Tarot & Readings
Tarot Spreads Explained — 7 Layouts and When to Use Each
Key takeaways
- ★Spread positions give each card context — the same card means different things in different spots.
- ★Three-card spreads (past/present/future) handle most questions.
- ★The Celtic Cross is for complex, layered situations, not quick yes/no.
- ★Pick the spread to match the question, not the other way around.
A tarot spread is the layout you deal the cards into. Each position carries a meaning, so the spread turns a pile of cards into a structured answer.
1. One-card pull
Daily guidance or a quick yes/no — see yes or no tarot.
2. Three-card spread
Past / present / future, or situation / action / outcome. The workhorse of tarot.
3. Celtic Cross
Ten cards for deep, multi-layer situations: present, challenge, root, recent past, goal, near future, self, environment, hopes/fears, outcome.
4. Relationship spread
You / them / the connection. Ideal for the questions in our love reading guide.
5–7. Decision, year-ahead and self-growth spreads
Match the layout to the question: a fork in the road needs a decision spread, a fresh start suits a year-ahead spread.
Frequently asked questions
What is the easiest tarot spread for beginners?+
The three-card spread (past, present, future) is the best starting point — enough depth to be useful, simple enough to interpret.
What is the Celtic Cross used for?+
It is a ten-card spread for complex situations where you want to see influences, hopes, fears and likely outcome together.
Can I make my own spread?+
Yes. Define a clear question for each position before you pull. Custom spreads work as long as positions are decided in advance.
