Tarot · Spread — 3 Card Reading · 3 positions
Breathe deep. Ask clearly.
Ask your question, or let the cards send you a message. The spread holds whatever you bring.
Three cards, one answer
The free three-card spread is the most versatile tool in tarot. Three cards, no prescribed positions — you choose which story you want to read out of the three cards. Maybe "past, present, future". Maybe "situation, obstacle, solution". Maybe "body, mind, spirit". Any three-card question works with this spread, because the cards take on the structure of your question instead of imposing one on you. It is deeper than a single card and faster than a long reading — the golden middle.
What the free three-card spread can do
The free three-card spread is the simplest way to read a story out of tarot cards. Three cards are enough to draw a movement: a beginning, a middle, an end. Or a theme, an obstacle, a lever. Or a question, an advice, a consequence. You lay the three cards next to each other and decide which logic to read them in. The middle card almost always plays a special role — it is the pivot, the thing that connects the other two. Anyone who internalises that single move can take the three-card spread through almost any tarot situation.
When this spread fits
The three-card spread fits when:
- you want to read a three-step story (beginning, middle, end)
- you have a question that needs more depth than a single card but does not warrant a full spread
- you want to invent your own three-card structure ("what to hold", "what to release", "what to draw in")
- you want to give someone else a quick reading
- you are practicing tarot and learning to put three cards in relation at once
How to actually read the three cards
Before you draw, decide on a structure. Write it down or hold it in your head: three words like "situation — obstacle — solution". That clarity matters, because the deck responds to the question you asked — not the one you reverse-engineer afterwards. When reading, start in the middle: that card is usually the heart of the answer. Ask how the left card leads to it and how the right card emerges from it. If the three cards show a clear movement (pain, healing, freedom), you have a clear story. If they contradict or feel disconnected, the message itself is one: what you asked about is not in flow right now. Always note your first impression — it is usually closer to the truth than the second, more cautious reading.
Three-card spread — frequently asked questions
- What is the difference from the past-present-future spread?
- The free three-card spread has no fixed positions, you choose the structure yourself. Past-present-future is a predefined variant — if you want a timeline, use that directly.
- Which three-card structures work best?
- Reliable ones: situation/obstacle/solution, body/mind/spirit, beginning/middle/end, what to hold/release/draw in, you/relationship/others.
- How specific does my question need to be?
- Specific enough that the cards can answer concretely, broad enough that the deck has room for a story. "Should I go out tomorrow?" is too narrow — "How is my social life right now?" is just right.
- What if only one of the three cards feels clear?
- Then that is the answer. The other two show the context in which that one card unfolds its meaning. A clear card flanked by two diffuse ones is still a clear card.