What Are the 22 Major Arcana Tarot Cards? Complete Meanings List [2026]
What Are the 22 Major Arcana Tarot Cards? Complete Meanings List
What Is the Major Arcana and Why Does It Matter?
The Major Arcana is a set of 22 cards (numbered 0 through 21) that represent life's most significant themes: identity, purpose, love, loss, and transformation. Unlike the 56 Minor Arcana cards that address everyday situations, Major Arcana cards carry the weightiest messages in the deck and signal turning points that reshape who you are.
If you've ever had a tarot reading that stopped you mid-sentence — the kind where the card on the table seemed to know exactly what you were going through — chances are a Major Arcana card was involved. The word "arcana" comes from the Latin arcanum, meaning "secret" — and that feels right. These cards hold the big questions. When one shows up in a reading, pay close attention. Something significant is happening.
At Uranize, we've found that readings dominated by Major Arcana cards tend to be the ones people remember months later. They hit differently because they speak to who you are, not just what's happening.
A complete standard tarot deck contains:
- 22 Major Arcana cards (numbered 0–21)
- 56 Minor Arcana cards (divided into four suits)
- 78 cards total
This guide is your comprehensive reference to all 22 Major Arcana cards — their meanings, symbolism, upright and reversed interpretations, and the real-world wisdom each one carries. For a broader overview of all 78 cards, see our complete tarot card meanings guide.
What Is The Fool's Journey and How Does It Explain the Major Arcana?
The Fool's Journey is a narrative framework where The Fool (Card 0) walks through all 21 remaining cards as stages of growth, crisis, and eventual wholeness. It is the best way to understand why the 22 Major Arcana cards appear in the order they do and what each one represents in the arc of human experience.
The Fool starts as pure potential: wide-eyed, optimistic, ready for anything. Along the way, they meet teachers (The Magician, The High Priestess), bump up against authority and tradition (The Emperor, The Hierophant), face inner demons (The Hermit, The Hanged Man), get knocked sideways by fate (The Wheel of Fortune, The Tower), and — if they stay the course — arrive at integration and fulfillment (The World).
Think of it as:
- A spiritual arc from innocence to enlightenment
- A psychological arc from unconscious patterns to full self-awareness
- A life arc from birth through hard-earned experience to wisdom
- A repeating cycle — most of us go through it multiple times, in different areas of life
This is what makes the Major Arcana so powerful in readings. These aren't random symbols to memorize — they're a map of what it actually feels like to be human. Once you see the story, individual card meanings click into place naturally.
Uranize Editorial Insight: The distinction between a good reading and a great one often comes down to a single factor: willingness to sit with discomfort. Cards that provoke resistance usually carry the most important messages.
What Does Each of the 22 Major Arcana Cards Mean?
Below is the complete list of all 22 Major Arcana cards with their upright and reversed meanings, keywords, and interpretive guidance.
0 – The Fool
Keywords: New beginnings, innocence, spontaneity, unlimited potential, faith, leap of faith
The Fool stands at the edge of a cliff, gazing at the horizon with pure openness. Numbered 0 — infinite potential — this card is about new beginnings, the willingness to leap without a complete plan, and trusting that the ground will meet your feet.
This is one of the most exciting cards to see in a reading. In our experience at Uranize, The Fool appears most often right before major life transitions — new cities, new careers, new relationships. It's the universe saying: go.
- Upright: Fresh starts, adventure, optimism, beginner's mind, embracing the unknown
- Reversed: Recklessness, naivety, hesitation, fear of change, poor judgment
In a reading, The Fool asks: What am I ready to begin? What would I do if I weren't afraid?
Read the full Fool tarot card meaning →
I – The Magician
Keywords: Willpower, skill, resourcefulness, manifestation, focused intention, action
The Magician stands before a table bearing the symbols of all four suits — Wand, Cup, Sword, and Pentacle — representing command over every element. One arm raised toward the sky, one pointing to the earth: "As above, so below." This card says you already have everything you need. The question is whether you'll use it.
- Upright: Focused will, using your skills wisely, manifestation, creative power, resourcefulness
- Reversed: Manipulation, wasted talents, trickery, lack of focus, untapped potential
In a reading, The Magician asks: What tools and skills do I already have? Am I actually using them — or just thinking about it?
Read the full Magician tarot card meaning →
II – The High Priestess
Keywords: Intuition, mystery, subconscious wisdom, patience, inner knowing, the unseen
The High Priestess sits between two pillars — one black, one white — holding the balance of opposites. She guards the veil between what you know consciously and what you sense beneath the surface. When she shows up, the answer you're looking for isn't in the facts you can Google — it's in the quiet voice you've been ignoring.
- Upright: Intuition, mystery, inner wisdom, patience, the unconscious speaking, trusting what you sense
- Reversed: Ignoring intuition, secrets, repressed feelings, disconnection from inner knowing
In a reading, The High Priestess asks: What does my gut already know that my mind hasn't caught up to?
III – The Empress
Keywords: Abundance, fertility, nurturing, creativity, nature, sensuality, growth
The Empress sits amid flourishing nature, radiating abundance. She embodies the creative, generative power of life itself — motherhood, artistic creation, tending a garden, nurturing your own wellbeing. If The Magician is about focused will, The Empress is about letting things grow.
- Upright: Abundance, creativity, nurturing, fertility, connection to nature, sensory pleasure, growth
- Reversed: Creative block, dependence, smothering, neglecting self-care, scarcity mindset
In a reading, The Empress asks: What needs my care and attention right now? Am I letting myself receive, or only give?
IV – The Emperor
Keywords: Authority, structure, discipline, leadership, stability, fatherly guidance
The Emperor sits armored on a throne carved with ram heads — established authority personified. He represents the structures that create order: boundaries, rules, discipline, responsibility. Not the most exciting energy, but often exactly what's needed. When this card appears, the situation usually calls for less dreaming and more doing.
- Upright: Structure, authority, stability, discipline, leadership, taking responsibility, order
- Reversed: Rigidity, domination, inflexibility, abuse of power, excessive control
In a reading, The Emperor asks: Where do I need more structure or discipline? Am I leading, or controlling?
V – The Hierophant
Keywords: Tradition, spiritual guidance, institutions, community, established wisdom, ritual
The Hierophant (often depicted as a high priest or pope) bridges the sacred and the everyday — established traditions, mentorship, the wisdom that has been passed down. This card often points to a teacher, a tradition, or an institution that has something valuable to offer. It can also signal the moment when you need to decide: follow the well-worn path, or strike out on your own.
- Upright: Tradition, spiritual mentorship, community, following established wisdom, ritual, conformity as strength
- Reversed: Rebellion, unorthodox paths, questioning institutions, breaking with tradition, dogmatism
In a reading, The Hierophant asks: What established wisdom is available to me? Or is it time to forge my own path?
VI – The Lovers
Keywords: Love, choice, alignment, values, partnership, harmony, meaningful decisions
Here's what surprises most beginners: The Lovers is as much about choice as it is about romance. Two figures stand beneath an angel, and the real question isn't "do they love each other?" — it's "are they choosing from their deepest values, or from fear and convenience?" This card shows up in career readings just as often as love readings at Uranize.
- Upright: Deep connection, meaningful choice, alignment with values, authentic partnership, harmony
- Reversed: Misalignment, poor choices, disharmony, projection, conflict between heart and mind
In a reading, The Lovers asks: Am I choosing from love, or from fear? Are my actions aligned with what I actually care about?
VII – The Chariot
Keywords: Victory, willpower, control, forward momentum, overcoming obstacles, triumph
The Charioteer commands a chariot pulled by two sphinxes — one black, one white — opposing forces held together by sheer willpower. This card is about winning through determination and focus. Not luck, not talent alone — pure directed effort. When The Chariot appears, it's telling you that success is absolutely possible, but only if you stop being pulled in two directions and commit.
- Upright: Victory through will, forward momentum, overcoming challenges, focused drive, integration of opposites
- Reversed: Loss of direction, lack of control, aggression, obstacles feeling insurmountable
In a reading, The Chariot asks: What am I willing to fight for? Can I hold my competing impulses together long enough to get where I'm going?
VIII – Strength
Keywords: Inner strength, courage, compassion, patience, taming instincts, gentle power
In the Rider-Waite tradition, Strength shows a figure gently closing a lion's mouth — not with brute force, but with calm, patient presence. This is one of the most misunderstood cards: true strength isn't about overpowering things. It's about the quiet courage of staying steady when everything in you wants to react.
- Upright: Inner courage, compassion, patience, gentle strength, mastering instincts, resilience
- Reversed: Self-doubt, fear, weakness, loss of courage, inability to manage impulses
In a reading, Strength asks: Where does patience — not force — need to be applied? What would it look like to lead with compassion here?
IX – The Hermit
Keywords: Introspection, solitude, wisdom, inner guidance, seeking truth, withdrawal
The Hermit stands alone on a mountain peak, holding a lantern that illuminates just a few feet ahead. This isn't loneliness — it's intentional solitude. The Hermit has chosen to withdraw because some answers only come in silence. If you've been running from one distraction to the next, this card is asking you to stop and listen.
- Upright: Solitude, introspection, wisdom, inner guidance, seeking truth, necessary withdrawal
- Reversed: Isolation, loneliness, excessive withdrawal, rejection of guidance, fear of the inner world
In a reading, The Hermit asks: What do I already know that I haven't been quiet enough to hear? Is this a time to pull back and reflect?
X – Wheel of Fortune
Keywords: Cycles, fate, change, turning points, luck, karma, the ever-turning wheel
The Wheel of Fortune is the tarot's reminder that nothing stays the same. What goes up comes down; what's down will rise again. This card speaks to cycles, timing, and the turning points that reshape everything. When it appears, something is shifting — and the smartest move is usually to work with the change rather than against it.
- Upright: Change, cycles, turning point, good fortune, recognition of patterns, destiny
- Reversed: Bad luck, resistance to change, feeling stuck in a negative cycle, external forces
In a reading, The Wheel of Fortune asks: What cycle am I in right now? Am I fighting the current, or flowing with it?
XI – Justice
Keywords: Fairness, truth, cause and effect, accountability, balance, legal matters
Justice holds scales in one hand and a sword in the other — fairness paired with the willingness to act on it. This card says: the truth matters, and so do consequences. Fair outcomes follow integrity. If you've been honest and done the right thing, Justice is reassuring. If you haven't... this card is a wake-up call.
- Upright: Fairness, truth, accountability, honest assessment, balance, legal matters being resolved justly
- Reversed: Unfairness, dishonesty, lack of accountability, imbalance, biased judgment
In a reading, Justice asks: Am I being honest — with myself and others? What would real accountability look like here?
XII – The Hanged Man
Keywords: Pause, surrender, new perspective, sacrifice, willing suspension, letting go
The Hanged Man hangs upside-down from a living tree — voluntarily, by the look of his peaceful expression and the halo around his head. This is one of tarot's great paradoxes: sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is stop doing. Stop pushing. Let go. The insight you need won't come from trying harder — it'll come from seeing things from a completely different angle.
- Upright: Pause, new perspective, surrender, sacrifice yielding wisdom, willing suspension, seeing differently
- Reversed: Resistance to necessary pause, stalling, martyrdom, unwillingness to let go
In a reading, The Hanged Man asks: What would I see if I flipped my perspective entirely? What do I need to let go of before I can move forward?
Read the full Hanged Man tarot card meaning →
XIII – Death
Keywords: Endings, transformation, transition, release, change, necessary completion
Let's clear something up: the Death card almost never refers to physical death. In thousands of readings at Uranize, this card consistently points to endings that make room for something new — a relationship that's run its course, a career chapter closing, an identity you've outgrown. It's the card of transformation, and it's often a relief when it finally appears, because it confirms what you already knew: something needs to end so something better can begin.
- Upright: Ending, transformation, transition, necessary change, releasing the past, new chapter ahead
- Reversed: Resistance to change, fear of endings, stagnation, refusing to let go
In a reading, Death asks: What's already over that I haven't let go of yet? What needs to end so the next thing can start?
Read the full Death tarot card meaning →
XIV – Temperance
Keywords: Balance, patience, moderation, integration, healing, long-term perspective
Temperance shows an angelic figure pouring water between two cups in a continuous, flowing exchange. This is the card of balance, patience, and the slow alchemy of bringing opposites together. After the intensity of Death, Temperance says: take your time. Heal. Let things integrate naturally rather than forcing the next step.
- Upright: Balance, patience, moderation, healing, alchemy, integration, long-term perspective
- Reversed: Imbalance, excess, impatience, lack of moderation, feeling out of alignment
In a reading, Temperance asks: Where am I rushing when patience would serve better? What opposing forces in my life need to be blended, not battled?
Read the full Temperance tarot card meaning →
XV – The Devil
Keywords: Bondage, materialism, shadow, limiting beliefs, unhealthy attachments, facing the shadow
The Devil depicts two figures chained to a demonic figure — but look closely at any Rider-Waite image and you'll notice something crucial: the chains around their necks are loose enough to slip off. They could leave. They're choosing to stay. That's what makes this card so powerful. It forces you to look at the patterns, addictions, and limiting beliefs you've been telling yourself you can't escape — and admit that you actually can.
- Upright: Shadow work, limiting beliefs, materialism, unhealthy attachments, feeling trapped, examining what binds
- Reversed: Breaking free, releasing limitations, recovery, confronting shadow, reclaiming power
In a reading, The Devil asks: What am I pretending I'm stuck in? What would happen if I admitted I could leave?
XVI – The Tower
Keywords: Sudden change, disruption, revelation, breakdown-breakthrough, upheaval, necessary destruction
The Tower is the card people dread seeing — lightning strikes a tower, figures fall, everything crumbles. But here's the thing experienced readers know: The Tower only destroys what was built on a shaky foundation. If your life, relationship, or career is genuinely solid, this card won't wreck it. If something collapses when The Tower appears, it was already going to fall. The lightning just speeds things up.
- Upright: Sudden disruption, revelation, necessary destruction, sudden clarity, breakdown that enables breakthrough
- Reversed: Avoided crisis, resisting necessary change, narrowly escaping disruption, internal upheaval
In a reading, The Tower asks: What in my life is built on sand? What truth have I been avoiding that's about to become unavoidable?
XVII – The Star
Keywords: Hope, healing, renewal, faith, inspiration, guidance, possibility
After the devastation of The Tower, The Star is a deep breath. A figure kneels beneath a star-filled sky, pouring water gently onto the earth — replenishing, healing, trusting again. This card says: the worst is over. You survived it. Now healing can begin. In our editorial experience, The Star frequently appears in readings for people who've been through genuinely difficult periods and are finally ready to look up again.
- Upright: Hope, healing, renewal, faith, inspiration, guided by inner light, possibility after difficulty
- Reversed: Lost hope, disconnection, discouragement, difficulty trusting, need for reorientation
In a reading, The Star asks: What am I ready to hope for again? Can I trust that renewal is already underway?
XVIII – The Moon
Keywords: Illusion, uncertainty, the unconscious, dreams, fear, working through the unknown
The Moon lights the night with reflected, indirect light — creating shadows, distortions, and uncertainty everywhere. This card represents those times when you genuinely don't know what's real. Anxiety is high, things feel confusing, and your fears are coloring how you see the situation. The Moon doesn't necessarily mean things are bad — it means you can't see clearly yet, and making big decisions right now would be premature.
- Upright: Illusion, uncertainty, the unconscious, working through the unknown, dreams, intuition needed in fog
- Reversed: Confusion lifting, truth emerging, facing fears, moving out of illusion, returning to clarity
In a reading, The Moon asks: Am I seeing this situation clearly, or through the lens of fear? What needs to surface before I can move forward?
XIX – The Sun
Keywords: Joy, vitality, clarity, success, confidence, warmth, simple happiness
After the fog of The Moon, The Sun is uncomplicated good news. A child rides a white horse beneath an enormous, radiant sun — pure joy, pure clarity. This is one of the most unambiguously positive cards in the deck. Things are working. You can see clearly. Let yourself enjoy it.
- Upright: Joy, vitality, clarity, success, confidence, creative energy, simple happiness
- Reversed: Diminished vitality, excessive pride, difficulty seeing the positive, blocked sunshine
In a reading, The Sun asks: Where is joy available to me right now? What would happen if I stopped second-guessing and let myself shine?
XX – Judgement
Keywords: Awakening, reckoning, renewal, calling, self-evaluation, rising to a new level
Judgement shows figures rising from coffins as an angel sounds a trumpet — resurrection, reckoning, answering a call. This card appears when something deep inside you knows it's time to level up, to stop playing small, to answer whatever's been calling you. It requires honest self-evaluation, but the reward is a version of yourself you've been building toward all along.
- Upright: Awakening, self-evaluation, responding to a calling, renewal, rising to a new level of awareness
- Reversed: Ignoring an inner call, self-doubt, refusing to acknowledge truth, fear of judgment
In a reading, Judgement asks: What is calling me to rise? What honest self-assessment do I need to face before I can answer that call?
XXI – The World
Keywords: Completion, wholeness, integration, achievement, fulfillment, the experience complete
The World is the final card in The Fool's Journey — a dancing figure at the center of a laurel wreath, surrounded by the four evangelists. You made it. The cycle is complete. Lessons learned, growth integrated, and a deep sense of fulfillment that comes not from getting what you wanted, but from becoming who you needed to be. And then — because the tarot is a wheel — the next journey begins.
- Upright: Completion, wholeness, integration, achievement, fulfillment, successful conclusion, ready for the next cycle
- Reversed: Incomplete closure, loose ends, feeling almost-but-not-quite finished, impatience with the process
In a reading, The World asks: What am I completing? Can I let myself feel the fullness of everything I've experienced and learned?
Read the full World tarot card meaning →
How Can You Use This Major Arcana Guide in Your Readings?
Now that you have the core meanings for all 22 cards, here's how to put them to work in actual readings:
What Should You Do When a Major Arcana Card Appears?
Don't gloss over Major Arcana cards. They carry more weight than Minor Arcana and usually point to something you need to sit with. A good practice: when a Major Arcana card shows up, ask yourself, "If I took this message completely seriously, what would change about how I'm handling this situation?"
What Does It Mean When Multiple Major Arcana Cards Appear Together?
If two or more Major Arcana cards appear in a single spread, you're in a significant period. Multiple life themes are converging at once, and the reading deserves extra time and attention. Look at the cards as a sequence — they're often telling a story together that's more than the sum of its parts.
How Should You Track Your Major Arcana Cards Over Time?
Here's something the Uranize editorial team recommends: keep a simple log of which Major Arcana cards appear in your readings over weeks or months. You'll start to notice that the cards trace a path through The Fool's Journey that mirrors your real-life growth. It's one of the most powerful self-awareness tools tarot offers.
Want personalized guidance on what the Major Arcana is telling you? Explore your reading with Uranize's AI tarot for insights that connect these archetypal meanings directly to your unique situation.
Uranize Editorial Insight: The most common misinterpretation we see is treating tarot cards as fixed predictions rather than reflections of current energy patterns. The cards mirror your situation — they do not dictate it.
Related Articles
Deepen your tarot knowledge:
- Complete Tarot Card Meanings Guide - All 78 cards explained
- The Fool Tarot Card Meaning - Beginning The Fool's Journey
- The World Tarot Card Meaning - Completing the path
- Tarot Card Meanings Reversed - Understanding reversals for all Major Arcana
- Daily Tarot Card Draw Guide - Building a daily practice with these cards
- Tarot for Beginners - Your complete introduction
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between Major and Minor Arcana?
The Major Arcana (22 cards) addresses the big stuff — life themes, deep patterns, and turning points that reshape who you are. The Minor Arcana (56 cards) covers everyday life: practical situations, passing moods, and the day-to-day texture of things. When a Major Arcana card appears, it usually carries more weight and points to something that deserves deeper reflection. Minor Arcana cards tend to reflect more immediate, changeable circumstances.
Why are there exactly 22 Major Arcana cards?
The number 22 carries significance in numerology (as a master number) and relates to various mystical traditions including Kabbalah, where the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet are associated with the paths of the Tree of Life. The 22 Major Arcana cards emerged through the evolution of tarot over centuries, with the Rider-Waite-Smith deck (1909) establishing the meanings most widely used today.
Which Major Arcana card is the most powerful?
No single card is universally the most powerful — it depends entirely on context. The World is widely considered the most auspicious card (completion, wholeness), and The Magician packs serious manifesting energy. But "power" in tarot is contextual. The Hermit is incredibly powerful when you need to withdraw and think. The Tower is powerful when something false needs to crumble. Every card has its moment.
What does it mean when you draw only Major Arcana cards in a reading?
An all-Major-Arcana reading tells you that you're in a period of real transformation, that deep patterns are at work, or that your question touches something profoundly important. Don't rush through this kind of reading. Sit with it. Journal about it. It's telling you something that matters.
How do I memorize all 22 Major Arcana card meanings?
Don't try to memorize all 22 at once — that's the fastest way to burn out. Instead, work with one card per week. Pull it out, look at the imagery, carry it with you mentally throughout the day. Do daily draws and journal about what comes up. After 22 weeks, you won't have memorized definitions — you'll have developed an actual relationship with each archetype, which is far more valuable.
Disclaimer: Tarot readings are tools for self-reflection and personal insight. They should not be used as a substitute for professional advice in matters of health, legal issues, or financial decisions. The interpretations provided here are suggestions for contemplation, not definitive predictions.
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