasons and lunar standstills. Pluto, at about 248 years, never returns within a single lifetime at all.

Is this astrology?

No. This is positional astronomy, the same kind that drives the rest of the site. The tool reports only where the bodies actually were and the real dates they come back, and it makes no claim about character, fortune, or events. Words like solar return and Saturn return are used here strictly for their astronomy: the moment a body is back at the same place in the sky.

How this tool works

Positions come from the open-source Astronomy Engine, running entirely in your browser, so no two visitors ever see a stale answer. The zodiac positions are the tropical ecliptic longitude of date, with 0° at the spring equinox, the same convention used across CycleCalcs. To find a return, the tool tracks each body's longitude forward and pins down the moment it crosses the starting point again, refined to within a minute, then skips the brief back-and-forth of a retrograde loop so each return counts once. The model is accurate to well under a degree and reliable for roughly the years 1700 to 2200.