Recent Tiger years — every 12, with their element:
- 1962 Water
- 1974 Wood
- 1986 Fire
- 1998 Earth
- 2010 Metal
- 2022 Water
- 2034 Wood next
Born in January or early February? Your sign may differ — check your exact date →
Which years are the Year of the Tiger, what a Tiger is like, best & worst matches, lucky numbers — and the real 'tiger women curse their husbands' superstition that dented Taiwan's birth rate in 2010.
The Tiger is the third animal in the Chinese zodiac, and it carries the heaviest reputation of the twelve: 虎 (hǔ) is the “king of beasts,” a sign of raw courage, authority and a temper to match. The last Tiger year was 2022 (a Water Tiger); the next one is 2034, a Wood Tiger (badge 木). If you were born in a Tiger year, you’re the zodiac’s natural-born leader — and, depending on which country you’re in, possibly the subject of one of the few zodiac superstitions still visible in national birth statistics (more on that below). Here’s what the Tiger year actually means, and how to check whether you’re really one.
Which years are the Year of the Tiger?
The Tiger comes around every 12 years. Recent and upcoming Tiger years, with the element each one carries (the element runs on a longer 60-year cycle, so no two consecutive Tiger years share one):
| Tiger year | Element | Runs from → to (lunar) |
|---|---|---|
| 1938 | Earth | — |
| 1950 | Metal | — |
| 1962 | Water | — |
| 1974 | Wood | — |
| 1986 | Fire | — |
| 1998 | Earth | — |
| 2010 | Metal | — |
| 2022 | Water | Feb 1, 2022 → Jan 21, 2023 |
| 2034 | Wood | Feb 19, 2034 → Feb 7, 2035 |
| 2046 | Fire | — |
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 (Ox), not the Tiger. Don’t guess — run your exact birth date through our Chinese zodiac calculator, which handles that boundary for you.
When is the next Year of the Tiger?
The next Tiger year is 2034, running from Chinese New Year on February 19, 2034 to February 7, 2035 (the day before the next New Year). It’s a Wood Tiger (甲寅 jiǎyín) year — wood being the element that softens the Tiger’s combative streak into something more cooperative and team-minded. The most recent Tiger year before it was 2022, a Water Tiger (壬寅 rényín). A baby born in, say, March 2034 is a Wood Tiger; a baby born in late January 2034 is still an Ox from the 2033 year.
The Tiger personality
In the zodiac’s character sheet, the Tiger is the born commander: brave, confident, competitive, charismatic and fiercely independent. Tigers are said to walk into a room and take it over without trying, to back themselves in a fight everyone else is avoiding, and to be intensely loyal to the people they’ve decided are theirs.
The flip side of all that force: Tigers are described as impulsive, hot-tempered and prone to overconfidence — the sign that leaps before it looks, bristles at being told what to do, and burns hot then crashes. The one-line version: a Tiger would rather charge and risk a fall than hold back and wonder.
The five types of Tiger
Because each Tiger year carries one of the five elements, the “type” shades the base personality:
| Element | Tiger years | What it adds |
|---|---|---|
| Wood | 1974 · 2034 | Cooperative, easier-going, team-minded |
| Fire | 1986 · 2046 | The most intense — bold, magnetic, headstrong |
| Earth | 1938 · 1998 | Steadier, more grounded and reliable |
| Metal | 1950 · 2010 | Driven, ambitious, blunt |
| Water | 1962 · 2022 | Adaptable, intuitive, persuasive |
2034 is 甲寅 — a Wood Tiger year, the gentler, more collaborative end of the Tiger spectrum.
Tiger compatibility: best and worst matches
Traditionally, the Tiger forms a harmonious trine with the Horse and the Dog, and a classic “six-harmony” pairing with the Pig. Its hardest match is its direct opposite on the wheel, the Monkey.
| Match | Animals | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Best | Horse, Dog, Pig | Shared drive and loyalty; trine + six-harmony |
| Tricky | Monkey, Snake | Monkey is the direct clash (寅申冲); Snake grates against the Tiger in the “six-harms” reckoning (寅巳害) |
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.
Lucky numbers, colours and things for the Tiger
By tradition, the Tiger’s lucky signals are:
- Lucky numbers: 1, 3 and 4
- Lucky colours: blue, grey and orange
- Lucky flowers: yellow lily and cineraria
- Best avoided: the numbers 6, 7 and 8, and the colours brown and white
These show up in everyday ways during a Tiger year — you’ll see grey-blue-and-orange New Year décor and tiger motifs on everything from red envelopes to children’s hats, where embroidered “tiger heads” (虎头帽) are a centuries-old good-luck charm.
Famous people born in the Year of the Tiger
A spread of Tiger-year births across the decades — scroll the timeline:
A roster heavy on commanding performers, a record-breaking sprinter and a sixty-year monarch fits the Tiger’s take-charge reputation.
If you’re a Tiger, your běnmìngnián comes in 2034
Here’s the counterintuitive part: the year of your own animal is considered one of the riskier years, not the luckiest. When 2034 arrives, it will be your 本命年 (běnmìngnián) if you’re a Tiger — tradition holds 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 worn next to the skin — red underwear, socks or a belt, classically given to you by an older relative. By custom you put it on from New Year’s Eve and keep it on through at least the first days of the new year (many keep it up all year). It isn’t only Tigers on edge in a Tiger year either: by the folk reckoning, the animals that “offend Tai Sui” (犯太岁) alongside the Tiger are typically the Monkey (the direct clash), the Snake and the Pig. If you’re in China around a Tiger New Year and notice racks of red undergarments by every supermarket checkout, this is why.
The “tiger women curse their husbands” superstition
This is the Tiger fact that surprises foreigners most, because it’s not gentle. In a strand of Chinese folk belief, a girl born in a Tiger year is a 虎女 (hǔnǚ) — said to be “too strong,” her fierce tiger nature liable to “overpower” her household and, in the harshest version, to 克夫 (kèfū): bring misfortune to, or even doom, her future husband. A folk-rhyme on zodiac matching files the Tiger near the bottom of the marriage ladder — “蛇虎如刀错” (“Snake and Tiger clash like crossed blades”) — and old village sayings spell it out: “女属虎,男属狗,虎为兽王定克夫” (“a Tiger woman with a Dog man — the tiger is king of beasts, she’s bound to doom him”).
It’s important to frame this honestly: this is superstition, not anything most Chinese people today actually believe, and folklorists read it less as cosmology than as a relic of a society where a “too strong” woman was treated as a threat to a husband’s authority. But it isn’t only a museum piece — it still moves numbers. In 2010 (a Metal Tiger year), Taiwan’s births fell to 166,886, about 24,000 fewer than 2009’s 191,310, dragging the fertility rate to a then-record-low 0.9 and prompting the president to call it a “national-security-level” problem; two years later, in the auspicious Dragon year, the rate bounced back to 1.27. Demographers have tracked the same tiger-dip-dragon-spike sawtooth across the region. It’s one of the very few zodiac beliefs you can literally see in a country’s demographic charts.
Each year is associated with one of 12 animals… and the cycle is further combined with the five elements, so that a full cycle takes 60 years to complete.
The other half of the Tiger’s cultural weight is far friendlier: because it’s the king of beasts, the tiger is also China’s great protector against evil. Embroidered tiger-head hats and shoes are put on babies to scare off bad spirits, and the white tiger (白虎, báihǔ) is one of the Four Symbols of the sky, guardian of the West. So the same animal that a superstitious family once feared in a daughter is the one they sew onto that daughter’s hat to keep her safe — a contradiction that tells you a lot about how layered these beliefs really are.
What the Tiger year means when you travel China
If you visit China during a Tiger year, the animal is unavoidable — tiger figures and the character 虎 (hǔ) appear on shop windows, lanterns, stamps and mooncake tins, peaking around Chinese New Year. You’ll spot tiger-head children’s hats in tourist markets and “福” (fortune) characters paired with stylised tigers on red envelopes. 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 guide before you book, and sort out visas and an eSIM ahead of time.
Find your exact Chinese zodiac sign
Not sure if you’re a Tiger — or curious what element and stem-branch year you were born under? Enter your birth date in our Chinese zodiac calculator; it accounts for the New Year boundary so you get the right animal, even for a January birthday.