The Tarot Card Draw pulls a random card from the Major Arcana for reflection, journaling, or a moment of pause in your day. Each draw reveals the card, whether it appears upright or reversed, and a short explanation of its traditional meaning to spark your own interpretation.
It's free and runs in your browser with no sign-up. Whether you read tarot seriously or are simply curious, it's a gentle prompt for thinking about where you are and where you're headed.
How to draw a tarot card
- Take a breath and hold a question or intention in mind.
- Press to draw a random card from the Major Arcana.
- Note whether the card is upright or reversed.
- Read its meaning and reflect on how it relates to your question.
What is the Major Arcana?
The Major Arcana is the set of 22 trump cards in a tarot deck — from The Fool and The Magician to The World — each representing a broad life theme or stage of a journey. Compared with the more day-to-day Minor Arcana, these cards point to bigger forces and turning points, which makes them well suited to reflection and journaling.
What does a reversed card mean?
A card drawn upside-down is called 'reversed', and readers traditionally take it as a softened, blocked, or inward version of the upright meaning. There are no good or bad cards — every card carries both light and shadow, and the reversal simply invites a different angle of reflection.