
The Rooster is the tenth animal in the Chinese zodiac, and the next Rooster year arrives in **2029 — an Earth Rooster**. Of all twelve signs the Rooster is the one most tangled up with everyday Chinese custom: its dawn crow was the village alarm clock, its picture went on the door to scare off ghosts, and the very word for it, 鸡 (jī), sounds like the word for "lucky" (吉, jí). If you were born in a Rooster year, here's exactly what the sign means — and how to be sure you really are one, since the New Year boundary trips a lot of people up.

## Which years are the Year of the Rooster?

The Rooster comes around every 12 years. Recent and upcoming Rooster years, with the element each one carries (the element runs on a longer 60-year cycle, so no two consecutive Rooster years share one):

| Rooster year | Element | Runs from → to (lunar) |
|---|---|---|
| 1933 | Water | — |
| 1945 | Wood | — |
| 1957 | Fire | — |
| 1969 | Earth | — |
| 1981 | Metal | — |
| 1993 | Water | — |
| 2005 | Wood | — |
| 2017 | Fire | — |
| **2029** | **Earth** | **Feb 13, 2029 → Feb 2, 2030** |
| 2041 | Metal | — |

One catch that trips people up: the zodiac year starts at **Chinese New Year, not January 1**. So if you were born in January or early February, you might belong to the *previous* animal (the Monkey), not the Rooster. Don't guess — run your exact birth date through our [Chinese zodiac calculator](/en/tools/chinese-zodiac/), which handles that boundary for you.

## Is 2029 a Year of the Rooster?

Yes — it's the next one. The 2029 Rooster year runs from **Chinese New Year on February 13, 2029** to **February 2, 2030** (the day before the following New Year). Specifically it's an **Earth Rooster** (己酉 jǐyǒu) year, the steadier, more grounded flavour of the sign. A baby born in, say, March 2029 is an Earth Rooster; a baby born in late January 2029 is still a Monkey from the 2028 year. The most recent Rooster year before that was **2017** (a Fire Rooster), and the one before that **2005** (a Wood Rooster).

## The Rooster personality

In the zodiac's character sheet, the Rooster is the sharp-eyed perfectionist: **observant, hardworking, confident, and frank**. Roosters are said to notice the detail everyone else missed, to keep their word, and to show up on time — the sign's headline virtue is reliability. They like order, they like a plan, and they're happy to tell you exactly what they think.

The flip side: that same precision tips into being **blunt, critical, and a touch vain**. Roosters can be know-it-alls who'd rather be right than tactful, and their high standards make them hard to please — including with themselves. The one-line version: a Rooster will tell you the truth before you're ready to hear it, then be quietly hurt you didn't thank them for it.

<figure>
<img src="/images/zodiac/an-rooster.svg" alt="Line-art illustration of a proud crowing rooster" width="460" height="300" loading="lazy" decoding="async" />
<figcaption>The Rooster is the zodiac's early riser — sharp-eyed, punctual, and not shy about saying what it sees.</figcaption>
</figure>

## The five types of Rooster

Because each Rooster year carries one of the five elements, the "type" shades the base personality:

<table class="zc-eltable">
<thead><tr><th>Element</th><th>Rooster years</th><th>What it adds</th></tr></thead>
<tbody>
<tr><td><span class="zc-dot" style="background:#2d7a4f"></span>Wood</td><td class="zc-yrs">1945 · 2005</td><td>Cooperative, easier-going, team-minded</td></tr>
<tr><td><span class="zc-dot" style="background:#c84b24"></span>Fire</td><td class="zc-yrs">1957 · 2017</td><td>The most intense — driven, magnetic, headstrong</td></tr>
<tr class="is-now"><td><span class="zc-dot" style="background:#b8862f"></span>Earth</td><td class="zc-yrs">1969 · <b>2029</b></td><td>Steadier, more grounded and reliable</td></tr>
<tr><td><span class="zc-dot" style="background:#8a8474"></span>Metal</td><td class="zc-yrs">1981 · 2041</td><td>Driven, ambitious, blunt</td></tr>
<tr><td><span class="zc-dot" style="background:#3a6ea5"></span>Water</td><td class="zc-yrs">1933 · 1993</td><td>Adaptable, restless, a smooth talker</td></tr>
</tbody>
</table>

<p class="zc-note">The next Rooster year, 2029, is 己酉 — an Earth Rooster, the grounded type.</p>

## Rooster compatibility: best and worst matches

Traditionally, the Rooster forms a harmonious trine with the **Ox** and the **Snake**, and a classic "six-harmony" pairing with the **Dragon**. Its hardest match is its direct opposite on the wheel, the **Rabbit**.

| Match | Animals | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Best | Ox, Snake, Dragon | Shared discipline and ambition; trine + six-harmony |
| Tricky | Rabbit, Dog, Rooster | Rabbit is the direct clash (卯酉冲); two Roosters out-criticise each other |

As with all zodiac compatibility, treat this as cultural folklore and a fun icebreaker, not a relationship verdict — plenty of happy couples are "incompatible" on paper.

<figure>
<img src="/images/zodiac/wheel-rooster.svg" alt="The 12-animal Chinese zodiac wheel with the Rooster highlighted at position 10, directly opposite the Rabbit, its clash animal" width="400" height="400" loading="lazy" decoding="async" />
<figcaption>The Rooster sits at position 10 of the cycle — directly opposite, and traditionally clashing with, the Rabbit.</figcaption>
</figure>

## Lucky numbers, colours and things for the Rooster

By tradition, the Rooster's lucky signals are:

- **Lucky numbers:** 5, 7 and 8
- **Lucky colours:** gold, brown and yellow
- **Lucky flowers:** gladiolus and cockscomb (the crest-shaped 鸡冠花, literally "rooster-comb flower")
- **Best avoided:** the numbers 1, 3 and 9, and the colours red and white

These show up in everyday ways during a Rooster year — gold-and-brown New Year décor, and rooster motifs on everything from paper-cuts and red envelopes to mooncake tins.

## Famous people born in the Year of the Rooster

A spread of Rooster-year births across the decades — scroll the timeline. (Each was born *after* their year's Chinese New Year, so the sign holds.)

<div class="zc-people">
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-art.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1933</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Karl Lagerfeld</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Designer</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-peace.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1945</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Aung San Suu Kyi</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Stateswoman</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-music.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1957</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Hans Zimmer</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Composer</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-mic.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1969</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Jay-Z</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Musician</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-mic.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1981</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Beyoncé</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Musician</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-ball.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1981</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Serena Williams</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Athlete</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-ball.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1981</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Roger Federer</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Athlete</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-music.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1993</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Ariana Grande</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Musician</span></div>
<div class="zc-person"><span class="zc-person__av"><img src="/images/zodiac/ic-music.svg" alt="" loading="lazy" /></span><span class="zc-person__yr">1993</span><span class="zc-person__nm">Niall Horan</span><span class="zc-person__rl">Musician</span></div>
</div>

A roster heavy on performers, perfectionist designers and record-breaking athletes fits the Rooster's exacting, never-quite-satisfied streak.

## If you're a Rooster, watch the běnmìngnián

Whenever your own animal's year comes back around — for Roosters, next in **2029** — that's your **本命年 (běnmìngnián)**, and tradition treats it as one of the *riskier* years, not the luckiest. The idea is that you've come full circle and "offended" Tai Sui, the god of the year, leaving you more exposed to bad luck.

The standard remedy is to wear **red next to the skin** — red underwear, socks or a belt, classically given to you by an older relative — put on from New Year's Eve and kept up through at least the first days of the new year. Note the small irony for Roosters: red is on the sign's "avoid" colour list, but the běnmìngnián red rule overrides that — here the red is protective, not decorative. If you're in China around a Rooster New Year and notice racks of red undergarments by every supermarket checkout, this is why.

## The rooster as China's original alarm clock — and ghost-chaser

Here's the bit that makes the Rooster different from every other sign: it earned its reputation from a real job. Before clocks, the rooster's dawn crow was the village's timekeeper — Chinese sources call the bird 司晨, "the one in charge of the morning." That single habit generated a whole cluster of meaning: punctuality, diligence, and the idiom **闻鸡起舞 (wén jī qǐ wǔ)**, "rise and train your sword at the cock's crow," still hung in studies today as a byword for discipline.

The same crow made the rooster a ghost-chaser. Folk belief held that ghosts can only move in the dark and must scurry back before daybreak; because the rooster's crow *announces* the dawn, it came to "drive off" them. Classical sources push this further into myth: the **重明鸟 (chóngmíng niǎo)**, a rooster-like bird with double pupils, and the **金鸡 (jīn jī)**, "golden rooster," that sits atop the cosmic peach tree and crows the sun up each morning, scattering evil spirits as the light spreads. The ancient almanac *Jingchu Suishiji* records that on the first day of the lunar year people would **paste a picture of a rooster on the door**, a custom older than the familiar door-gods. In Shanxi some households still hang a red paper-cut rooster (鸡符) instead.

Two more threads worth knowing:

- **The five virtues (五德).** A Han-dynasty text, the *Han Shi Wai Zhuan*, graded the rooster a "virtuous fowl" with five merits: 文 (refinement, for its crown-like comb), 武 (valour, for the spurs on its legs), 勇 (courage, for fighting all comers), 仁 (benevolence, for calling the flock to share food), and 信 (trustworthiness, for crowing on time without fail). It's why a rooster painting reads, to a Chinese eye, as a wish for upright character — not just luck.
- **The pun stack.** 鸡 (jī) is a near-homophone of 吉 (jí), "auspicious," so a big rooster picture means **大吉大利 (dàjí dàlì)**, "great luck, great profit." Better still, a rooster beside cockscomb flowers means *promotion* — because the comb, 鸡冠 (jīguān), puns on 官 (guān), "official." A whole little visual language is hiding in one bird.

So when you see roosters everywhere in a Rooster year, it isn't just zodiac branding — it's a 2,000-year-old symbol doing several jobs at once: clock, guard, and good-luck charm.

## What the Rooster year means when you travel China

<figure class="zc-fig-emoji">
<img src="/images/zodiac/lantern.svg" alt="A red Chinese lantern" width="120" height="120" loading="lazy" decoding="async" />
<figcaption>Around a Rooster Spring Festival, gold-and-brown rooster motifs and red lanterns fill every street.</figcaption>
</figure>

If you visit China during a Rooster year, the animal is everywhere — rooster figures and the character 鸡 (jī) on shop windows, lanterns, stamps, paper-cuts and mooncake tins, peaking around **Chinese New Year (February 13, 2029** for the next one). Wondering when to actually go? The weeks bracketing the New Year are the most festive *and* the most crowded — see our [best time to visit China](/en/best-time-to-visit-china/) guide before you book, and sort out [visas](/en/visa-free/) and an [eSIM](/en/esim/) ahead of time.

## Find your exact Chinese zodiac sign

Not sure if you're a Rooster — or curious what element and stem-branch year you were born under? Enter your birth date in our [Chinese zodiac calculator](/en/tools/chinese-zodiac/); it accounts for the New Year boundary so you get the right animal, even for a January birthday.

## Sources

- [Encyclopædia Britannica — Chinese zodiac](https://www.britannica.com/topic/Chinese-zodiac)
- [China Highlights — Year of the Rooster](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/chinese-zodiac/rooster.htm)
- [The World of Chinese — rooster symbolism and the 鸡/吉 pun](https://www.theworldofchinese.com/2017/01/cock-a-doodle-doo-from-twoc/)
