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Stephen Curry in action during an NBA game, wearing his Golden State Warriors uniform
GuideSportsMarch 24, 2026•13 min read

Stephen Curry's Birth Chart: The Pisces Sniper Whose Knees Are Writing the Comeback of 2026

Stephen Curry has four planets in Capricorn, a Leo rising, and a Pisces Sun sitting one degree from his North Node. His birth chart explains why the greatest shooter ever keeps coming back — and why March 2026 might be the most important return of his career.

Photo: Erik Drost · CC BY 2.0

By Sera Vane·March 24, 2026AI-assisted, editor-reviewed
In this article(13 min read)
  1. A Pisces Sun in the 9th House: The Philosopher Who Chose Basketball
  2. Leo Rising and the Capricorn 6th House Stellium: Showman’s Heart, Worker’s Body
  3. The Aquarius Moon in the 7th: Why the Partnership Question Matters
  4. March 2026 Transits: Neptune, Jupiter, and the Architecture of a Comeback
  5. Venus in the 10th House: The Public Love Affair That Never Ends
  6. The Bigger Picture: Pluto, Legacy, and What Comes After the Comeback

There is a specific kind of silence that follows a Stephen Curry three-pointer — the half-second after the ball leaves his hand, wrist still flicked, when everyone in the arena already knows it’s going in. That silence has been missing from Chase Center for over twenty games now. Bilateral knee tendinopathy, the kind of grinding, unglamorous injury that doesn’t make for dramatic MRI photos but eats seasons alive, has kept the greatest shooter in basketball history off the floor since late February. The Warriors are clawing at play-in tournament relevance. The rest of the league has moved on. And Curry, who turned 38 on March 14, 2026, is doing what Pisces Suns with Leo risings do: preparing a return that nobody sees coming but everybody will feel.

Stephen Curry — Birth Chart Essentials

Born
March 14, 1988 — Akron, OH
Birth Time
1:51 PM EST (verified)
Sun
Pisces 24°24' (9th House)
Moon
Aquarius 8°22' (7th House)
Rising
Leo 0°14'
Mercury
Aquarius 27°55' (8th House)
Venus
Taurus 9°15' (10th House)
Mars
Capricorn 14°24' (6th House)
Jupiter
Taurus 1°17' (10th House)
Saturn
Capricorn 1°56' (6th House)
North Node
Pisces 23°05'

A Pisces Sun in the 9th House: The Philosopher Who Chose Basketball

Curry’s Sun sits at Pisces 24°24’ in his 9th house — the house of higher learning, long journeys, and belief systems. This is not where you’d expect to find the chart of a professional athlete. The 9th house wants to teach, to preach, to wander. Pisces wants to dissolve boundaries. Put them together and you get someone who didn’t just learn to shoot a basketball — he reinvented what shooting a basketball could mean. The three-point revolution Curry started wasn’t a physical achievement first. It was a philosophical one. He believed something about the game that nobody else did, and then he proved it with his body.

His North Node at Pisces 23°05’ sits less than two degrees from his Sun. This is the kind of conjunction that astrologers quietly obsess over. The North Node represents your soul’s direction, the unfamiliar territory you’re meant to grow into. When it conjuncts your Sun that tightly, your identity and your destiny are essentially the same thing. Curry doesn’t just play basketball — he is his purpose. That’s why retirement speculation always sounds absurd when applied to him. The man’s chart says his ego and his karmic mission are fused at the degree level. He’s not done until the universe says he’s done.

Compare this to fellow Pisces athlete Jessica Pegula, whose chart channels that mutable water energy into tennis. Pisces athletes share an unusual trait: they compete through feel rather than force. Curry’s shooting form has been called “effortless” so many times it’s become a cliché, but that’s the Pisces signature — making the extraordinary look like it just happened. What people mistake for ease is actually profound attunement. He doesn’t aim at the basket so much as merge with the trajectory.

Leo Rising and the Capricorn 6th House Stellium: Showman’s Heart, Worker’s Body

Leo rising at 0°14’ — right at the critical degree. This is the chart of someone who was born to be watched. Leo risings walk into rooms and rearrange the energy. They need an audience not out of vanity but out of biological necessity; performing is how they metabolize life. Curry’s shimmy after a deep three, his tunnel celebrations, the mouthguard chewing — these aren’t affectations. They’re his ascendant expressing itself in real time. The Leo rising is also why Curry’s public image has remained remarkably clean across nearly two decades of fame. Leo rising at its best projects warmth, generosity, and an almost royal dignity. People don’t just respect Curry; they genuinely like him, which is rarer in professional sports than a perfect shooting night.

But here’s where Curry’s chart gets structurally interesting — and directly relevant to his current injury. He has four planets stacked in Capricorn in his 6th house: Mars at 14°24’, Saturn at 1°56’, Uranus at 0°51’, and Neptune at 9°58’. The 6th house governs daily routines, health, and the physical body’s relationship to work. Four Capricorn planets here is like having a construction crew permanently stationed in your health sector. Capricorn builds things to last, but it builds them through pressure, repetition, and endurance — exactly the forces that create tendinopathy. Curry’s knees haven’t failed randomly. His chart has always said that his body would be both his greatest tool and his most demanding teacher.

Mars in Capricorn in the 6th is especially telling. Mars is exalted in Capricorn — it’s one of the strongest Mars placements possible. This gives Curry extraordinary physical discipline and the ability to maintain peak performance through sheer will and structure. But exalted Mars in the 6th also means he pushes his body harder and longer than it might naturally tolerate. The 4,000 three-pointers milestone he hit earlier this season didn’t come from talent alone. It came from Mars-in-Capricorn repetition: thousands of practice shots, years of specific routines, an almost monastic dedication to physical preparation. That dedication is beautiful and it is expensive. Knees keep receipts.

The Aquarius Moon in the 7th: Why the Partnership Question Matters

Curry’s Moon sits at Aquarius 8°22’ in his 7th house of partnerships. The Moon represents emotional needs, instinctive responses, and what makes someone feel safe. In Aquarius, the Moon needs intellectual stimulation, freedom within connection, and a sense of belonging to something larger than any single relationship. In the 7th house, those needs get filtered entirely through partnerships — romantic, professional, and collaborative. This is why the Curry-Draymond-Klay dynasty worked as long as it did. Curry’s emotional wiring isn’t about individual glory (that’s the Leo rising’s job). His Moon needs a team, a collective mission, a group of people who are doing something nobody’s done before.

With Klay Thompson gone and Draymond Green in his twilight, this Aquarius Moon is in unfamiliar emotional territory. The 7th house Moon doesn’t just want teammates — it wants those teammates, the ones who shared the specific frequency of four championships and a revolution. The young Warriors roster can’t replicate that, and Curry’s chart suggests he knows it on a cellular level. This is relevant to the injury return because Aquarius Moon people don’t come back for themselves. They come back for the collective. If Curry returns before the end of March, it won’t be because his ego demands it. It’ll be because the team needs him for the play-in push, and his 7th house Moon can’t stand watching from the sideline while the group struggles.

Mercury at Aquarius 27°55’ in the 8th house adds another layer. The 8th house Mercury processes information through crisis, transformation, and what’s hidden beneath surfaces. Curry’s basketball IQ — his ability to read defenses before they form, to sense the geometry of plays that haven’t happened yet — comes from this placement. He doesn’t think about basketball the way most players do. He thinks about it the way a chess player thinks twelve moves ahead, except his 8th house adds an almost psychic quality to that analysis. He knows where people are going to be. That’s Mercury in the 8th’s gift: reading what’s underneath.

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March 2026 Transits: Neptune, Jupiter, and the Architecture of a Comeback

The transits hitting Curry’s chart in late March 2026 are not subtle. They read like a cosmic script for exactly the situation he’s in — an aging superstar deciding whether his body can match his will for one more push. Let’s start with the most structurally important one: transiting Neptune squaring his natal Saturn (with an extraordinarily tight aspect). Neptune dissolves. Saturn structures. When Neptune squares Saturn, the rigid frameworks you’ve built — physical routines, career structures, identity scaffolding — start to soften and blur. For a 38-year-old athlete with Capricorn planets governing his physical body, this transit is asking a fundamental question: Can you rebuild what’s breaking down, or do you need to let it dissolve?

This is happening alongside the Sun-Saturn conjunction in early Aries — a transit that’s pressuring everyone to confront authority, structure, and the cost of ambition. For Curry, whose natal Saturn sits in Capricorn in the 6th, this collective transit is landing in his 9th house, squaring back to his natal Saturn. That’s a Saturn-square-Saturn transit, which typically arrives every seven years and demands an honest accounting. Are you still building something real, or are you maintaining a monument? The 9th house location makes this specifically about belief — does Curry still believe he can be the player he was? Saturn doesn’t accept faith. It wants evidence.

But here’s where the chart turns hopeful. Transiting Jupiter is opposing his natal Mars from Cancer — a major aspect for physical recovery and expansion. Jupiter opposite Mars is loud, expansive energy applied directly to his physical drive. In Cancer, Jupiter is exalted, operating from a place of emotional nourishment and protective instinct. This opposition to his natal Mars in Capricorn in the 6th house is essentially Jupiter saying: Your body has more in it than the injury suggests. Jupiter oppositions aren’t always comfortable — they can bring excess, overestimation, doing too much too fast — but they flood the system with optimism and physical energy. For a knee recovery, this is the transit you want. It doesn’t guarantee return, but it provides the biological and psychological fuel to make return possible.

Transiting Uranus squaring his natal Mercury (within about half a degree) suggests his thinking about his career is undergoing rapid, unexpected shifts. Mercury in Aquarius already processes information in unconventional ways; Uranus squaring it from Taurus forces sudden recalculations about value, worth, and what’s sustainable. Curry may be privately reconsidering aspects of his game, his workload management, or even his long-term timeline in ways that would surprise the public. This transit doesn’t just change minds — it electrifies them. Expect Curry to come back, if he does, playing differently. Not worse. Different. Uranus demands innovation, and Curry has always been its instrument.

Meanwhile, transiting Pluto at early Aquarius is beginning a long conjunction to his natal Moon at Aquarius 8°22’. This is a generational transit — Pluto moves slowly — and it’s still approaching with a few degrees of separation. But Pluto-Moon transits transform emotional foundations from the ground up. Over the next year or two, Curry’s relationship to his emotional needs, his family life, and his sense of belonging will undergo total metamorphosis. The play-in tournament push might be the immediate story, but the deeper Pluto transit is rewriting why Curry plays basketball at all. By the time this transit perfects, the man who comes out the other side may care about entirely different things than the man who went in.

Venus in the 10th House: The Public Love Affair That Never Ends

Venus at Taurus 9°15’ in Curry’s 10th house of career and public reputation is one of the most favorable placements in his entire chart. Venus in Taurus is in domicile — this planet is at full power here. In the 10th house, it means Curry’s public image is naturally Venusian: graceful, appealing, aesthetically pleasing. People don’t just admire his game; they find it beautiful. The way he moves, the arc of his shot, even his off-court style — all of it carries that Taurus Venus signature of effortless quality. This placement also explains his extraordinary brand longevity. Venus in Taurus in the 10th doesn’t do flash-in-the-pan fame. It builds lasting value, the kind of reputation that compounds over decades.

Jupiter at Taurus 1°17’ sits in the same 10th house, expanding everything Venus promises. Jupiter here inflates career success, public recognition, and professional opportunity. Together, Venus and Jupiter in Taurus in the 10th create a public image that’s almost impossibly favorable — loved, respected, commercially powerful, and somehow still relatable. Transiting Mercury making an exact sextile to his natal Venus right now (within six-hundredths of a degree) is activating all of this. Mercury sextile Venus is a communication-beauty aspect: it makes messages land gracefully, public statements resonate, and negotiations succeed. If Curry announces his return this week, the messaging will be perfect. His chart is practically scheduling the press conference.

The current sky also features Mars transiting through Pisces, which is worth noting for Curry’s recovery timeline. Mars in Pisces is not the most aggressive Mars — it heals more than it fights. For someone with natal Mars in Capricorn, transiting Mars sextiling that position from Pisces creates a harmonious channel between the healing energy of Pisces and the structural discipline of Capricorn. This Mars-Mars sextile is exactly the kind of transit that supports a careful, methodical return to physical activity — not a dramatic comeback, but a quiet resumption. The fact that Mars in Pisces is also trining his natal Pluto in Scorpio adds transformative power to the recovery. Curry’s body isn’t just healing; it’s integrating the injury into a new physical reality, which is the most sustainable kind of recovery.

The Bigger Picture: Pluto, Legacy, and What Comes After the Comeback

Every comeback story has a surface narrative and a deeper one. The surface narrative for Curry is simple: can he return from bilateral knee tendinopathy in time to drag the Warriors into the play-in tournament? That’s a basketball question with a basketball answer. The deeper story, the one his chart tells, is about a man approaching a fundamental threshold. With transiting Pluto moving toward his natal Moon, Neptune dissolving his Saturn structures, and Saturn squaring itself across his belief axis, Curry is in a period of profound identity renegotiation. This isn’t just an injury return — it’s a trial run for the final act of his career.

The spring equinox on March 20 marked the astrological new year, and it coincided with Mercury stationing direct — a symbolic fresh start that’s coloring everything happening in late March. For Curry, this fresh-start energy is landing in his 9th house, the same house as his Sun. The 9th house is about meaning-making, and with Mercury now direct and gaining speed, the intellectual fog that might have clouded his recovery decisions in early March is clearing. He can think clearly about what he wants and why.

All planets being direct is another significant factor. This is a relatively rare configuration, and it creates an unusual forward momentum in the sky — no retrograde drag, no internal review loops, just pure kinetic energy. For someone trying to return to peak athletic performance, this is an ideal window. Every planet is moving forward. Mercury’s shadow period is still technically active, so there may be lingering effects of the recent retrograde — last-minute scheduling changes, medical results that need re-evaluation — but the overall trajectory is forward. Curry’s chart, combined with this sky, suggests late March through early April is the optimal return window.

What makes this chart analysis ultimately optimistic isn’t any single transit — it’s the pattern. Jupiter expanding his Mars (physical energy). Mercury sextiling his Venus (communication and timing). Mars in Pisces supporting recovery. All planets direct. Yes, Neptune is dissolving his Saturn structures, and Pluto is approaching his Moon with transformative intent. But those are longer transits — they’re setting the stage for the next two to three years of Curry’s evolution, not the next two weeks. The short-term transits, the ones that govern whether he’s physically ready and psychologically willing to return for a play-in push, are overwhelmingly supportive. The chart says he comes back. It also says the man who comes back is already becoming someone slightly different from the one who left. And if you know anything about Pisces Suns with Leo risings, becoming someone new is just another word for the kind of transformation they were born to perform.

What is Stephen Curry’s zodiac sign and birth chart?

Stephen Curry is a Pisces Sun (24°24’) with a Leo rising (0°14’) and an Aquarius Moon (8°22’). Born March 14, 1988 at 1:51 PM in Akron, Ohio, his chart features a powerful four-planet Capricorn stellium in the 6th house of health and daily work, plus Venus and Jupiter in Taurus in his 10th house of career.

How does Stephen Curry’s birth chart explain his shooting ability?

Curry’s Pisces Sun in the 9th house gives him an almost intuitive relationship with trajectory and space — he feels the shot rather than calculating it. His Mars exalted in Capricorn in the 6th house provides relentless discipline for repetitive practice, while Mercury in Aquarius in the 8th house creates an unconventional basketball intelligence that reads defenses before they form.

What do the 2026 transits say about Curry’s injury recovery?

Transiting Jupiter opposing his natal Mars in late March 2026 brings expansive physical energy directly to his health sector — a recovery-friendly aspect. Mars transiting Pisces sextiles his natal Mars, supporting healing over aggression. Neptune squaring his Saturn suggests structural dissolution that requires rebuilding, but short-term transits favor a return before April.

What is Stephen Curry’s rising sign?

Stephen Curry’s rising sign is Leo at 0°14’ — the very first degree, which astrologers consider a critical or powerful degree. Leo rising gives him natural charisma, warmth, and a need to perform. It explains his signature celebrations, his ease with media, and why his public image has remained overwhelmingly positive throughout his career.

Will Stephen Curry retire based on his astrology chart?

Curry’s chart doesn’t indicate imminent retirement. His North Node conjunct his Sun in Pisces suggests his identity and life purpose are deeply fused — he’ll play as long as that feels aligned. However, transiting Pluto approaching his natal Moon signals a profound emotional transformation over the next two years that will reshape his motivations and potentially redefine what basketball means to him.

In this article

  1. A Pisces Sun in the 9th House: The Philosopher Who Chose Basketball
  2. Leo Rising and the Capricorn 6th House Stellium: Showman’s Heart, Worker’s Body
  3. The Aquarius Moon in the 7th: Why the Partnership Question Matters
  4. March 2026 Transits: Neptune, Jupiter, and the Architecture of a Comeback
  5. Venus in the 10th House: The Public Love Affair That Never Ends
  6. The Bigger Picture: Pluto, Legacy, and What Comes After the Comeback
  • Type: Guide
  • Read time: 13 min

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