You want a straight answer. Not a meditation, not a journey of self-discovery, not a ten-card deep-dive into your relationship with ambiguity — just yes or no. Fair enough. Tarot can do that. But before you draw, it helps to understand what actually happens when you crush seventy-eight layered symbols down to a binary. Sometimes that compression produces genuine clarity. Other times it creates a false sense of certainty that feels like an answer but works like a blindfold.
Here is the thing about binary thinking: we reach for it when a situation has five moving parts, then feel baffled when the "answer" does not untangle anything. The question was wrong, not the card. A yes-or-no reading cuts through noise beautifully when the question is genuinely two-sided — accept or decline, stay or go, now or later. It falls apart when the question only pretends to be simple while hiding a mess underneath.
This guide gives you the complete reference — every card, every answer — plus the framework to know when to trust the binary and when to set it aside for something with more room. For the method, timing, and psychology behind yes-or-no readings, see our companion article on yes-or-no tarot.
In short: Yes-or-no tarot assigns each of the 78 cards a yes, no, or maybe answer. The Sun, The World, and Nine of Cups are among the strongest yes cards; The Tower, Ten of Swords, and The Devil are firm no cards. The method works best with genuinely binary questions about your own situation, and fails when the question hides complexity or seeks to predict another person's behavior.
How to Pull a Yes or No Card
The method is simple. The discipline is in the question.
- Formulate a clear, single-point question. Not "should I change my career and move to another city?" That is two questions. Split them. "Should I pursue a career change right now?" — clean.
- Shuffle the deck. Any method. Stop when it feels right.
- Draw one card. Place it face-up.
- Consult the reference below. Yes, No, or Maybe.
- If Maybe — do not redraw. Maybe means the question is not ready for a binary answer, or you are not ready for the answer. Sit with it.
For higher confidence, draw three cards and count: two or three yes cards = yes, two or three no cards = no, mixed = genuinely unclear.

Major Arcana Yes/No Guide
The twenty-two Major Arcana carry the strongest energy. When a Major Arcana card answers your yes-or-no question, pay attention — the answer comes with weight.
| Card | Answer | Brief Reason |
|---|---|---|
| The Fool | Yes | The leap is worth taking. Trust the unknown. |
| The Magician | Yes | You have every resource you need. Act with intention. |
| The High Priestess | Maybe | The answer exists but is hidden. Wait for more information. |
| The Empress | Yes | Growth and abundance support this direction. |
| The Emperor | Yes | Structure and discipline favor this path. Proceed with authority. |
| The Hierophant | Yes | The traditional or established path is correct here. |
| The Lovers | Yes | But only if you choose consciously, not reactively. |
| The Chariot | Yes | Victory through focused willpower. Move forward decisively. |
| Strength | Yes | You have the inner courage. Proceed with patience. |
| The Hermit | Maybe | Not yet. More solitude and reflection needed before acting. |
| Wheel of Fortune | Yes | Timing and cycles favor you. Luck is present. |
| Justice | Maybe | The answer depends on whether the situation is fair and balanced. |
| The Hanged Man | No | Surrender the timeline. This is not the right moment. |
| Death | No | Not in its current form. Something must end first. |
| Temperance | Yes | With patience and balance, yes. Not rushed, but eventual. |
| The Devil | No | Attachment or unhealthy patterns are distorting your judgment. |
| The Tower | No | The current plan will not hold. Expect disruption. |
| The Star | Yes | Hope is well-placed. Healing and renewal confirm this direction. |
| The Moon | No | Something is hidden. You do not have the complete picture. |
| The Sun | Yes | Unconditionally, clearly, joyfully yes. |
| Judgement | Yes | A calling. This is the right direction. Answer it. |
| The World | Yes | Completion and fulfillment. Everything aligns. |
Cups Yes/No Guide
Cups govern the emotional world. When Cups cards show up in a yes-or-no reading, the question is really about feelings, relationships, or inner experience — no matter how it was worded.
| Card | Answer | Brief Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Ace of Cups | Yes | A new emotional beginning. Love, compassion, or creative flow supports this. |
| Two of Cups | Yes | Partnership and mutual connection say yes. |
| Three of Cups | Yes | Celebration, friendship, and community are with you. |
| Four of Cups | No | Apathy or discontent. You are not seeing what is actually being offered. |
| Five of Cups | No | Grief or regret is clouding the question. Process the loss first. |
| Six of Cups | Yes | Nostalgia, innocence, or reunion energy supports this. |
| Seven of Cups | Maybe | Too many options, not enough clarity. Illusion may be present. |
| Eight of Cups | No | Walking away is the answer. What you are asking about has run its course. |
| Nine of Cups | Yes | The wish card. Satisfaction and contentment confirm this direction. |
| Ten of Cups | Yes | Emotional fulfillment and harmony. A strong, warm yes. |
| Page of Cups | Maybe | An emotional message is coming, but it is not yet clear. Stay open. |
| Knight of Cups | Yes | Follow the romantic or creative impulse. The offer is genuine. |
| Queen of Cups | Yes | Emotional intelligence and intuition confirm this path. Trust your feelings. |
| King of Cups | Yes | Emotional maturity and calm mastery support this decision. |
Pentacles Yes/No Guide
Pentacles address the material world — money, career, health, home, physical security. When Pentacles answer a yes-or-no question, the answer lands in concrete, practical terms.
| Card | Answer | Brief Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Ace of Pentacles | Yes | A new financial or material opportunity. The ground is fertile. |
| Two of Pentacles | Maybe | Balance is required. You can manage this, but it will take juggling. |
| Three of Pentacles | Yes | Collaboration and skilled work support this. The plan is solid. |
| Four of Pentacles | No | Holding on too tightly. Fear of loss is driving the question. |
| Five of Pentacles | No | Hardship or scarcity. This is not the right time for this particular move. |
| Six of Pentacles | Yes | Generosity and fair exchange are present. Give or receive as needed. |
| Seven of Pentacles | Maybe | The seeds are planted but results are not yet visible. Patience needed. |
| Eight of Pentacles | Yes | Diligent work will produce results. Commit to the craft. |
| Nine of Pentacles | Yes | Self-sufficiency and abundance. You have earned this — proceed. |
| Ten of Pentacles | Yes | Legacy, security, and long-term success. A deeply grounded yes. |
| Page of Pentacles | Maybe | A new opportunity is forming but requires more study or preparation. |
| Knight of Pentacles | Yes | Slow, steady, reliable progress. Not exciting, but dependable. Yes. |
| Queen of Pentacles | Yes | Practical wisdom and nurturing competence support this direction. |
| King of Pentacles | Yes | Material mastery and financial security confirm this path. |
Swords Yes/No Guide
Swords deal with the mind — thoughts, communication, conflict, truth. Swords cards in a yes-or-no reading often signal that the question is more tangled than it looks, or that you need mental clarity before the answer means anything.
| Card | Answer | Brief Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Ace of Swords | Yes | Mental clarity and breakthrough. The truth supports this. |
| Two of Swords | Maybe | Stalemate. You are avoiding the decision itself. |
| Three of Swords | No | Heartbreak or painful truth. The answer hurts, but it is honest. |
| Four of Swords | No | Rest first. You are too exhausted to make this decision well. |
| Five of Swords | No | Conflict and defeat. Even winning here costs too much. |
| Six of Swords | Yes | Transition and moving forward. Leave the difficult behind. |
| Seven of Swords | No | Deception or avoidance. Something is not being addressed honestly. |
| Eight of Swords | No | Feeling trapped, but the trap is largely mental. The answer is not yet clear. |
| Nine of Swords | No | Anxiety and fear. Your worry is distorting the question itself. |
| Ten of Swords | No | An ending. This chapter is finished. Let it close. |
| Page of Swords | Maybe | Curiosity and investigation. More information needed before committing. |
| Knight of Swords | Yes | Swift action and direct communication. Cut through hesitation. |
| Queen of Swords | Yes | Clear boundaries and honest assessment support this decision. |
| King of Swords | Yes | Intellectual authority and fair judgment. The logic is sound. |
Wands Yes/No Guide
Wands run on energy, ambition, passion, and creative drive. When Wands answer a yes-or-no question, they speak to whether you have the fire and stamina to carry this through.
| Card | Answer | Brief Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Ace of Wands | Yes | New inspiration and creative spark. The energy is there — go. |
| Two of Wands | Yes | Planning and vision. The world is open to you. Proceed. |
| Three of Wands | Yes | Expansion and foresight. Your preparations are paying off. |
| Four of Wands | Yes | Celebration and stability. A joyful, grounded yes. |
| Five of Wands | Maybe | Competition and scattered energy. You can proceed, but expect friction. |
| Six of Wands | Yes | Victory and public recognition. Success is indicated. |
| Seven of Wands | Yes | You will need to defend your position, but you can hold it. Stand firm. |
| Eight of Wands | Yes | Rapid movement and momentum. Things will happen fast. |
| Nine of Wands | Maybe | Resilience but exhaustion. You can do this, but should you? Check your reserves. |
| Ten of Wands | No | Burden and overcommitment. Adding more will break you. Simplify first. |
| Page of Wands | Yes | Enthusiasm and new adventure. The spark of excitement is a green light. |
| Knight of Wands | Yes | Bold action and passionate pursuit. Go with confidence. |
| Queen of Wands | Yes | Charisma, confidence, and creative power support this move. |
| King of Wands | Yes | Visionary leadership and bold energy confirm the direction. |

Cards That Always Mean Yes
These cards carry an almost unambiguous affirmative charge. Draw any of these for a genuine, well-formed yes-or-no question and you can trust what you got.
The Sun — the most emphatic yes in the entire deck. Joy, clarity, success, warmth. Zero ambiguity. Whatever you asked about is illuminated and supported.
The World — completion and fulfillment. Everything has aligned for this to work. The cycle is on your side.
Ace of Wands — pure creative ignition. The energy exists and is ready to be directed. Start now.
The Star — hope that is genuinely well-placed. After difficulty, this confirms the path forward is open and healing.
Nine of Cups — the "wish card." Emotional satisfaction and the fulfillment of what you have been hoping for.
Six of Wands — victory, recognition, success. The outcome you want is achievable and approaching.
Cards That Always Mean No
These cards clearly say stop, reconsider, or walk away. Respect them — they are protecting you from a decision your conscious mind may be pushing while your deeper awareness resists.
The Tower — the plan as it stands will not survive contact with reality. Not a timing issue — the structure itself is flawed.
Ten of Swords — complete ending. Whatever you asked about has already concluded at a level you may not have fully acknowledged. Continuing is not possible because there is nothing left to continue.
Five of Swords — even if you "win" this, the cost will be too high. Pyrrhic victory. Walk away.
The Moon — you are operating with incomplete or distorted information. Something important is hidden, and acting before it surfaces is a mistake.
Nine of Swords — anxiety is driving this question, not genuine inquiry. The card is not answering you — it is telling you that you are not in a state to receive an answer. Address the anxiety first.
The Devil — the desire behind this question is rooted in attachment, compulsion, or a pattern that does not serve you. The "yes" you want would feed something that needs to be starved.
When Yes/No Readings Do Not Work
The best forecasters are not the most decisive. They are the most calibrated. They know the difference between questions that have binary answers and questions that sit on a probability spectrum. They assign confidence levels instead of forcing yes-or-no.
Tarot yes-or-no readings fail in predictable situations:
When the question is not genuinely binary. "Should I change careers?" looks like a yes-or-no question, but it is actually a tangle: Am I unhappy? Is the unhappiness about the work or the workplace? Do I have the resources for transition? What would I do instead? Compressing all of that into a single card produces an answer that cannot possibly address the real complexity. Use a Celtic Cross spread or a career tarot spread instead.
When you have already decided. If you draw a "no" card and immediately think "I will draw again," you have your answer — and it is yes. You are not asking the cards. You are asking the cards to agree with you. Different activity. Notice it.
When the timing variable dominates. Some questions are not yes-or-no but now-or-later. "Should I propose?" might be "yes, but not this month." A single card cannot carry timing nuance. If you suspect timing is the real question, use a three-card spread with positions for "the situation now," "what needs to happen first," and "the likely outcome after that."
When the question involves another person's feelings or decisions. "Does she love me?" is not something tarot can answer with a binary, because it is about someone else's inner world. Tarot reads your situation, your patterns, your unconscious — not theirs. Rephrase: "Am I in a loving relationship?" or "Is this relationship growing?" Those are questions about your experience, and the cards can meet you there.
The discipline of yes-or-no tarot is not in the drawing. It is in knowing which questions deserve a binary answer and which ones need more room. A well-chosen question gets a clear card. A poorly chosen question gets confusion — and the confusion is the answer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I ask the same yes-or-no question again if I do not understand the first card?
You can, but wait at least twenty-four hours and rephrase slightly. Immediate redraws produce noise, not clarity. If the first card confused you, write it down and sit with it — the meaning often becomes clear as the day unfolds. If confusion persists after a day, make the question more specific and draw again. The issue is almost always in the question's precision, not the card's message.
What if I get a "maybe" card for an urgent question?
A "maybe" card for an urgent question is the most valuable answer you can get, because it tells you that the urgency itself is the problem. Urgency narrows perception. It pushes you to demand an answer before the situation has fully formed. The High Priestess, the Hermit, or Justice showing up as "maybe" — that is the cards telling you the information you need exists but has not reached you yet. Sometimes the most powerful response to urgency is patience.
Should I read reversed cards in yes-or-no readings?
Personal choice. Reversals add nuance: a "yes" card reversed becomes "not yet" or "yes, with obstacles." A "no" card reversed becomes "maybe" or "the difficulty is lifting." If you are a beginner, reading all cards upright simplifies the system and still works. If you are comfortable with reversals, they add a useful gradient between clean yes and clean no — which is often more honest than the binary.
How accurate is yes-or-no tarot?
Accuracy hinges on the quality of the question. A specific, genuinely binary question about your own situation produces a clear, useful answer that resonates. A vague, multi-layered, or other-directed question produces confusion that feels like inaccuracy but is actually precision — the cards are accurately reflecting the muddiness of the question. The single biggest predictor of good answers is good questions. Invest your energy there and the cards will meet you.
The appeal of yes-or-no is obvious. You want certainty in a world that provides almost none. You want the relief of a clear direction after weeks or months of circular thinking. And sometimes, for clean questions at genuine decision points, a single card gives you exactly that — a clear signal that cuts through the noise. But the deeper gift of yes-or-no tarot is not the answer. It is the discipline of formulating the question. The work of reducing a messy situation to a single, clean, answerable question teaches you more about what you actually want to know than any card could. By the time you have the question right, you often have the answer too — and the card simply confirms what your own clarity produced.