The Wheel of the Year is one of the oldest frameworks humans have for understanding time — not as a line from past to future, but as a circle returning through seasons of growth, fruition, release, and rest. This 13-card spread maps your personal year onto that cycle. One card for each of the eight sabbats. One for each season. A center card holding the year's overarching theme. It is the most thorough annual spread you can do, and it works whether you practice a pagan path, follow no spiritual tradition at all, or just want a psychologically rich way to reflect on where you stand in your own yearly cycle.
In short: This 13-card spread uses the Wheel of the Year structure — eight sabbats plus four seasonal cards plus a center — to create a complete map of your year's psychological terrain. Humans make meaning by organizing their lives into stories with chapters, turning points, and themes. The Wheel of the Year gives that instinct a concrete structure: not a fortune told, but a story discovered.
When to use this spread
The Wheel of the Year spread works best at natural turning points: the winter solstice, the new year, your birthday, or any moment when you feel the need to zoom out and see the full arc rather than the day-to-day details. It is especially powerful if you have been making decisions reactively and want to reconnect with a longer rhythm.
Use this spread when you want to understand the overall pattern of your year rather than answer a specific question. It does not handle "should I take this job?" or "will this relationship work?" It addresses something deeper: what is the story my year is telling, and where am I in it?
This spread also works well as a year-in-review tool. Lay it out in December and read it as a retrospective: what did each season actually bring, and how does that compare to what the cards suggested? The gap between intention and reality is where the most valuable self-knowledge lives.
The 13 positions explained
The spread is arranged in a circle, beginning at the bottom (Yule/Winter Solstice) and moving clockwise through the year. The center card is placed last.
Sabbat cards (the inner wheel)
| Position | Sabbat | Approximate date | Theme |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Yule (Winter Solstice) | Dec 20-23 | Rebirth in darkness — what is being born in your deepest winter |
| 2 | Imbolc | Feb 1-2 | First stirrings — where the first signs of new growth appear |
| 3 | Ostara (Spring Equinox) | Mar 19-22 | Balance and emergence — what comes into equal light and dark |
| 4 | Beltane | May 1 | Passion and creation — where your creative and vital energy peaks |
| 5 | Litha (Summer Solstice) | Jun 20-22 | Full illumination — what is most visible and celebrated |
| 6 | Lughnasadh | Aug 1 | First harvest — what you can gather from your efforts so far |
| 7 | Mabon (Autumn Equinox) | Sep 21-24 | Gratitude and balance — what you are grateful for, what you release |
| 8 | Samhain | Oct 31-Nov 1 | Ancestor wisdom — what the past teaches you, what dies to feed next year |
Season cards (the outer wheel)
| Position | Season | Theme |
|---|---|---|
| 9 | Winter | The quality of your inner life — rest, reflection, hidden growth |
| 10 | Spring | The quality of your emergence — courage, vulnerability, new direction |
| 11 | Summer | The quality of your outward expression — visibility, joy, performance |
| 12 | Autumn | The quality of your release — what you harvest and what you surrender |
Center card
| Position | Theme |
|---|---|
| 13 | The year's overarching theme — the thread connecting all seasons |
Position-by-position reading guide
Position 1 — Yule (Winter Solstice). Your seed card, the beginning that happens in total darkness. Whatever appears here is forming below your awareness. The Ace of Pentacles means a material opportunity is germinating. The High Priestess means deep intuitive knowledge is taking shape. Do not try to act on this card. Just know it is there, working in the dark.
Position 2 — Imbolc. The first candle in the window. This card shows where new life first becomes visible — a tender shoot, easily damaged by frost. The Page of Wands means a creative impulse is surfacing. The Star means hope is returning after a difficult stretch. Protect what this card names. It is still fragile.
Position 3 — Ostara (Spring Equinox). Equal day and night. This card reveals what comes into balance — and what the balancing costs. The Two of Swords means a decision must be faced. Justice means fairness is the emerging theme, and fairness always requires something to be weighed.
Position 4 — Beltane. Fire and desire. The card of your year's peak creative and vital energy — where passion concentrates. The Empress means fertility and abundance at their most literal. The Knight of Wands means passionate action that does not wait for permission. Lean into this card.
Position 5 — Litha (Summer Solstice). Maximum light. Everything is visible. This card shows what reaches its fullest expression — and the subtle shadow that accompanies full illumination. The Sun here is the most literal match: joy, success, visibility. But even The Sun casts shadows. What does your success reveal that you would rather keep hidden?
Position 6 — Lughnasadh. The first harvest — grain is cut, bread is baked. This card shows the tangible results of your first half-year's labor. The Nine of Pentacles means self-sufficiency earned through sustained effort. The Seven of Pentacles means the harvest is coming but requires more patience.
Position 7 — Mabon (Autumn Equinox). Equal day and night again, but this time the darkness is gaining. This card names what you must release with gratitude. The Six of Swords means leaving a difficult situation behind. The Ten of Cups means recognizing the emotional abundance you have before the year turns inward.
Position 8 — Samhain. The veil between worlds thins. This card connects you to ancestral wisdom, to lessons from those who came before, to the part of yourself that must die so next year's self can live. Death here is the most powerful placement — total transformation, nothing wasted. The Eight of Cups means walking away from what no longer feeds you, even if it once did.
Positions 9-12 — Season cards. These four cards describe the overall quality of each season rather than a specific event. Read them as adjectives. Winter might be "restful" (Four of Swords) or "isolating" (The Hermit). Summer might be "celebratory" (Three of Cups) or "overextended" (Ten of Wands). They give you the emotional weather report for each quarter.
Position 13 — Center. The spine of the reading. Every other card connects to this one. If The Wheel of Fortune appears here, the year's theme is change itself — cycles, luck, the understanding that what rises will fall and that is not tragedy but rhythm. If Temperance appears, the theme is integration and patience. This card stays fixed. The seasons rotate around it.
Sample interpretation
Say you draw The Hermit as your center card (Position 13). The year's theme is solitude and inner wisdom — not loneliness, but chosen withdrawal for the purpose of self-knowledge. Now every sabbat card gets read through that lens. The Ace of Wands at Beltane means your creative peak arrives through solitary practice, not collaboration. The Three of Cups at Mabon means your autumn harvest is the return to community after a period of necessary isolation. Each card gains meaning from the center, and the center gains specificity from each card.
This is how humans naturally build meaning: we identify a theme and organize events around it. The Wheel of the Year spread makes that process visible and intentional.
Tips for reading this spread
Lay all thirteen cards before reading any of them. The temptation is to interpret each card as you draw it, but this spread works as a whole. Lay the complete circle, step back, and look at the pattern. Where are the Major Arcana concentrated? Any clusters of one suit? The overall visual pattern tells a story before you read a single card.
Photograph the spread. You will want to revisit it throughout the year. At each sabbat, return to the photograph and see how the card's meaning has evolved as your circumstances shifted.
Do not treat it as a fortune. This spread does not predict your Beltane or guarantee your Lughnasadh harvest. It reveals the psychological themes available to you at each station of the year. What you do with those themes is your own choice.
Frequently asked questions
How is the Wheel of the Year spread different from a yearly horoscope spread?
A horoscope spread assigns one card per calendar month. The Wheel of the Year follows the older sabbat cycle, which reflects natural turning points — solstices, equinoxes, and cross-quarter days — rather than arbitrary calendar divisions. The result is a more psychologically resonant structure because it tracks actual shifts in light, energy, and season.
Do I need to follow a pagan path to use this spread?
Not at all. The Wheel of the Year is a seasonal framework, not a religious one. It works because it maps onto the biological rhythms that affect everyone: changes in light, temperature, and the body's hormonal responses to seasonal shifts.
When is the best time to do a Wheel of the Year reading?
The winter solstice or New Year are traditional starting points, but any moment of reflection works. Your birthday is particularly strong — it makes the reading personally cyclical rather than calendar-bound.
Can I use this spread for a specific project rather than my whole year?
Yes. Replace "year" with your project's lifespan and the sabbats become project milestones. Position 1 becomes the project's inception, Position 5 its peak visibility, Position 8 its completion or transformation.
Time is not a line. It is a wheel, and you have been turning with it your entire life — through seasons of growth and dormancy, harvest and release. This spread makes that turning conscious. Explore how the full spectrum of 78 cards maps onto your personal seasons. Ready to see your year as a whole? Try a free reading.