Will it happen soon?

First card

Second card

Third card

A yes-or-no tarot question is rarely just about a single word. You are usually asking whether the energy around timing is open, blocked, delayed, or asking for a clearer decision from you. This spread keeps the answer simple while still giving the situation enough room to speak.

1 What this yes-or-no spread looks at

The first card shows the current signal around the question. The second card names the main resistance or support. The third card points toward the likely movement if nothing major changes. Together, the cards help you read the difference between a clean yes, a clean no, and a not-yet.

2 How to read the answer

Major Arcana cards usually make the answer feel more consequential. Fast minor cards point to timing or day-to-day movement. Blocked or heavy cards do not always mean no; sometimes they mean the answer depends on a condition you have not met yet.

3 How to use this answer

Use the spread as a clarity check, not as permission to avoid your own judgement. If the cards feel direct, act with calm confidence. If they feel mixed, slow down and ask what information is missing before you force a decision.

Frequently asked questions

Can tarot answer yes-or-no questions?

Yes, but the most useful answer usually includes why the answer is leaning yes, no, or not yet.

What if the cards feel mixed?

Mixed cards often mean the outcome depends on timing, communication, or a choice that has not been made yet.

Should I pull again for the same question?

Give the situation time to move before repeating the same question. Re-pulling too quickly can turn clarity into anxiety.

Is this a prediction?

Treat it as a snapshot of current energy and likely movement, not a fixed verdict you cannot change.