Life Timing

Your Saturn return, clearly explained.

Roughly every 29 years, Saturn returns to where it sat at your birth — and life tends to ask you to grow up on purpose. It's one of astrology's most felt cycles, and it's worth understanding before it peaks.

The first Saturn return lands around ages 28–31, the second around 57–60. It often coincides with real restructuring — career, relationships, where and how you live — as the parts of life that aren't built on solid ground get tested.

What it asks of you depends on Saturn's sign and house in your chart. Understanding that turns a daunting transit into a workable one.

What the Saturn return covers

When yours happens

The exact window of your Saturn return, including the passes if Saturn retrogrades back and forth.

What it's asking of you

The area of life Saturn is restructuring, read from its sign and house in your chart.

The challenge and the reward

Where the cycle tests you, and the real maturity and structure it can build.

How to move through it

Practical focus for the months ahead rather than fear-based predictions.

How to use it in Shymea

Calculate your free birth chart to find your Saturn sign and house.

A Saturn Return report computes the exact return dates for your chart and maps the cycle with a roadmap and reflection prompts — delivered as a PDF.

Related

Common questions

When is my Saturn return?
The first is around ages 28–31, the second around 57–60. The exact window depends on your chart; the Saturn Return report computes the precise dates for you.
Is the Saturn return a bad thing?
No. It's demanding but constructive — it tends to restructure what isn't built on solid ground. We frame it as growth, not doom.
Why does it feel so intense?
Saturn governs structure, responsibility, and limits. When it returns to its birth position, those themes come due — which can feel like pressure to mature.
Can a report tell me what will happen?
It maps the timing and themes to reflect on, not fixed events. Outcomes are shaped by your choices.

Shymea is for guidance, self-reflection, and entertainment — not a substitute for professional medical, financial, legal, or psychological advice.