50 Questions You Can Ask Astrology Right Now

8 min read
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Horary chart wheel surrounded by floating question bubbles with heart, career, home, and compass icons

The difference between a vague horary chart and a crystal-clear one often comes down to how you phrase the question. A well-framed question gives the planets something specific to work with. A vague one gives you vagueness back.

If you've read our guide on how to ask a horary question, you know the basics: be specific, be sincere, and ask yes-or-no. But sometimes you need to see what a good question looks like before you can write your own.

Here are 50 well-crafted horary questions organized by category, with notes on why each one works. Use them as templates for your own question, adapting the specifics to your situation.

Love and Relationships

Love questions are the most common in horary astrology, and for good reason — they touch on things that matter deeply. The key is naming the person and specifying the outcome you're asking about.

  1. "Does [name] have romantic feelings for me?" — Direct, binary, and asks about a specific person. Much better than "Does anyone like me?"

  2. "Will [name] and I get back together?" — Clear outcome to assess. The chart can show whether the significators are moving toward reunion.

  3. "Is [name] being faithful to me?" — Specific and sincere. The chart can reveal hidden factors through the condition of the 7th house ruler.

  4. "Should I tell [name] how I feel?" — Frames it as a decision. The chart shows whether the action leads to a favorable outcome.

  5. "Will my relationship with [name] lead to marriage?" — Concrete endpoint to evaluate. Avoids the vagueness of "Is this the one?"

  6. "Is [name] the right partner for me long-term?" — Slightly broader than the marriage question, good when marriage isn't necessarily the goal.

  7. "Will I meet a romantic partner in the next six months?" — Time-bounded and specific. Without the timeframe, "Will I ever find love?" is too vague.

  8. "Should I end my relationship with [name]?" — A genuine decision question. The chart shows the dynamics and likely outcome of staying versus leaving.

For more on love questions and how horary reads them, see our detailed guide on love questions in horary astrology.

Career and Work

Career questions work best when they're about a specific opportunity, decision, or outcome — not general life direction.

  1. "Will I get the [specific position] at [company name]?" — Names the exact role and company. The more specific, the clearer the chart.

  2. "Should I accept the job offer from [company]?" — A clean decision question. The chart can show whether the opportunity benefits you.

  3. "Will I receive a promotion this year?" — Time-bounded and specific to your current workplace.

  4. "Is now a good time to ask for a raise?" — Timing question. The chart shows whether conditions favor the request.

  5. "Will my job interview on [date] go well?" — Tied to a specific event. The chart captures the dynamics around that particular interview.

  6. "Should I leave my current job to start my own business?" — Decision framed as an action. The chart can evaluate both the leaving and the starting.

  7. "Will my business be profitable within the first year?" — Concrete metric with a timeframe. Much better than "Will my business succeed?"

  8. "Is [business partner name] a trustworthy partner for this venture?" — Asks about a specific person in a specific context. The 7th house reveals the other party's condition and intentions.

Money and Finances

Financial questions in horary are best when they involve a concrete transaction, investment, or financial event — not general prosperity.

  1. "Will I be approved for the mortgage on [property address]?" — Ultra-specific. The chart has a clear yes/no to evaluate.

  2. "Should I invest in [specific investment]?" — Names the opportunity. The 2nd house (your money) and its relationship to the investment's significator tell the story.

  3. "Will I receive the insurance settlement?" — Concrete financial outcome. The 8th house (other people's money) is key here.

  4. "Is this a good time to sell my property at [address]?" — Timing question with a specific asset.

  5. "Will the money owed to me by [name] be repaid?" — Names the debtor and asks about a specific debt.

  6. "Should I take on this freelance project for [client]?" — Decision question combining work and money, tied to a specific opportunity.

Health and Well-being

Health questions require sensitivity. Horary can offer perspective, but it's not a substitute for medical advice. Frame questions around decisions and outcomes, not diagnosis.

  1. "Will my [specific treatment or procedure] be successful?" — Asks about the outcome of a medical decision you've already made or are considering.

  2. "Is now a good time to start [specific health regimen]?" — Timing question for a concrete action you're considering.

  3. "Will my recovery from [condition/surgery] go smoothly?" — Specific to a known situation with a clear positive/negative outcome.

  4. "Should I seek a second medical opinion about [condition]?" — Decision question about a specific next step.

Decisions and Life Choices

These are the "should I or shouldn't I?" questions. They work well because horary excels at evaluating binary choices.

  1. "Should I move to [city name]?" — One specific destination, one clear decision. Don't ask about two cities in one question.

  2. "Is this the right time to buy the house at [address]?" — Combines timing and decision, tied to a specific property.

  3. "Should I go back to school to study [specific field]?" — Decision about a concrete action with clear implications.

  4. "Will my visa/immigration application to [country] be approved?" — Specific outcome for a specific application.

  5. "Should I accept the offer on my house?" — Clean decision question about a real, current situation.

  6. "Is now the right time to have a difficult conversation with [name] about [topic]?" — Timing and decision combined. Specific about who and what.

  7. "Should I attend [specific event or opportunity]?" — Simple, concrete, and something you're genuinely weighing.

  8. "Will this legal matter be resolved in my favor?" — Clear outcome for a real situation. The 7th house (the other party) and 10th house (the judge/authority) show the dynamics.

Timing Questions

Timing questions ask when, not just whether. They work in horary because planetary aspects can be converted to time units.

  1. "When will I hear back about the [specific] application?" — Tied to a real waiting situation. The degrees between applying aspects suggest the timeframe.

  2. "When will my house sell?" — Specific property, clear event to time.

  3. "How long will this project take to complete?" — About a concrete, current undertaking.

  4. "When is the best time to launch [specific product or business]?" — Timing question for a concrete plan.

Lost Items

Lost item questions are among horary's most practical applications — and some of the most impressive. The chart doesn't just say whether you'll find the item; it can suggest where to look.

  1. "Where is my [specific item]?" — Simple and direct. The 2nd house ruler and its sign placement give directional and locational clues.

  2. "Will I find my lost [specific item]?" — Asks whether recovery is likely before investing more time searching.

  3. "Did I lose my [item] at [specific location], or is it somewhere else?" — Narrows the search. The chart can confirm or redirect.

  4. "Will my stolen [item] be recovered?" — Different from "lost" — theft questions look at the 7th house (the thief) and whether the item returns to the querent.

Relationships (Non-Romantic)

Not all relationship questions are about romance. Horary handles family, friendship, and professional relationships just as well.

  1. "Is [name] being honest with me about [situation]?" — Trust question about a specific person and context.

  2. "Will my relationship with [family member] improve?" — About a real, ongoing dynamic with a named person.

  3. "Should I trust [name] with [specific responsibility]?" — Decision question about a concrete action involving a specific person.

  4. "Will [name] agree to my proposal/request?" — Concrete outcome involving a named person and a specific ask.

Education and Learning

  1. "Will I be accepted into [specific program] at [institution]?" — Named program and school. The 9th house (higher education) and its ruler show the outcome.

  2. "Should I pursue [specific certification or degree]?" — Decision about a concrete educational path.

  3. "Will I pass the [specific exam]?" — Binary outcome tied to a named assessment.

Travel

  1. "Will my trip to [destination] on [dates] go well?" — Specific destination and timeframe. The 9th house (long-distance travel) or 3rd house (short trips) reveals the conditions.

What makes all of these questions work

Looking across all 50 examples, you'll notice they share the same DNA:

They name names. Not "someone" or "a company" — specific people, places, and things. This gives the chart specific houses and significators to work with.

They ask about one thing. Not "Should I move to Portland or stay in Seattle and maybe look for a new job?" Just one question, one decision, one outcome.

They have a yes or no. Even the timing questions have a binary core: will it happen, and if so, when? The chart needs a clear axis to evaluate.

They're about now, not forever. "Will I ever find love?" is almost unanswerable. "Will I meet someone in the next six months?" gives the chart a workable scope.

They come from genuine concern. You can feel the real stakes behind each question. These aren't idle curiosities — they're things that keep you up at night, that you've been turning over in your mind. That sincerity is what makes horary work.

How to adapt these to your situation

Pick the question closest to what you're wondering about. Then customize it:

  1. Replace the placeholder names with real names
  2. Replace general locations with specific ones
  3. Add a timeframe if it's relevant
  4. Make sure the question is really yours to ask — it should be about your situation, not someone else's private business

If you're still unsure how to phrase your question, our guide on how to ask a horary question walks through the formula step by step.

Ready to ask yours?

You've seen 50 examples. Now it's your turn.

Think about the question that's been circling in your mind. Frame it clearly, specifically, and honestly. Then ask the stars and see what the chart reveals.

The planets are always in motion. Your moment is now.


New to horary? Start with our guide: What Is Horary Astrology?

Ready to ask the stars?

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