Every generation has astrological transits that sets each apart.

In astrology, the outer planets—Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto—are considered generational influences. This is because they move slowly through the zodiac, spending extended periods in each sign (roughly 7 years for Uranus, 13 years for Neptune, and 14–30 years for Pluto). As a result, they tend to shape the collective values and themes shared by entire age groups rather than just individuals, Unlike the personal planets.

Uranus reflects how society pushes for change and challenges the norm, Neptune relates to our collective dreams, ideals, and longings, and Pluto represents deep transformation and evolution. For example, Uranus in Libra reshaped relationship dynamics and contributed to a rise in divorce, while Uranus in Pisces influences how a generation approaches spirituality and inner meaning.

Even though these planets move in different signs during each generation, they can help cultivate and find the energy relevant to the timeline. For instance, the Baby Boomers were the generation in which Neptune was in Libra, making them the ones who were the first “hippies” and lovers of all beings, while Millennials focused on radically altering the work model.

The main determination for the generation is Pluto and this are our official years down below.

What is Pluto and How Does It Affect People?



In astrology, Pluto is known as the planet of deep transformation. It represents the parts of life that aren’t always easy to face—power, control, endings, and rebirth—but ultimately lead to growth. Rather than bringing quick or surface-level changes, Pluto works beneath the surface, slowly reshaping things over time.

On a personal level, Pluto shows where you’re likely to go through intense experiences that push you to evolve. It highlights areas of life where you may need to let go of the past, confront hidden truths, and rebuild yourself stronger than before. While this energy can feel heavy or confronting, it’s ultimately about empowerment and long-term growth.

On a larger scale, Pluto is a generational planet. Because it moves so slowly through each zodiac sign, it influences entire generations of people, giving them shared themes, challenges, traits and perspectives. These generations often play a role in major societal shifts, with Pluto’s placement reflecting periods of transformation in culture, power structures, and global events. In this way, Pluto doesn’t just shape individuals—it helps define the evolution of society as a whole.


So What generation am i in according to astrology?


According to Wikipedia Millennials start as early as 1981 and can end as early as the early-2000s with the most common range being accepted as 1981-1996 |
where Gen Z as a few ranges from 1995-2009 being the second most popular range to 1997-2012 being the most accepted range for this cohort, Yet these ranges are completely wrong, There's a huge gap between 1981 babies that are just ending the Pluto in Libra energy which is Late Gen X energy to 1995 babies that are ending Pluto in scorpion energy and either have tail end uranus in capricorn or early degree Uranus in Aquarius and entering the Pluto in sag era, Not to mention 1995 babies grew up almost entirely in the 2000s how do they have anything in common with people born in the 1980s that clearly remember the 90s?

While its true astrologically speaking 1995 is a cusp year also known as Zillenials its section of a generation also has very different Uranus and Neptune signs also Shaping their position in a generation which we speak about part 2 of this information page.

Now we give our own patterns and evidence and patterns that accurately happened to show you the data and patterns available that astrology is accurate to determine the generations.
Yes there are cusp years due to retrogrades people born in transitional retrograde years belong to both generations as one energy is ending and the other is starting especially since Pluto is a transformational planet, While you can only have your pluto in one or the other you are affected by both if you are a late degree and early degree Pluto.


LETS DEFINE THE GENERATIONS ASTROLOGICALLY



Silent Generation — Pluto in Cancer (1914–1939)


Cancer rules: home, family, roots, the mother, emotional security, the nation

This generation was born into one of the most destabilising periods in modern history. Pluto in Cancer tore apart the very concept of home and homeland. The Great War (WWI) shattered European borders and displaced millions. The Great Depression (1929) obliterated domestic financial security, families lost homes, farms, and savings overnight. The Dust Bowl literally destroyed the land, forcing mass migration from the American heartland. Then WWII threatened the existence of entire nations and peoples, culminating in the Holocaust, the most extreme expression of Pluto-Cancer's dark side: using the concept of homeland and bloodline as a weapon of mass destruction.

The personality: The Silent Generation are deeply private, emotionally restrained, and security-obsessed. Having lived through literal scarcity, they equate stability with survival. They don't talk about feelings — they provide. They are loyal, self-sacrificing, dutiful, and deeply attached to family structure. They were called "silent" because they kept their heads down, conformed, and endured. Pluto in Cancer gave them iron emotional armour forged in genuine catastrophe.

Baby Boomers — Pluto in Leo (1937–1958)


Leo rules: the self, ego, creativity, performance, royalty, the individual, the spotlight
Pluto in Leo exploded the individual onto the world stage. Post-WWII, America and the West entered an unprecedented economic boom — the individual could thrive, not just survive. The 1950s brought suburban prosperity, the rise of the nuclear family as an aspirational ideal, and the birth of consumer culture. Then Pluto's destructive side arrived: the assassination of JFK (1963, as early Boomers came of age), Malcolm X, MLK — the killing of leaders who embodied collective Leo ideals of heroism and vision. The Civil Rights Movement was Pluto-Leo demanding that every individual be granted dignity. The 1960s counterculture, rock and roll, Woodstock, free love — all quintessential Leo self-expression taken to its Plutonic extreme. The Vietnam War forced a generation to question authority and assert personal identity against the state.

The personality: Boomers are the most self-defined generation in history. They genuinely believe the individual can change the world, because they watched it happen. They are competitive, expressive, optimistic, and often perceived as self-centred. They came of age when they were the story, and many never fully relinquished the spotlight. They reinvented youth culture and expected permanence in that reinvention. Pluto in Leo gave them an enormous sense of personal significance for better and worse.


Early Gen X — Pluto in Virgo (1957–1971)


Virgo rules: work, systems, health, analysis, criticism, efficiency, the body, service
Pluto in Virgo dismantled the systems that hold daily life together. The systems of health collapsed first: the rise of chronic illness, environmental pollution, pesticide crisis (Rachel Carson's Silent Spring was published in 1962), and the beginning of the AIDS crisis emerging in the late 1970s and devastating the early 1980s. Industrial and labour systems fractured, deindustrialisation began gutting working-class communities.

The Vietnam War exposed the brutal machinery of government and military systems. Watergate shattered trust in political institutions. The women's movement (Virgo = service and labour) transformed who was expected to work and how. The oil crisis of 1973 attacked the logistical systems of everyday life.
The personality: Early Gen X are analytical, self-reliant, deeply sceptical of institutions, and quietly industrious.

They watched every major system fail or lie and concluded that you can only depend on yourself. They are pragmatic problem-solvers with a dark sense of humour, Virgo's wit turned into cynicism by Pluto. They were the original latchkey kids, raising themselves while mothers entered the workforce en masse. They don't perform optimism; they just get things done. Pluto in Virgo made them the most quietly competent generation alive.


Late Gen X — Pluto in Libra (1971–1984)

Libra rules: relationships, marriage, law, justice, balance, partnership, diplomacy, aesthetics

Pluto in Libra obliterated the institution of marriage and partnership as it had previously existed. The divorce rate in the United States doubled between 1960 and 1980, peaking precisely during this Pluto transit since Libra rules Partnerships and marriage and Pluto needs to transform the sign its in.

No-fault divorce laws swept across Western nations, fundamentally changing the legal definition of partnership. Late Gen X are the original children of divorce many grew up in broken homes, with step-parents, divided loyalties, and the lived experience of adult relationships failing. Internationally, Pluto in Libra presided over a pivotal era of geopolitical negotiation: détente, the Camp David Accords, the fall of Saigon. Apartheid was challenged. The Cold War's arms race forced uneasy balance. Roe v. Wade (1973) redefined bodily autonomy in legal terms, Libra's domain of law turned on the most intimate human question.

The personality: Late Gen X crave fairness and balance but are deeply disillusioned about whether it actually exists. They are independent, aesthetically conscious, socially aware, and reluctant to commit to anything that might collapse the way their parents' marriages did. They tend to be excellent mediators having spent childhood brokering peace between warring adults. They are culturally fluid, having grown up in the MTV era where aesthetics and cool were currency. Pluto in Libra made them hyper-aware of injustice and deeply ambivalent about relationships.



Millennials — Pluto in Scorpio (1983–1995)


Scorpio rules: death, sex, power, transformation, the occult, shared resources, debt, psychological depth, taboo
Pluto in Scorpio is the most intensely matched placement — Pluto rules Scorpio, meaning this transit was operating at maximum power. Every Scorpionic taboo was ripped open and forced into public consciousness. AIDS became a global epidemic — sex now literally carried death, the most Scorpionic equation imaginable. The crack cocaine epidemic devastated urban communities, bringing addiction and its shadow economies to the surface. The Cold War ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union — the ultimate Plutonian power restructure, entire empires dissolving overnight. The Satanic Panic reflected society's hysterical confrontation with hidden, dark forces. Child abuse, incest, and sexual trauma entered public discourse for the first time with real legal consequence. The stock market crash of 1987 and the S&L crisis exposed the corrupt underbelly of shared financial systems. Serial killers entered pop culture. Chernobyl contaminated the earth itself.
The personality: Millennials are the most psychologically aware generation ever produced. They grew up with death, addiction, and power abuse as the ambient backdrop — and they processed all of it. They are emotionally intelligent, therapy-fluent, obsessed with authenticity, and deeply attuned to power dynamics and manipulation. They are also burdened — by student debt (Scorpio's shared resource trap), by housing unaffordability, by the psychological weight of having come of age during 9/11 and the 2008 financial crisis. They don't trust easy surfaces. Pluto in Scorpio made them extraordinarily perceptive and extraordinarily exhausted.


Generation Z — Pluto in Sagittarius (1995–2008)


Sagittarius rules: travel, foreign lands, philosophy, religion, higher education, freedom, expansion, the horizon, truth-seeking, the internet as a boundless frontier

This is where your two key events land with extraordinary precision.
The Internet and Internet Explorer Netscape launched in 1994, Internet Explorer in 1995, the exact moment Pluto entered Sagittarius. The World Wide Web was the ultimate Sagittarian frontier, a boundless, borderless space where you could travel anywhere without a passport, access any knowledge, explore any idea, and encounter any culture. Pluto exploded this open, the internet didn't grow slowly, it detonated. Gen Z were born into a world where the entire globe was already theoretically accessible from a screen. Sagittarius rules the expansion of the known world, and the internet was the most radical geographical expansion in human history. No ocean to cross, no visa required.


September 11, 2001 — Pluto in Sagittarius, and the most traumatic attack on physical travel in modern history. Sagittarius rules airports, international flight, and the freedom to move across borders and 9/11 used commercial aircraft as weapons, transforming air travel permanently. The TSA was created. Shoes came off at security. Liquids were measured. The border became a site of surveillance and suspicion. Foreign = potentially dangerous. The very axis of Sagittarian freedom — the open sky, the international journey was weaponised and then fortified against itself. Simultaneously, the War on Terror was sold as a philosophical and religious conflict (Sagittarius rules both religion and philosophy), framing the entire era as a clash of belief systems and worldviews.
Gen Z therefore grew up with a profound paradox: infinite virtual travel, radically restricted physical travel.

The horizon was both wider than ever (any YouTube video, any Instagram feed, any foreign voice was one click away) and more surveilled, more anxious, more politically fraught than it had been in decades.

The personality: Gen Z are global in mindset but deeply anxious. They are the most informed generation in history and simultaneously the most overwhelmed. They absorbed the post-9/11 world as children airports are stressful, the news is terrifying, institutions lie and the internet gave them both the tools to research everything and the burden of knowing too much too young. They are idealistic in the Sagittarian tradition but post-ironic, They are entrepreneurial, freedom-seeking, and deeply mistrustful, They cancel what they perceive as false authority. They are also the generation most likely to have anxiety disorders Pluto in Sagittarius gave them the whole world and then told them it was on fire.


Generation Alpha — Pluto in Capricorn (2008–2024)


Capricorn rules: institutions, government, corporations, authority, structure, discipline, legacy, the long arc of time, hierarchy

Pluto entered Capricorn in 2008 — the year of the global financial crisis which is pure evidence on its own as Capricorn rules finance and money. The entire architecture of institutional capitalism cracked. Banks considered "too big to fail" were failing. Governments bailed out corporations while ordinary people lost homes.

The legitimacy of every major Capricornian structure, banks, governments, corporations, churches was shredded throughout this transit. The #MeToo movement toppled powerful men from institutional heights. Brexit destabilised a major political structure then COVID-19 (2020) brought governments to their knees and exposed the brittleness of global supply chains, healthcare infrastructure, and economic systems that had been assumed permanent. Pluto in Capricorn ended with the literal collapse of old-guard political certainties across the Western world.

The personality (still forming): Generation Alpha are being forged in an era of institutional collapse and reconstruction. They have never known a world where the old authorities were unquestioned their entire childhood has been watching structures fail and be challenged. They are likely to be pragmatic builders,
Capricorn always rebuilds but with no illusions about the permanence of systems. Growing up through a pandemic as young children will have left a deep imprint around safety, isolation, and the fragility of normalcy. They are the most digitally native generation yet, having had screens before they had full sentences.
Early indicators suggest they are surprisingly entrepreneurial, resilient, and old-souled, classic Capricorn, aged by circumstances.


Generation Beta — Pluto in Aquarius (2024–2043)


Aquarius rules: technology, collective humanity, revolution, networks, the future, individuality within the group, humanitarian ideals, artificial intelligence, electricity, the internet of consciousness

Pluto entered Aquarius in 2024 and the timing is unmistakable. AI became publicly transformative in 2022–2023 and is restructuring every field of human endeavour precisely as Pluto crosses this transit. Generation Beta will be the first generation born into a world where artificial intelligence is simply part of the environment as unremarkable as electricity, and as revolutionary. Aquarius rules networks, collectives, and the dissolution of the individual into something larger and AI represents exactly this: human intelligence abstracted, pooled, and redistributed at scale.

Pluto in Aquarius will also likely bring radical upheaval to governance structures (Aquarius rules the collective social contract), technological revolution that destabilises existing power (think: the printing press, the French Revolution, electricity, all Aquarian disruptions), and a complete renegotiation of what it means to be a human individual within a networked, AI-assisted civilisation.

The personality (entirely to be determined): We can predict astrologically, Generation Beta will embody the Plutonian transformation of Aquarius,
they will be collectively-minded but fiercely individual, technologically telepathic, idealistic about humanity's potential, and deeply suspicious of anything that smells like top-down control. They may be the generation that either achieves genuine global cooperation or fragments into radical decentralisation. They will likely find the concept of "privacy" as their parents understood it alien — and may have rebuilt something entirely new in its place. They will inherit either the ruins or the renaissance of the AI revolution. Either way, they will transform it.

The through-line across all generations is Pluto's method: it does not change things gently. It removes what is false, decays what has outlived its purpose, and forces what is hidden into the open leaving each generation to build identity from the wreckage and the revelation.