Structure: 13 numbers x 20 day signs
The Tzolk'in is a permutation, not a list. A number cycle (1–13) and a name cycle (20 nawales) advance together, one step per day. Day 1 is 1 Imix, day 14 is 1 Ix, day 260 is 13 Ajaw, then it restarts. Because 13 and 20 share no common factor, the lowest common multiple is 260, and every number-name pair appears exactly once per cycle. Each pair is called a kin — your birth kin is the headline of any Maya birth chart.
Why 260 days?
There is no single academic answer, but several plausible drivers overlap. 260 days closely matches human gestation (~9 months). It tracks the highland maize planting-to-harvest window. At latitudes near Copán (~14.8 N), 260 days separates the two annual solar zenith passages. Numerologically, 13 (heavens / levels) times 20 (digits, the human body) is sacred arithmetic. The cycle predates the Classic Maya — it appears across Mesoamerica, suggesting deep cultural roots before any single explanation took hold.
How the Tzolk'in is used in astrology
Three uses dominate. Birth kin: the sign and tone of your birthday is your core archetype, similar to a Western sun sign. Daily energy: today's kin reads like a forecast — which days favour starting, resolving, or resting. Kin return: your birth kin recurs every 260 days, not every 365, giving you a sacred check-in roughly 1.4 times a year. Day-keepers (ajq'ij) in Guatemala still consult the Tzolk'in for divination, ceremony, and naming.
Tzolk'in vs Haab' vs Long Count
The Tzolk'in is the astrology engine — the other two calendars contextualise it. The Haab' is the 365-day civil/solar year, used to fix agricultural seasons and the Year Bearer. The Long Count is a linear day count from a mythic zero in 3114 BCE, used for absolute dating. Combined, the Tzolk'in and Haab' form the 52-year Calendar Round. Most modern Maya astrology readings draw their interpretive energy from the Tzolk'in alone.
Modern practice and the unbroken count
The Tzolk'in count has run continuously among K'iche', Kaqchikel, Tz'utujil, and Mam communities — surviving conquest, suppression, and missionisation. That living count is why Mayanists trust the GMT correlation (584,283) to anchor calendar maths to real dates. When you compute a kin online, you are reading a date that has been counted, in person, for over two millennia.