What Is This Free Online Tarot Reading?
Unse Hanjan's tarot reading uses the complete traditional deck of 78 cards — 22 Major Arcana plus 14 cards each of Wands, Cups, Swords, and Pentacles. The one-card spread delivers the advice you need for today, while the three-card spread reads the flow of your situation through cards placed in past, present, and future positions. Choose a question topic — love, career, money, or today's flow — to make the meanings easier to apply to your own circumstances.
After the shuffle animation, you personally pick the cards that draw you from a face-down fan, then watch them flip in 3D to reveal whether each is upright or reversed, along with keywords and a detailed interpretation. The three-card spread also generates a combined summary based on your card combination, and the share button copies a link that reproduces the exact same layout so you can send your reading to friends.
Key Features
Full 78-Card Deck
All 22 Major Arcana and 56 Minor Arcana are included, each with upright and reversed interpretations and keywords.
One-Card & Three-Card Spreads
Choose a single card for quick daily advice, or the past-present-future spread when you want to read the flow of a situation.
Pick Your Own Cards
After the shuffle animation, tap the cards you feel drawn to from a face-down fan and reveal them with a 3D flip.
Shareable Result Links
Your card layout is encoded in the URL, so the exact same result can be viewed again. Share your reading with friends via link.
How to Get a Tarot Reading
- Select your spread: One Card (today's advice) or Three Cards (past, present, and future).
- Pick a question topic — love, career, money, or today's flow. You can also skip this step.
- Hold your question in mind while the cards shuffle, then tap the cards that call to you from the face-down fan.
- Flip the cards to read the upright or reversed meanings and keywords, then use the share button to copy a link to your result.
Ways to Use It
A Morning Ritual
Draw a single card with your morning coffee or on your commute, and let it set the tone and mindset for your day.
Sorting Out a Dilemma
Weighing a job offer, or working up the nerve to confess your feelings? When your head is spinning before a decision, read the past-present-future flow with three cards — interpreting them often reveals what you truly want.
Fun with Friends
Take turns drawing cards at a gathering, or share your result link so friends can read the exact same spread and talk it over.
Learning Tarot
New to tarot? Draw one card a day, read its keywords, and jot them in a notebook. With upright and reversed meanings for all 78 cards, you can learn the symbolism piece by piece without a thick guidebook.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many times a day can I draw cards?
There is no limit. That said, tradition favors one calm reading per question rather than redrawing the same question repeatedly. The tool is designed so that picking the same cards in the same order on the same day yields the same upright or reversed orientations.
What is the difference between upright and reversed?
An upright card expresses its energy flowing naturally, while a reversed card suggests that energy is delayed, turned inward, or in excess. Reversed does not mean bad — read it as a hint about what deserves a closer look.
Should I choose one card or three cards?
For today's advice or a simple question, one card is enough. If you want context on how a situation is unfolding, the three-card spread reading past, present, and future is the better fit — it also includes a combined summary of all three cards.
Do I have to pick a question topic like love or career?
No, it is optional. Choosing a topic simply adds a note on the result screen suggesting which lens to read through, making the meanings easier to apply to your situation. It does not change which cards are drawn.
Can I share my result with friends?
Yes. Pressing the share button copies a link that encodes your card layout. Anyone who opens it sees the exact same cards, orientations, and interpretations. The link contains only card information — no personal data.
Which deck are the card images based on?
Unse Hanjan uses its own original geometric symbol designs, free of copyright issues. The 22 Major Arcana each carry a unique emblem (the Fool's sun and cliff, Death's rose, and so on), while the 56 Minor Arcana follow the traditional structure of suit symbols and number arrangements.
Should I trust the tarot results?
This tarot reading is entertainment content built with reference to traditional tarot symbolism. Enjoy the results as a mirror for reflection and a conversation starter — for important matters such as health, investments, or career moves, always consult a professional and decide for yourself.
I drew the Death or Tower card — is that a bad omen?
No need to panic. In tarot, the Death card almost never refers to literal death — it marks the closing of one chapter and the start of another, a transformation. The Tower depicts a shaky structure collapsing so that something sturdier can be rebuilt. Read either card as a sign that it may be time to let go of an old habit or accept a change you have been putting off; reversed, they suggest checking whether you are resisting a change or delaying a necessary ending.
Can I ask the same question more than once?
Redrawing right away because you dislike the answer tends to muddy the first reading. Tradition treats the first spread as the answer to that question, and recommends asking again only when your situation has genuinely changed or new information has come to light. If you really want a second look, wait at least a day — or sharpen the question itself, turning 'Will this relationship work out?' into 'What should I pay attention to in this relationship right now?'
Privacy
Card drawing and interpretation happen entirely inside your browser — the cards you select and the topic you choose are never sent to or stored on a server, and no sign-up is required. Shared result links contain only card numbers and orientations, with no personally identifiable information, so you can use the reading with complete peace of mind.