Saju and Western astrology answer similar questions (who am I, what is my career path, who am I compatible with) using completely different machinery. Western astrology uses planets in zodiac signs. Saju uses stem-branch pairs in pillars. This guide is the complete side-by-side comparison: history, machinery, accuracy, and which one to use when.
Western astrology and Korean Saju both attempt to answer the same set of human questions: who am I, what is my purpose, who am I compatible with, how should I time major decisions. But the underlying machinery the two systems use is completely different.
Western astrology uses planets (Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, plus asteroids and nodes) moving through twelve zodiac signs across twelve houses. The output is a circular chart with planets distributed around it. Korean Saju uses ten heavenly stems and twelve earthly branches arranged in four vertical pillars. The output is an 8-character matrix.
Western sun-sign astrology divides humanity into 12 categories. Full Western natal astrology produces effectively unique charts (because planet positions to the minute are unique), but the major-feature granularity is in the dozens of pattern categories.
Korean Saju produces 518,400 distinct eight-character combinations (60 year pillars times 12 month pillars times 60 day pillars times 12 hour pillars), filtered by which are actually generable from a real birth date. The structural granularity is comparable to a full Western natal chart, but the data is more accessible because birth time precision matters less in Saju (two-hour windows vs minutes).
Both systems are only as good as their input data. Western astrology requires exact birth time to the minute for the house cusps and rising sign. Korean Saju requires birth hour to the two-hour window, which is much easier for ordinary people to provide. Many Westerners do not know their exact birth time. Most Koreans do, because Korean birth certificates record the hour and the tradition expects it.
This is one practical reason Korean Saju produces more usable readings on the typical person than Western astrology does: the input precision is more achievable.
If you have an emotional, psychological, or relationship question and you want a rich symbolic vocabulary, Western astrology is excellent. The planet-archetype language is well-developed and the reading style is more therapeutic.
If you have a career, money, marriage-timing, or business-decision question and you want a concrete structural read, Korean Saju is stronger. The Sip-sin system directly labels which characters represent Career, Wealth, and Authority, and the Daewoon system gives you decade-level timing predictions that Western astrology only loosely matches.
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.