Image by **TheoCrazzolara via Pixabay**

Image by **TheoCrazzolara via Pixabay**

You don't need a special deck of tarot cards to perform divination—a deck of ordinary playing cards will suffice. I'm a professional tarot reader, but when I don't have a tarot deck with me, I might use a deck of playing cards to provide a useful reading.

I’ve included a bunch of readers’ questions at the end.

A regular tarot deck has an extra set of cards called the Major Arcana that give extra depth and power to the meaning of the spread (layout of the cards). These qualities will obviously be missing when reading with playing cards, but you can still gain some insight.

Which playing card suit corresponds to which tarot card suit?

It's a little bit harder to read playing cards since apart from the court (royal figures) cards, there are no images to guide you. This makes the numbers and the suits more important. Hearts represent cups, spades are swords, diamonds translate to pentacles, coins, or discs, and clubs represent wands, rods, batons, or staves. We will get to the number properties in the next section.

Playing Card Tarot Correspondences

Playing Card Suit Equivalent Tarot Suit Correspondences
Hearts Cups Emotions, feelings, relationships.
Spades Swords Thinking, communication.
Diamonds Pentacles, Coins, Discs Practicalities, material world.
Clubs Wands, Rods, Batons, Staves Creativity, action.

How to Read Playing Cards

Spades—like swords in a tarot deck—are connected to all aspects of thinking and communicating.

What Numbers Mean in Tarot Cards

Knowing the properties of numbers will give you a solid framework on which to base all card readings, whether they be playing cards or tarot. Remember that each attribute has a positive and negative aspect. For example, fours mean stability but they can also mean feeling stuck.

Tarot Playing Cards by Number