Virgo & Pisces
The detail person and the dreamer -- surprisingly tender when they stop trying to fix each other.
About these scores
Strongest bond
Heart — Emotional safety and nurturing
Growth edge
Growth — Tension that drives change
These scores compare sun signs only. Your Moon and Rising shift the numbers — sometimes a lot. Sign up with your birth chart to see your personal version.
Common Questions
What people usually want to know.
Are Virgo and Pisces soulmates?
Opposite signs who mirror each other beautifully — Virgo brings the grounding, Pisces brings the imagination. When they stop trying to change each other and start appreciating the contrast, something clicks. The soulmate question here really comes down to your full birth chart. Your Rising and Moon signs shape whether this balance feels effortless or requires work.
Do Virgo and Pisces attract each other?
Absolutely. There's a powerful magnetic pull between opposite signs. Virgo is genuinely intrigued by Pisces's mystery, creativity, and emotional depth; Pisces feels safe and cherished with Virgo's stability, competence, and attentive care. The attraction is both physical and emotional—grounded earth meeting flowing water in surprisingly compatible ways.
What is the biggest challenge for Virgo and Pisces?
Communication and fundamental approach to life. Virgo is literal, practical, and detail-oriented; Pisces is abstract, emotional, and big-picture intuitive. Virgo's critical analysis can deeply hurt sensitive Pisces, while Pisces's vagueness, boundary issues, or emotional avoidance can genuinely frustrate clarity-seeking Virgo. They need patience, respect, and willingness to learn each other's completely different language.
Why do Virgo and Pisces work well together?
They balance each other perfectly when they get it right. Virgo grounds Pisces's dreams into achievable reality; Pisces softens Virgo's critical edges and opens them to intuition and magic. Both are devoted, naturally adaptable, and service-oriented at their core. Together they create a complete world when they genuinely embrace both the practical and the mystical dimensions of life.
The content on this page draws on these core astrology texts.
- Claudius Ptolemy — Tetrabiblos (2nd century AD)
- William Lilly — Christian Astrology (1647)
- Charles Carter — An Encyclopaedia of Psychological Astrology (1924)