Most Jungian archetype tests on the internet are 30-question quizzes.
You answer "do you prefer order or freedom?", click 12 more checkboxes, and the site tells you you're a Magician. Five minutes later you retake it, answer slightly differently, and now you're a Sage. Or a Hero. Whichever character felt cooler in the moment.
This guide walks through exactly how to do that.
TL;DR
- The chart is fixed at birth — the user can't pick the answer they wish were true
- Same chart in, same scores out, every time (deterministic)
- You get all 12 scored, not just one label
- Shadow detection comes for free from the polarity logic
What Are the 12 Jungian Archetypes?
Quick refresher before we get into the math.
| # | Archetype | Also called | Core motivation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hero | Warrior | Prove worth through courage |
| 2 | Caregiver | Healer | Protect and nurture |
| 3 | Explorer | Seeker | Freedom to discover |
| 4 | Rebel | Outlaw | Revolution, breaking rules |
| 5 | Lover | Romantic | Intimacy and connection |
| 6 | Creator | Visionary | Build things of lasting value |
| 7 | Ruler | Sovereign | Control, order, responsibility |
| 8 | Magician | Alchemist | Transformation, hidden laws |
| 9 | Sage | Scholar | Find truth, use intelligence |
| 10 | Jester | Trickster | Joy, play, the present moment |
| 11 | Innocent | Idealist | Trust, optimism, simplicity |
| 12 | Mystic | Seeker | Union with the divine |
Every person has all 12 inside them. The question is which two or three are running the show — and which one is so repressed it shows up as the shadow.
That's where the birth chart comes in.
Why a Birth Chart Beats a Quiz
When you take a quiz, your answers are filtered through:
- How you want to be seen (social desirability bias)
- How you saw yourself last week
- Whether you understood the question the same way the test author meant it
- Whether you've taken this kind of test before and remember the "right" answers
A birth chart skips all of that. It's a snapshot of where the planets were at one specific moment — your birth — and that snapshot doesn't move. You can't will Mars into a different sign. You can't decide your Sun was actually in Leo when it was in Virgo. The data is what it is.
What People Who Know Personality Work Say About Archetypes
Before we get into the math, it's worth pointing out that Jungian archetypes aren't a fringe interest. They're taken seriously by psychologists, leadership thinkers, and HR people who've spent decades watching personality models come and go.
"Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate." — Carl Jung
That's the whole pitch for archetype work in one sentence. Jung's point: the patterns running you don't stop running just because you can't name them. Naming them is the first move.
"There is no coming to consciousness without pain. People will do anything, no matter how absurd, in order to avoid facing their own soul. One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious." — Carl Jung
"The story of the human race is the story of men and women selling themselves short." — Abraham Maslow
Maslow wasn't a Jungian, but his observation lands in the same place: most people live a fraction of what their full archetypal range allows. A profile that surfaces dominant + shadow patterns is, at minimum, a map of the parts you're not using.
"Hire character. Train skill." — Peter Schutz, former CEO of Porsche, widely quoted in HR circles
"Archetypes are the psychic counterpart of instinct." — Carl Jung
Translation: this isn't a personality test you can game. The patterns are wired in. You're just measuring which ones got the loudest signal in your particular configuration.
A note from the author
I'll be honest about where I stand. I'm a skeptic by default. I write code for a living, I trust deterministic systems, and I'm wary of anything that smells like horoscope content for the gullible.
The Core Idea: Archetype Signatures
Every Jungian archetype has a fingerprint — a specific combination of planets, signs and houses that activate it.
- Planets: Sun (vitality, identity), Mars (action, drive, courage)
- Signs: Aries (the warrior sign), Leo (the noble king/queen)
- Houses: 1st house (self, identity), 10th house (public achievement)
- Planets: Venus (love, beauty), Neptune (romance, fantasy)
- Signs: Libra (partnership), Taurus (sensuality)
- Houses: 7th (relationships), 5th (romance)
Different planets, different signs, different houses. The two archetypes barely overlap.
| Archetype | Primary planets | Primary signs | Primary houses |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hero | Sun, Mars | Aries, Leo | 1, 10 |
| Caregiver | Moon, Chiron | Cancer, Virgo | 4, 6 |
| Explorer | Jupiter, Uranus | Sagittarius, Aquarius | 9, 3 |
| Rebel | Uranus, Mars | Aquarius, Aries | 11, 8 |
| Lover | Venus, Neptune | Libra, Taurus | 7, 5 |
| Creator | Venus, Sun | Leo, Libra | 5, 12 |
| Ruler | Saturn, Sun | Capricorn, Scorpio | 10, 1 |
| Magician | Pluto, Mercury | Scorpio, Gemini | 8, 12 |
| Sage | Mercury, Jupiter | Gemini, Sagittarius | 9, 3 |
| Jester | Mercury, Jupiter | Gemini, Sagittarius | 5, 11 |
| Innocent | Venus, Jupiter | Pisces, Taurus | 4, 12 |
| Mystic | Neptune, Pluto | Pisces, Scorpio | 12, 8 |
Two technical footnotes worth knowing:
-
Sage and Jester share their planet and sign signatures — both run on Mercury+Jupiter in Gemini+Sagittarius. The difference lives in the houses: Sage is anchored in 9th (higher learning, philosophy) and 3rd (teaching, study), while Jester is anchored in 5th (play, creative self-expression) and 11th (group fun, irreverent social networks). Same mental firepower, different arena. House placements are what break the tie.
-
Chiron as a primary Caregiver planet is a modern choice. Chiron was only discovered in 1977, so classical astrology doesn't use it — a strict traditionalist would score the Caregiver using Moon + Venus alone. We include Chiron because its "wounded healer" mythology maps onto the Caregiver archetype almost perfectly, and modern archetypal astrology (Tarnas, Casey) uses it the same way. If you're doing this by hand and don't want to calculate Chiron, drop it and add a small Venus bonus — you'll get roughly the same result.
(There are also secondary planets, signs and houses for each archetype — those add weight but count less. Same idea, finer grain.)
Now the actual scoring.
Step 1: Cast the Birth Chart
Before you can score anything, you need the chart. You'll need three things:
- Birth date — to find where the planets were
- Birth time — to find the houses (Ascendant, Midheaven, etc.)
- Birth location — to find the houses correctly for your time zone and latitude
If you don't know your birth time, write down a "noon chart" and treat the result as approximate. If you have it down to the hour, that's good enough for archetype work (unlike, say, electional astrology where you need the minute).
Once you have the chart, you'll have a list of placements like:
1Sun in Leo, House 52Moon in Cancer, House 43Mercury in Virgo, House 64Venus in Libra, House 75Mars in Aries, House 16Jupiter in Sagittarius, House 97...That's your input.
Step 2: Score Each Archetype
For each of the 12 archetypes, walk through every planet in the chart and ask three questions:
- Is this planet in the archetype's primary planet list? → +3 points
- Is this planet's sign in the archetype's primary sign list? → +2 points
- Is this planet's house in the archetype's primary house list? → +2 points
Let's do a worked example with the Hero, using a chart that has:
- Sun in Leo, House 1
- Mars in Aries, House 10
- Jupiter in Sagittarius, House 9
- Venus in Libra, House 7
- Moon in Pisces, House 4
Hero signature: planets Sun + Mars primary, Jupiter secondary; signs Aries + Leo primary, Capricorn + Sagittarius secondary; houses 1 + 10 primary, 5 + 6 secondary.
Walk through:
- Sun in Leo, H1: Sun is primary planet (+3), Leo is primary sign (+2), House 1 is primary house (+2) → +7
- Mars in Aries, H10: Mars primary (+3), Aries primary (+2), H10 primary (+2) → +7
- Jupiter in Sagittarius, H9: Jupiter secondary (+1.5), Sagittarius secondary (+1) → +2.5
- Venus in Libra, H7: nothing matches → 0
- Moon in Pisces, H4: nothing matches → 0
Now do that for all 12 archetypes. You'll end up with 12 raw scores. The Lover scoring on this chart, by contrast, would be much lower — Venus in Libra/H7 contributes (+3 +2 +2 = 7), but that's it. Hero crushes Lover here because Sun, Mars and Jupiter all line up.
Step 3: Add the Bonuses
The basic planet/sign/house score gets you most of the way, but professional implementations add three more layers that meaningfully change the result.
Dignity bonuses
This is the same logic traditional astrology has used for 2,000 years — strong planets matter more. The classical dignity table (rulership, exaltation, detriment, fall) maps onto archetype scoring beautifully.
Aspect bonuses
Squares and oppositions also count, but they tend to add tension rather than amplification — a Sun-Mars square still flags Hero, but with a "this archetype is conflicted" footnote.
Stellium detection
Stellium detection runs across all 12 signs and 12 houses. If one is found that activates an archetype, that archetype gets a significant bonus.
After all three layers — dignity, aspects, stelliums — you have your final raw scores.
Step 4: Normalize to 100%
Raw scores aren't directly useful. One chart might have a Hero score of 16.5; another might have a Hero score of 8. Are both Heroes? You can't compare across users without normalizing.
The fix is dead simple:
1total = sum of all 12 raw scores2for each archetype:3 normalized = (raw_score / total) * 100Real profiles tend to look like this:
1Hero: 18.4% ← dominant2Magician: 14.2% ← second3Sage: 12.7% ← third4Ruler: 9.8%5Explorer: 9.1%6Creator: 8.5%7Lover: 7.3%8Caregiver: 6.1%9Rebel: 5.8%10Jester: 4.2%11Innocent: 2.5%12Mystic: 1.4%13─────────────────14Total: 100.0%Step 5: Find the Shadow Archetype
Here's where it gets interesting.
In Pearson's 12-archetype framework, every archetype has a polar opposite:
| Dominant | Shadow |
|---|---|
| Hero | Caregiver |
| Caregiver | Hero |
| Explorer | Lover |
| Lover | Explorer |
| Rebel | Ruler |
| Ruler | Rebel |
| Magician | Innocent |
| Innocent | Magician |
| Sage | Jester |
| Jester | Sage |
| Creator | Mystic |
| Mystic | Creator |
The polarity logic comes from depth psychology: the archetype that sits opposite your dominant pattern is the one most likely to be repressed.
You can do this for any dominant. Sage needs to remember play and the present moment (Jester). Lover needs to recover independence and the open road (Explorer). Magician needs to recover lost trust and simplicity (Innocent). Creator needs to surrender to what already is (Mystic). Etc.
This is real Jungian individuation work, encoded in a deterministic algorithm.
Worked Example: A Real Chart
Let me run a complete profile on a sample chart so you can see what the output looks like.
- Sun in Pisces, H10
- Moon in Capricorn, H8
- Mercury in Pisces, H10
- Venus in Aquarius, H9
- Mars in Capricorn, H8
- Jupiter in Leo, H3
- Saturn in Capricorn, H8
- Uranus in Capricorn, H8
- Neptune in Capricorn, H8
- Pluto in Scorpio, H6
After running the scoring engine — planet/sign/house weights, dignity bonuses for Saturn-in-Capricorn (rulership) and Sun-in-Pisces, aspect bonuses for the Capricorn cluster, plus the stellium detection — you get:
1Magician: 17.8% ← dominant (Pluto in Scorpio + Capricorn 8H stellium)2Ruler: 15.2% ← second (Saturn in domicile + 10H emphasis)3Mystic: 13.4% ← third (Pisces Sun + Mercury, Neptune in 8H)4Sage: 11.1%5Hero: 9.3%6Caregiver: 8.7%7Creator: 7.2%8Explorer: 6.5%9Lover: 5.4%10Rebel: 3.1%11Jester: 1.6%12Innocent: 0.7%13─────────────14Total: 100.0%That's a real Jungian profile, derived deterministically from the chart, with no quiz questions involved.
Doing This Yourself vs Using an API
The planet/sign/house weights for each of the 12 archetypes took us 7 rounds of astrologer review and formal overlap analysis to settle. We had to make sure no two archetypes could dominate the same chart by accident, that the primary planet pairs were unique, that secondary signs weren't overloaded. The final table is small (one row per archetype) but the calibration behind it took months.
If you're doing this for one chart — your own — by hand is fine. Print out the signature table, walk through each placement, sum the scores, normalize.
The math is the same as what we walked through above. The difference is you don't have to maintain the signature tables yourself, and you get the dignity/aspect/stellium bonuses out of the box.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Treating archetypes as fixed identity labels
You're not "a Hero." You're "Hero-dominant right now, with a strong Magician second and a repressed Caregiver shadow." Archetypes are patterns you express in different proportions, not boxes to be put in. Even your top archetype is ~18-20% of the total, not 100%.
Mistake 2: Ignoring the secondary scores
Mistake 3: Skipping the shadow
The shadow is the most psychologically valuable part of the profile. It tells you exactly where the growth work is. Don't just glance at it — sit with it. The archetype scoring 1-3% in your chart is the one Jung would have spent the most time on in a session.
Mistake 4: Using a no-time chart and pretending it's accurate
Without birth time you lose all house placements, which is roughly 40% of the signal. The result is still meaningful but not authoritative. Be honest about the confidence level.
Mistake 5: Re-running the test hoping for a different answer
How This Compares to MBTI and Big 5
People often ask why bother with archetypes when MBTI and Big Five already exist.
And when the archetype profile is generated from a birth chart instead of a self-report quiz, you get the best of both worlds: the emotional richness of mythological language and the reliability of fixed astronomical data.
FAQ
Building This Yourself? Use the API
1{2 "scores": {3 "hero": 18.4, "magician": 14.2, "sage": 12.7,4 "ruler": 9.8, "explorer": 9.1, "creator": 8.5,5 "lover": 7.3, "caregiver": 6.1, "rebel": 5.8,6 "jester": 4.2, "innocent": 2.5, "mystic": 1.47 },8 "dominant_archetypes": [9 { "archetype": "hero", "score": 18.4, "label": "Warrior",10 "motto": "Where there's a will, there's a way",11 "interpretation": "..." }12 ],13 "shadow_archetype": {14 "archetype": "caregiver", "score": 6.1,15 "interpretation": "The Caregiver lives partly in shadow..."16 }17}Related Reading
If you found this useful, you might also like:
- How accurate is your birth chart, really? — why birth time matters for any depth-psychology work
- Personality API: 50+ traits from a birth chart — broader character analysis beyond archetypes
- Karmic Astrology API — soul-level patterns and lessons (pairs well with shadow work)
- Synastry API — for archetype-pair compatibility analysis between two people
- AI-powered astrology — how machine learning is changing chart interpretation
The 12 Jungian archetypes are the most psychologically grounded personality framework anyone's built. The birth chart is the most reliable input data anyone's got. Put them together and you get a profile that survives a bad mood, a good mood, and 30 years of self-deception.
That's the version worth calculating.



