Saju, BaZi, and Suimeigaku all read the same eight characters from the same lunisolar calendar, but the interpretive style is dramatically different in each country. Korean Saju leans into the Sip-sin (Ten Gods) relational reading. Chinese BaZi emphasizes the Useful God (yongshen) and structural patterns. Japanese Suimeigaku focuses on personality archetypes and avoids predictive language. Here is the full comparison so you know which tradition matches your question.
Korean Saju traces back to Tang-dynasty Chinese stem-branch theory, which was imported to the Korean peninsula during the late Silla and Goryeo periods. By the Joseon era (1392-1897), Korea had developed its own academic tradition, called Myeongri-hak, with state-recognized practitioners and astronomical observatories like Gwansanggam responsible for the official calendar.
What makes the Korean lineage distinctive is its emphasis on the Sip-sin or Ten Gods reading system, which converts raw element-on-element relationships into named life themes like Career, Wealth, Resource, and Output. This reading style produces the kind of concrete, decision-useful predictions that Korean clients expect when they pay for a Saju reading.
Your birth date and birth hour, expressed in the lunisolar calendar, generate four pillars. Each pillar has a Heavenly Stem on top and an Earthly Branch on the bottom, for eight characters total. The first pillar (Year) is shared with everyone born in the same Korean lunar-solar year. The second pillar (Month) narrows you down to roughly one twelfth of those. The Day Pillar narrows you down to one of about sixty stem-branch combinations. The Hour Pillar narrows again by twelve.
Because the hour pillar matters, Korean Saju readers always ask for your exact birth time. A chart calculated without the hour is only three quarters complete and the most personal layer is missing.
Every stem and every branch maps to one of the Five Elements: Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, or Water. The way these five appear, dominate, or go missing across your eight characters is the actual content of a Saju reading.
Korean readers count elements, look for clusters and gaps, and identify which element your Day Master needs more of and which it has too much of. Lifestyle remedies (career direction, lucky colors, lucky hours) are tuned to your specific element profile.
Korean Saju survives in the modern era for three structural reasons. First, it is birth-data based, so unlike self-report personality tests it cannot be gamed by trying to be the type you want to be. Second, it is taught in accredited Korean universities as Myeongri-hak, which gives it a legitimacy floor that pure folk traditions do not have. Third, it is built into Korean wedding planning culture, so most Koreans encounter it as a practical decision tool at least once in their lives.
Modern Saju also adapts well to digital delivery. Korean Saju apps now have over twelve million monthly active users, and the average reading takes ninety seconds to compute and three minutes to read.
Korean Saju and Western astrology answer different questions, so direct accuracy comparison is misleading. For career, money, and timing questions, Korean Saju produces more concrete, decision-useful predictions because the Sip-sin system directly labels which characters represent those themes. For emotional and psychological questions, Western astrology has a richer symbolic vocabulary. Most Korean practitioners use both, treating them as complementary.
The two-hour window of your birth determines your Hour Pillar, which represents your children, your late-life destiny, and your hidden talents. A chart without the hour is three quarters complete. If you do not know your hour, you can still get a meaningful reading from the other three pillars, but the most personal layer is missing. Korean birth certificates traditionally record the hour, which is why most Koreans know it.
Your eight characters are fixed for life. What changes is the 10-year Daewoon (Great Luck) overlay and the annual year pillar. So at any given moment your "reading" is the static eight characters plus the current Daewoon plus the current year. As you move through life, the Daewoon shifts every ten years and the year pillar shifts every solar new year (around February 4), producing a constantly updating prediction even though the underlying chart never changes.
Korean Saju is not a falsifiable scientific theory in the Popper sense; it is a 1,400-year-old interpretive tradition. What is empirically defensible is that Korean Saju is internally consistent (the rules are deterministic), culturally stable (the same reading is reproducible across practitioners), and decision-useful (real Korean institutions use it for real decisions). Whether the underlying causal claim is correct is a separate question that Korean Saju, like astrology in any tradition, cannot definitively prove.