You've been pulling single cards for a while now. Maybe you've tried a three-card past-present-future spread. It's been helpful, but lately your questions have gotten more complex — why does this keep happening to me, what's really going on with my career, how do I untangle this situation that seems to touch everything in my life at once.
Single cards are flashlights. The Celtic Cross is a floodlight.
The Celtic Cross is the most iconic, most widely used, and most deeply layered tarot spread in existence. Ten cards, arranged in a pattern that dates back over a century, mapping your situation from its hidden roots to its likely outcome. It's the spread that professional readers reach for when they need the full picture — and it's the spread that separates casual card-pullers from serious tarot practitioners.
This guide will walk you through every position, teach you how to read the relationships between cards, and give you the practical tools to start doing meaningful Celtic Cross readings — whether you've been reading for years or you're just ready to go deeper.
What Is the Celtic Cross Spread?
The Celtic Cross is a 10-card tarot spread that provides a comprehensive analysis of any question or situation. It was popularized by Arthur Edward Waite in his 1909 book The Pictorial Key to the Tarot — the same book that accompanied the now-famous Rider-Waite-Smith deck.
The spread consists of two sections:
- The Cross (cards 1-6): Maps the core situation — what's happening, what's blocking it, where it came from, and where it's heading
- The Staff (cards 7-10): Traces the path from your inner world through external forces to the final outcome
What makes the Celtic Cross special isn't just the number of cards — it's the architecture. Each position has a specific function, and the cards don't just speak individually. They speak to each other. Card 1 and Card 2 are in dialogue. Card 5 and Card 10 create an arc. Card 9 often holds the key that unlocks the entire reading.
It's not a spread you "figure out" in five minutes. It's one you learn to listen to.
The 10 Positions Explained

Let's break down each position in the Celtic Cross. Understanding what each position asks is more important than memorizing card meanings — the position gives the card its context.
The Cross — Core Situation (Cards 1-6)
Position 1: The Present — "This Covers You"
This is ground zero. The card at the center of the cross represents the heart of your question — the energy, theme, or situation that defines where you are right now.
Don't overthink this one. It's a snapshot. If you asked about your career and you draw the Four of Swords, the reading is telling you: the core of your career situation right now is rest — or the need for it. Everything else in the spread orbits around this card.
Position 2: The Challenge — "This Crosses You"
Laid horizontally across Card 1, this card represents the primary obstacle, opposing force, or complicating factor in your situation. It's what's making things difficult — or what's adding complexity.
Here's something most guides won't tell you: the Challenge card isn't always negative. Sometimes a "positive" card in this position creates its own kind of problem. The Ace of Swords crossing you might mean that a sudden burst of clarity is disrupting your comfortable ambiguity. The truth can be its own kind of challenge.
The relationship between Card 1 and Card 2 is the single most important dynamic in the entire spread. Read them together before you look at anything else.
Position 3: The Foundation — "This Is Beneath You"
This card reveals the root cause — the deep, often unconscious influence that created the current situation. It's the why behind the what.
The Foundation card frequently surprises people. You asked about a relationship problem, but the card beneath you is the Five of Swords — suggesting the real foundation isn't love trouble, it's an unresolved conflict pattern you've been carrying for much longer than this relationship has existed.
Think of this position as the soil your situation grew from. Understanding the root changes how you interpret everything above it.
Position 4: The Recent Past — "This Is Behind You"
This card shows what's fading — recent events, energies, or influences that are moving into the background but still casting a shadow over the present.
The key word here is recent. This isn't your childhood or your karmic history — that's closer to Position 3. Position 4 is the last chapter of the story. What just happened that set the stage for where you are now?
Position 5: The Crown — "This Crowns You"
Placed above the center cross, the Crown card represents your conscious goal, your best possible outcome, or the energy you're aspiring toward. It's what you want to happen — or what could happen if things go well.
This is the aspirational position. But pay attention: sometimes what crowns you is a wish that's actually working against you. If the Two of Swords crowns you, your "goal" might actually be to avoid making a decision — which is not a goal, it's a stalling tactic.
Position 6: The Near Future — "This Is Before You"
This card shows what's coming into being — the energy or events approaching in the near term. It's not the final outcome (that's Position 10), but the next chapter of the story.
Position 6 is particularly useful for timing. If you're wondering when will things shift, this card gives you a preview of the next phase. Combined with the Present card, it shows the direction of momentum.
The Staff — Path to Outcome (Cards 7-10)
The Staff is the vertical column of four cards to the right of the cross. If the Cross maps the situation, the Staff maps the journey through it.
Position 7: Your Attitude — "This Represents You"
This card reflects how you see yourself in this situation — your self-image, your attitude, your approach. It's the lens through which you're viewing everything.
This position is about perception, not reality. You might see yourself as the Three of Swords — the heartbroken victim — when the rest of the spread tells a very different story. The gap between Position 7 and the other cards often reveals your biggest blind spot.
Position 8: External Influences — "This Surrounds You"
This card represents the people, environment, and external forces shaping your situation. It's everything happening around you that you don't fully control — your family's expectations, your workplace culture, the economy, a friend's influence.
Position 8 is a reality check. You might be internally focused, convinced the issue is all about your feelings and choices, and then this card drops a Six of Swords — reminding you that your environment is already shifting, whether you're ready or not.
Position 9: Hopes and Fears — "This Is Your Hope and Fear"
This is the most psychologically revealing position in the entire spread. It exposes what you secretly hope will happen — and what you're terrified might happen. Often, they're the same thing.
Think about it: I hope they love me back and I'm afraid they love me back can coexist perfectly. Commitment is both the hope and the fear. Success is both the hope and the fear. The card in Position 9 holds the tension between desire and dread, and understanding it often provides the breakthrough insight of the entire reading.
Position 10: The Outcome — "This Is Where It's Leading"
The final card. The culmination. Where this path is heading if the current trajectory continues.
Two critical things about Position 10:
-
It's not destiny. The Outcome card shows the most likely result given the energies currently in play. Change the energy, change the outcome. Every other card in the spread gives you information about how to do that.
-
Read it in context. A "scary" outcome card isn't necessarily bad if the rest of the spread shows growth and transformation. The Three of Swords as an outcome might mean heartbreak — or it might mean a painful truth that finally sets you free.
How to Actually Read a Celtic Cross Spread
Knowing the positions is step one. Reading the spread as a coherent story is where the real skill lives. Here's a practical framework:
Step 1: Read the Core Dynamic First
Start with Cards 1 and 2 — the Present and the Challenge. This is the central tension of the entire reading. What's happening, and what's complicating it? Sit with these two cards before you look at anything else. If you can articulate this dynamic in one sentence, you've found the reading's thesis.
Step 2: Trace the Timeline
Read Cards 4 → 1 → 6 as a timeline: Recent Past → Present → Near Future. This gives you the narrative arc — where you've been, where you are, and where you're heading. Does the trajectory feel right? Does the Near Future card make sense given the Past?
Step 3: Go Deep with the Foundation and Crown
Cards 3 and 5 form a vertical axis: what's beneath you and what's above you. The unconscious root and the conscious aspiration. If these two cards are in harmony, you're aligned. If they contradict each other — say, a desire for independence (Crown) built on a foundation of fear of abandonment (Foundation) — you've found a core tension that the reading wants you to address.
Step 4: Read the Staff as Your Journey
Cards 7 → 8 → 9 → 10 tell the story of how you get from here to there. Your attitude (7), modified by your environment (8), filtered through your hopes and fears (9), leading to the outcome (10). Pay special attention to Position 9 — it's often the pivot point where the reading reveals its deepest insight.
Step 5: Look for Patterns
After reading individual cards and pairs, zoom out and look for patterns across the entire spread:
- Suit dominance: Lots of Swords? The situation is fundamentally mental. Cups everywhere? It's emotional at its core. Pentacles suggest material concerns, Wands suggest creative or spiritual ones.
- Major Arcana count: More Major Arcana cards mean bigger, more fate-driven forces at play. Mostly Minor Arcana suggests the situation is more within your control.
- Repeated numbers: Multiple Aces suggest new beginnings across the board. Several Fives indicate widespread conflict or change.
- Reversed cards: A spread full of reversals might suggest blocked energy, internal resistance, or a situation that hasn't fully manifested yet.
Common Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)
Reading Cards in Isolation
The most common beginner mistake. Each card means something different depending on its position and its neighbors. The Five of Swords in Position 4 (Recent Past) means a conflict you've moved through. The same card in Position 6 (Near Future) means a conflict that's approaching. Same card, completely different message.
Panicking Over "Bad" Cards
There are no bad cards in tarot — only uncomfortable truths. The Three of Swords in a Celtic Cross reading isn't a curse. In Position 3 (Foundation), it reveals the heartbreak beneath the surface. In Position 9 (Hopes & Fears), it might reveal your fear of being hurt again. In Position 10 (Outcome), it suggests a painful but necessary truth is coming. Context transforms everything.
Ignoring the Challenge Card
Position 2 is the key to unlocking the entire reading, and beginners often gloss over it because it's "just the obstacle." The Challenge card tells you exactly what's standing between you and resolution. Sometimes removing the obstacle is the entire point of the reading.
Asking Vague Questions
"What does my future hold?" gives the Celtic Cross nothing to work with. Try: What do I need to understand about my career transition right now? or What's the real dynamic between me and [person]? The more focused your question, the more precise the reading.
When to Use the Celtic Cross
The Celtic Cross is your go-to spread when:
- Your situation is complex and involves multiple factors
- You want the full picture — not just advice, but understanding
- You're at a crossroads and need to see all the forces at play
- Smaller spreads aren't cutting it — you keep pulling cards but something feels incomplete
- You want to understand why — not just what, but the root causes and hidden dynamics
It's not the right spread when you need a quick yes/no (try our Yes or No spread for that) or when you want a light, daily check-in (a single card draw works better).
Try It Yourself
Ready to lay down your own Celtic Cross? Our free Celtic Cross reading tool guides you through all 10 positions with a beautiful, interactive layout — complete with card flip animations, position-by-position explanations, and optional AI-powered analysis that reads the connections between your cards.
No deck required. No experience necessary. Just a question and the willingness to look at the full picture.
The Celtic Cross has endured for over a century because it works. It meets the complexity of real human situations with a structure that's deep enough to hold all the nuance, all the contradiction, and all the truth. Ten cards, one spread, the whole story.
Your story is waiting. Begin your Celtic Cross reading.
