Is This Person Lying? Horary Astrology and Deception
"Is this person a scammer?" It's a question we've seen more than once on iHorary, and it makes sense. In a world of online transactions, dating apps, and business deals with strangers, trust is hard to establish. You're putting money, time, or your heart on the line -- and you want to know if the other person is genuine.
Horary astrology has been answering trust questions for centuries. Long before the internet, people asked astrologers about business partners, suitors, and servants. "Is this person honest?" is actually one of the oldest horary questions in the books.
Here's how horary reveals deception -- and what it can and can't tell you about someone's character.
The 7th house: The other person
In horary, when you ask about another person's character or intentions, you look at the 7th house. This is the house of "the other" -- anyone you're dealing with in a one-on-one capacity:
- A business partner or potential partner
- A seller or buyer
- A romantic interest
- A contractor or service provider
- Anyone whose trustworthiness is in question
The ruler of the 7th house becomes their significator. Its condition tells you a tremendous amount about this person's character, intentions, and reliability.
How planets reveal character
The key to reading trustworthiness in horary is essential dignity -- a traditional system that describes how well a planet can express its nature based on the sign it occupies.
Strong dignity = Honest and capable
A planet in its domicile (the sign it rules) or exaltation is in excellent condition. It can act according to its nature, openly and effectively. When the other person's significator has strong essential dignity, it suggests someone who:
- Operates openly and transparently
- Has the capacity to follow through on promises
- Acts from a position of strength, not desperation
- Is likely to deal honestly because they can afford to
Example: You ask "Can I trust this business partner?" The 7th house ruler is Jupiter in Sagittarius (its own domicile). Jupiter here is strong, generous, and acts according to its own principles. This suggests a trustworthy person who means what they say.
Weak dignity = Unreliable or compromised
A planet in its detriment (the sign opposite the one it rules) or fall (the sign opposite its exaltation) is in poor condition. It can't act well -- it's compromised, desperate, or operating against its nature. When the other person's significator is debilitated:
- They may lack the ability to fulfill their promises, even if they want to
- They may be in a desperate situation that drives dishonest behavior
- Their intentions may be good but their capacity to deliver is weak
- Or they may genuinely be acting in bad faith
Example: You ask "Is this contractor reliable?" The 7th house ruler is Mars in Cancer (in fall). Mars in Cancer is weakened -- unable to act decisively or competently. This suggests someone who either can't deliver what they promise or won't. Proceed with extreme caution.
Peregrine = The wanderer without loyalty
A planet that has no essential dignity at all in its current sign is called peregrine. In traditional horary, a peregrine planet is a classic indicator of a thief or deceiver. It has no "home" -- no stable footing, no loyalty, no rules it adheres to.
If the other person's significator is peregrine, it's one of the strongest deception indicators in horary. The person is:
- Operating without principles or allegiance
- Potentially a fraud, scammer, or opportunist
- Not bound by the norms that usually govern honest dealings
This doesn't mean everyone represented by a peregrine planet is a criminal. But in a question specifically about trust, it's a serious red flag.
Mercury and deception
Mercury has a special role in deception questions. As the planet of communication, commerce, and cleverness, Mercury governs both honest trade and dishonest trickery. It's the planet of the merchant -- and the con artist.
Afflicted Mercury in a trust question:
- Mercury retrograde -- Miscommunication, information being withheld or distorted. Things aren't as they appear. In a scam question, retrograde Mercury strongly suggests something is being hidden or reversed from what you've been told.
- Mercury conjunct or aspected by Neptune -- Confusion, illusion, deliberate deception. Neptune dissolves clarity, and its connection to Mercury suggests the information you're receiving is unreliable.
- Mercury combust (within a few degrees of the Sun) -- Hidden or burned away. The truth is obscured. The person may be hiding their real intentions behind a bright facade.
- Mercury in detriment or fall -- Communications are unreliable. Promises made may be empty.
Mercury in good condition -- dignified, well-aspected, direct -- suggests straightforward communication and honest dealing.
Other deception indicators
Beyond the 7th house ruler and Mercury, horary offers several other markers that traditional astrologers associate with dishonesty:
Neptune and the 12th house
Neptune anywhere prominent in a trust chart is a warning. Neptune represents illusion, deception, and things that aren't what they seem. If Neptune:
- Sits on the 7th house cusp -- the other person presents a false image
- Aspects the 7th house ruler -- their intentions are clouded or deceptive
- Conjuncts the Moon -- your perception of the situation is distorted; you may be seeing what you want to see
The 12th house is the house of hidden enemies, self-undoing, and things that work against you secretly. If the other person's significator is in your 12th house, they may be working against your interests without you knowing it. This is one of the most concerning placements in a trust question.
Saturn's testimony
Saturn represents restriction, limitation, and harsh reality. Saturn isn't inherently deceptive -- it's actually associated with truth, but the uncomfortable kind. In trust questions:
- Saturn afflicting the 7th house ruler suggests the other person is cold, calculating, or self-serving
- Saturn on the 7th house cusp can indicate someone who is withholding, unavailable, or has ulterior motives
- But Saturn in good dignity can also mean the person is simply serious, cautious, or reserved -- not dishonest, just guarded
Context matters enormously. Saturn in the chart of a question about a banker might just mean they're conservative and by-the-book.
The Moon's testimony
The Moon, as always, shows the emotional flow and your perception. In trust questions, pay attention to:
- What the Moon last separated from -- this shows what led you to ask. A separation from Mars might mean a conflict triggered your suspicion. A separation from Neptune might mean something felt "off" intuitively.
- What the Moon applies to next -- this shows what's coming. If the Moon applies to the 7th house ruler with a trine, you may find reassurance. If it applies with a square to Saturn, the truth may be uncomfortable.
A walkthrough: "Is this person a scammer?"
Let's trace through how a horary chart might answer this question.
The question: "Is this person I met online who wants me to invest money with them trustworthy?"
The chart shows:
- Ascendant in Cancer, so the Moon rules you
- 7th house cusp in Capricorn, so Saturn represents the other person
- Saturn is peregrine in Gemini -- no essential dignity, wandering
- Mercury (ruler of Gemini, Saturn's dispositor) is retrograde and conjunct Neptune
- The Moon (you) applies to an opposition with Saturn
- No benefics aspect the 7th house or its ruler
Interpretation: The other person's significator (Saturn) is peregrine -- the classic thief marker. Their dispositor (Mercury) is retrograde and conjunct Neptune -- communication is deliberately misleading. The Moon opposes Saturn, suggesting the situation is adversarial, not cooperative. There is nothing beneficial supporting the 7th house.
This chart is screaming: do not trust this person. Do not send money. The indicators are as clear as horary gets when it comes to deception.
What horary can tell you vs. what it can't
Horary is remarkably good at showing you the character and condition of the person you're asking about. It reveals:
- Whether the person is operating honestly or deceptively
- Whether they have the capacity to deliver on promises
- Whether the situation is what it appears to be
- Whether hidden factors are at play
But there are limits:
- Horary can't prove fraud. It shows indicators of deception, but it's not evidence. Don't use a horary chart as your sole basis for accusing someone.
- It can't read specific thoughts. The chart shows character and intention in broad strokes, not detailed plans.
- A negative chart doesn't always mean malice. Sometimes a debilitated 7th house ruler means the person is incompetent rather than dishonest. They might genuinely intend to help but lack the ability.
- Your own bias matters. If you already suspect someone, your emotional state can complicate the chart. Try to ask from a place of genuine inquiry, not confirmation-seeking.
When to ask trust questions
Trust questions work best in horary when:
- You have a specific person in mind -- Not "will I be scammed" in general, but "Is this particular person trustworthy?"
- There's a real situation at stake -- Money, a relationship, a business deal
- You have genuine uncertainty -- If you already know someone is dishonest, you don't need horary to confirm it
- You're willing to accept the answer -- Including the possibility that someone you like isn't who they seem
Frame the question clearly. "Is this person trustworthy?" works. "Can I trust my new business partner, David, with the investment?" works even better. The more specific, the better the chart can respond.
Protecting yourself
Horary can flag deception, but it's one tool among many. If a chart raises red flags, also:
- Verify independently. Check credentials, references, and registrations
- Trust your instincts. If something feels off, it probably is -- the chart may be confirming what your gut already knows
- Don't rush. Scammers create urgency. Legitimate opportunities don't vanish overnight
- Talk to someone you trust. A friend or advisor outside the situation can offer perspective
Ask your trust question
If you're unsure about someone -- a business contact, an online connection, a potential partner -- and your instinct is telling you to check, horary can offer clarity.
Frame your question around the specific person and situation. Then ask the stars and see what the planets reveal about their character.
Not every answer will be dramatic. Sometimes the chart simply confirms that the person is solid and you can proceed with confidence. That peace of mind is worth something too.
New to horary? Start with our guide: What Is Horary Astrology?