Yearly 2026 Tarot Reading

Discover the grand arc of your journey. Select five cards to reveal your Theme of the Year and the specific energies for Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter.

0/5 محدد
1

Theme of the Year

2

Spring

3

Summer

4

Autumn

5

Winter

ركّز على سؤالك، ثم اختر 5 بطاقةs أخرى من المجموعة أدناه

The Grand Arc of the Year

The yearly spread is our most comprehensive time-based reading. It maps out the seasonal shifts and the overarching spiritual lesson you are here to master over the next 12 months.

The central card (Theme of the Year) acts as the anchor for all four seasons.

Timing Your Yearly Reading

Most users perform this on New Year's Day, their birthday, or the Winter Solstice.

The Seasonal Cycle

Each seasonal card represents the 'atmosphere' of those three months. Wands in Summer suggest a high-energy period of action; Pentacles in Winter suggest a time of material security and grounding.

Major Arcana in any season indicate a 'Turning Point' quarter.

The Year of Abundance

The Sun or The Star as the Theme of the Year indicates a 12-month period of profound luck, healing, and clarity.

The Year of Growth

More challenging cards suggest a year focused on resilience, shedding old layers, and inner strength rather than easy external wins.

Yearly Wisdom

1. Journaling: Keep a dedicated journal for your yearly cards and note events as they happen.

2. Archetypal Living: Try to embody the qualities of your Theme card throughout the year.

3. Patience: A yearly reading is a marathon, not a sprint. Let the cards unfold slowly.

Need a Deep Dive Into Your 2026 Destiny?

Our top-rated readers can spend an hour with you mapping out every month of your coming year in extreme detail.

See Top Yearly Readers

Yearly Reading FAQ

Is this reading set in stone?

Absolutely not. The cards show the path of least resistance. You always have the power to change direction.

What if my Theme of the Year is scary?

Cards like Death or The Tower as a yearly theme simply mean a year of major growth and 'clearing the slate'—which is often necessary for long-term happiness.