The transits of the planets

Transits of Pluto



Transits to the Moon

With Pluto transiting the natal Moon we see the meeting of two planetary energies that are as far apart as possible. Pluto’s force is the most transcendental of all those used in astrology, whereas the Moon is the most intensely personal. Because the Moon moves so quickly, two people born only a few hours apart will have markedly different lunar configurations. The Moon refers to aspects of being that function on a level prior to, and metaphorically lower than, those of any other planet. It symbolizes the living energies and activities that operate beneath conscious awareness, connecting us to the biosphere as firmly as a plant’s roots connect it to the soil. The Moon’s manifestations therefore vary enormously from one individual to another; what we register consciously are merely the effects of this energy, not the energy itself.

Where the Moon is deeply personal, Pluto’s energy is remote, transpersonal and transcendent. It works almost entirely beyond ordinary awareness and represents vast, slowly changing forces that seem to lie outside the control of individuals and even of humanity as a whole. The sliding of tectonic plates, for example, builds pressure until an earthquake releases it. Pluto is also linked with what we call historical forces. While these forces arise partly from collective human activity, historians now recognize that climate shifts, proximity to seas or deserts, and the movement of pathogens and species across the globe all play decisive roles. These factors, to name only a few, have little to do with human intention.

Combining these two energies can be difficult. On the emotional level – the realm of the Moon – Plutonian force can trigger feelings that are excessive or even obsessive. Lunar energy, which is meant to foster love, nurture and support, may under Pluto’s influence turn toward control, jealousy, possessiveness or anger. Sometimes the combination signals profound internal forces that propel a person from one stage of growth to another. This need not be pathological; within normal development Pluto can mark turning points. When things do turn pathological, however, the period of transit can bring emotional breakdowns and disruptions to the support systems on which one usually relies. If the individual is given wise guidance and true support, even the most challenging Pluto – Moon transit can lead to a life of far greater richness than seemed possible when the process began.

Transits to Mercury

Mercury governs every form of conveying information and knowledge. It takes the essence of a message and converts it from one medium to another: we translate thought into words to speak, or into symbols to write. Movement is therefore implicit in Mercury’s symbolism, whether of ideas or of objects, usually over relatively short distances.

Pluto, by contrast, is associated with slow, inevitable transformation. A Plutonian process tends to unfold unnoticed and becomes problematic only when it is blocked. A sudden flash of insight is not Plutonian; a long-term overhaul of one’s entire way of thinking is. A useful key phrase for Pluto transits to Mercury is change of mind. Although Mercury is fundamentally concerned with transmitting knowledge and information, it is not always involved with content; its priority is accurate conveyance. Yet content often enters the picture, because poorly organized ideas are hard to transmit. Mercury also has qualities that do not stem directly from its messenger role. For instance, it rules young people, typically adolescents through about age thirty. When Pluto transits Mercury, a transformative encounter with a younger person may play a pivotal role in one’s life.

Transits to Venus

Pluto is a transcendental planet, linked to powers that transcend not only individuals but also nations and cultures. Venus is classed as personal even though it rules relationships, because those relationships are usually individual and intimate. Yet Venus also has a transcendental, impersonal facet: love and creativity. Pluto combines more easily with this second facet than with the first, as the delineations below will show. First, however, it is useful to outline the two general modes of Pluto – Venus interaction.

Pluto’s transformative force can easily overwhelm Venus’s simple desire for affection and companionship. The everyday way we handle Venusian matters is bound up with ego and personality – limited subsets of our whole being. When this first mode of Venusian energy mixes with Pluto, ego issues intrude. Throughout this material the reader is reminded that Pluto does not readily submit to ego demands. One manifestation is that love and sexuality, together or separately, become entangled with a craving for power and control: jealousy, possessiveness or emotional blackmail arise. A less common but more uplifting manifestation is a love so intense that it utterly transforms the people involved. Such relationships, however, often burn out; the intensity is hard to sustain, and lasting partnerships rarely maintain that level of power.

In the arts Pluto can blend more gracefully with Venus. Creative work allows the artist to channel Pluto’s transcendental force through Venus rather than through personal ego. Creation transforms the creator, and in turn transforms everyone who encounters the work. This is as true of popular music with a driving beat as it is of classical forms: the means are Venusian, the impact Plutonian.

Transits to the Sun

This is an exceptionally powerful combination. The Sun represents the fundamental energy of the solar system and, in human beings, the life force itself. Uniquely, it functions comfortably at all three levels. Personally, it supplies basic psychological and physical vitality, though the ego often co-opts it. Interpersonally, it signifies rulership – kings, presidents, governments. Transcendentally, it stands for consciousness itself, both psychological and spiritual. Many cultures have worshipped the Sun as a god, and early Christianity adopted much of that symbolism – halos, Christmas at the winter solstice, Sunday as the sacred day. Combine that with Pluto’s transformative power and the potential is enormous.

Difficult Pluto transits to the Sun often arise when solar energy has been hijacked by the ego and mistaken for will. True will is free; ego-driven will is compelled by unconscious desires the person cannot explain. This damages both the Sun’s expression and Pluto’s, inviting power struggles and ruthless attempts to dominate. While such extremes are rare, history provides ample examples.

At other times the combination is hard because it may coincide with serious physical breakdown, especially when the body cannot eliminate waste products – a Plutonian function.

Transits to Mars

This pairing is challenging. Astrologers sometimes call Pluto the higher octave of Mars, acknowledging similarities between the two. Qualitatively, however, Mars is clearly hot and dry, while Pluto’s expression varies. Both energies are often pressed into service by the ego, and both involve power. Mars should defend what needs defending, yet it frequently becomes blind aggression. Pluto is transcendental, but attempts to harness its force for ego ends are even more disastrous. Together they double the danger, so their power must be consciously directed.

At its best this combination supplies the force needed to enact necessary change when resistance has become deadly. Destruction then serves a greater good, however harsh it seems – the Second World War is often cited. The problem is knowing when such drastic action is truly required. A medical analogy helps: when a leg is gangrenous, amputation is the only way to save the person. That illustrates Pluto – Mars energy.

Fortunately, most people experience this transit not as catastrophe but as the capacity for heroic effort to overcome an unavoidable obstacle. The key word is heroic; if the situation does not warrant that word, the energy is probably being misapplied.

All too often, however, it shows up in ruthless ambition: individuals determined to destroy anyone in their path, provoking similar responses and, figuratively, starting a war.

Transits to Jupiter

Jupiter’s energy is interpersonal, Pluto’s transcendent, so they are not far apart on the three-level scale. Because most people find Jupiter relatively easy, Pluto – Jupiter transits more readily tap their higher potential: reform, positive change and regeneration rather than breakdown and conflict.

More than any other planet, Jupiter manifests in the broad social order: law, higher education, medicine, religion – indeed, culture itself, in the sense of the whole system of ideas, beliefs and practices that define a people.

Pluto is change and transformation, often originating beyond the culture or the individual state – in the natural world and the earth itself. It also rules long-range forces that reshape society. Current mass migrations and revived cultural schisms are examples.

Together, these energies strive to bring sweeping social reforms intended to heal and integrate. They may fail when powerful egos try to divert Plutonian force to their own ends, and one person’s reform can be another’s oppression.

For individuals, Pluto – Jupiter often accompanies long-term therapy, healing or self-improvement. The negative side appears when someone is so convinced of being right that breaking the law seems justified – and they are sometimes right, sometimes wrong.

Transits to Saturn

Saturn has two faces. The more familiar represents discipline, order, structure and necessity – often experienced as obstacles that frustrate personal desires. Traditional astrology cast Saturn as malefic, but it is not an intentional evildoer.

The higher face, like Pluto, is transcendental, marking the boundary between interpersonal reality and the beyond.

Consequently, Pluto transiting Saturn is demanding rather than gratuitously painful. It requires persistence and a willingness to learn hard lessons, yet one need not be enlightened to manage even the toughest combination.

On the interpersonal level people commonly meet a hardening process: freedoms narrow, opportunities dwindle, choices shrink, and events feel fated.

At the transcendental level, however, what seems fated is really a summons to transcend consensus reality. Extreme Pluto – Saturn pressures force withdrawal from the so-called real world, revealing alternatives that ordinary consciousness would never imagine.


Note: Not everyone experiences these transits with equal strength. Saturn spends roughly two and a half years in each sign, so people born near one another share similar Saturn positions. The effects are most noticeable when:

  1. Saturn is near the Ascendant, Midheaven, Descendant or I.C. (the angles).
  2. Saturn makes close aspects to the Sun, Moon or another planet on an angle.
  3. The chart contains many planets or points in Aquarius or Capricorn.
  4. Saturn aspects many chart points besides those listed above.

If none of these apply in your natal chart, the transits will be noticeable but not very powerful.

Transits to Uranus

Both Pluto and Uranus function best on the transcendental level. When circumstances force them down to interpersonal or, worst of all, personal levels, the results can be unfortunate.

Both planets signify change, but in different styles. Pluto rules metamorphosis – slow, powerful shifts driven by long-term forces, like the motion of tectonic plates. Uranus brings sudden, unpredictable change and extremes. Continuing the geological metaphor: when Pluto’s immense force becomes jammed, Uranus releases it in a sudden earthquake. Lightning, the classic Uranian phenomenon, illustrates its electrical nature.

Historically, their combination marks upheaval. The 1960s Uranus – Pluto conjunction, opposed by Saturn, coincided with civil-rights battles, student unrest and the rise of the counterculture. From 2010 onward a series of Uranus – Pluto squares opened with the Arab Spring and closed with the rise of extreme fundamentalisms.

When Pluto transits natal Uranus (assuming Uranus is strongly placed), an individual may undergo great personal change or become deeply involved in social revolution. A useful phrase is revolutionary change. Even if one’s life remains stable, sensitivity to collective upheaval sharply increases.


Note: Uranus spends about seven years in each sign, so those born near you share its position. These transits are most noticeable when:

  1. Uranus is near the Ascendant, Midheaven, Descendant or I.C. (the angles).
  2. Uranus makes close aspects to the Sun, Moon or another planet on an angle.
  3. Uranus aspects many other chart points.

If none of these apply, the transits will be observable but not very powerful.

Transits to Neptune

Pluto and Neptune are both transcendental planets. Their mutual cycle has proved crucial in historical research: major aspects between them coincide with turning points. Currently they move at similar speeds while maintaining a sextile, echoing their relationship during the Italian Renaissance. At other times Pluto moves far more slowly. As a result, the timing of Pluto – Neptune transits varies from generation to generation, a point discussed in this section’s introduction.

Their combination is difficult to grasp fully. Neptune blurs ordinary reality; its energy suggests that reality itself is mutable. At its highest it connects to sublime spirituality, though that is not how it is usually experienced.

Pluto, meanwhile, signifies slow, powerful, inexorable transformation. Together they point to the forces that bring things gradually into and out of existence as we know it.


Note: Neptune remains in a sign for about fourteen years. These transits are strongest when:

  1. Neptune is near the Ascendant, Midheaven, Descendant or I.C. (the angles).
  2. Neptune makes close aspects to the Sun, Moon or another planet on an angle.
  3. Neptune aspects many other chart points.

If none of these apply, the transits will be observable but not very powerful.

Transits to Pluto

As with every planet transiting its natal position, these passages mark key stages in the planetary cycle. Pluto, however, is unique. It is one of the Kuiper Belt objects, with an eccentric, inclined orbit. Although its full revolution takes roughly 245 years (tropical) or 248 (sidereal), the intervals between its major returns vary widely depending on where in the zodiac the cycle begins. For one generation a Pluto – Pluto aspect may occur much earlier or later than for another, so its significance must be described generation by generation.

Transits to Chiron

Pluto is ultimately about slow, inevitable transformation. Attempts to suppress Plutonian processes turn difficulties into catastrophes: sliding plates that move freely do little harm, but if they jam, pressure builds until an earthquake releases it. On the human level Pluto favours deep healing but is equally linked to breakdown. The task is to moderate either Pluto’s force or, better, our response, so that it fosters growth rather than destruction.

In living organisms growth is governed by internal timing mechanisms that trigger major changes – puberty, for instance. Sexuality’s development is a Plutonian example, as are successful psychotherapy and certain spiritual practices. Pluto itself is not sexual or spiritual; it simply governs long-term transformations in an organic whole. Unconnected events are not Plutonian.

Thus, when Pluto combines with Chiron, the result can be healing and spiritual growth, or disintegration and decay.


Not everyone feels these transits equally. Chiron must be strongly placed to make a noticeable impact. It gains power when:

  1. Chiron is near the Ascendant, Midheaven, Descendant or I.C. (the angles).
  2. Chiron makes close aspects to the Sun, Moon or another planet on an angle.
  3. Chiron aspects many other chart points.

If none of these apply, the transits will be observable but not very powerful.

Transits to Midheaven

The Midheaven indicates life direction. Medieval texts describe it in terms of social status, while ancient Greek sources use the word praxis – action, what one does within the social order. Modern society equates it with career, but life direction is the broadest term.

The Midheaven is a point, not a planet; it has no intrinsic energy. It is the place where energy manifests. When Pluto aspects the natal Midheaven, its transformative power affects what appears through that point. All major aspects from Pluto to the Midheaven are therefore potent and deserve attention.

Transits to Ascendant

The Ascendant, the exact degree rising in the east, is a key chart point. It represents the face we show the world, our physical body and health, and the personality others can see.

Pluto transforms. When it aspects the Ascendant, it alters how we appear in the world. Pluto also signifies extremes, power and cycles of breakdown and rebuilding. Each Pluto transit to the Ascendant brings those themes into visible expression.

Many such changes are simply phases of growth. But if Pluto’s energy is blocked, it intensifies and the changes become problematic. Suppressed change may erupt suddenly; if blocked again, psychological, physical or relational breakdowns can follow.

Though drastic transformations are seldom welcome, they can restore original conditions and permit renewal. A psychological crisis can begin a spiritual rebirth; physical illness, properly treated, can inaugurate renewed health.

Transits to the Lunar Nodes

Because Pluto’s cycle with the nodes lasts far longer than a human life, most people experience only two of its four major nodal contacts. This text therefore focuses on the current, immediately preceding and immediately following Pluto – node transits.

The four nodal points mark stages in sending energy into social and personal networks (North Node) and receiving its results (South Node). The bendings bridge the two.

Pluto’s transcendental energies operate largely outside ordinary awareness, so it is hard to be conscious of what we do and experience during these transits. They seldom cause immediate crises, but lack of awareness can have consequences at the next transit within the same lifetime. Because each phase’s experience is shaped by actions at the previous one, these cycles genuinely warrant the overused term karmic – karma literally means action.

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About Robert Hand

Robert Hand is one of the world's most famous and renowned astrologers. He takes a special interest in the philosophical dimensions of astrology and is quite dedicated to computer programming. Currently he is fully engaged for Arhat Media as an editor, translator and publisher of ancient astrological writings. Rob Hand lives in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA.

Rob is an honor graduate from Brandeis University, with honors in history, and went on for graduate work in the History of Science at Princeton. Rob began an astrology practice in 1972 and as success came, he began traveling world wide as a full time professional astrologer. In 2013, he was designated as a doctor of philosophy (Ph.D.) by The Catholic University of America.

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