Horary Astrology vs Tarot: Which Gives Better Answers?

6 min read
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Split composition comparing a horary astrology chart wheel with tarot cards

You have a question about love, career, or a big decision. You want real guidance, not a horoscope that could apply to anyone. So you're weighing your options: tarot or astrology?

Both horary astrology and tarot can answer specific questions. Both have long histories. Both have passionate practitioners who swear by them. But they work in fundamentally different ways — and understanding those differences can help you choose the right tool for the moment.

How each method works

Tarot

Tarot uses a deck of 78 cards (22 Major Arcana and 56 Minor Arcana). You shuffle the deck while focusing on your question, then draw cards into a spread. The reader interprets the cards based on their imagery, position in the spread, and relationship to each other.

The process is intuitive. Two readers looking at the same spread might offer different interpretations. The cards serve as a mirror for the reader's intuition, and the richness of the imagery allows for layered, nuanced readings.

Horary astrology

Horary uses the actual positions of the planets at the moment you ask your question. The astrologer casts a chart — a real astronomical snapshot of the sky — and reads it according to rules developed over centuries.

The process is technical. The chart is objective: Mercury is either applying to Saturn or it isn't. The Ascendant is in Gemini or it's in Cancer. Two experienced horary astrologers reading the same chart should arrive at very similar conclusions, because the rules are specific and well-documented.

Key differences

The basis: intuition vs. astronomy

This is the fundamental divide. Tarot relies on the reader's intuitive connection to the cards. The cards themselves are symbolic tools — they don't represent anything happening in the physical world at that moment.

Horary relies on the actual sky. The planets really are where the chart says they are. The aspects between them are mathematically precise. This gives horary an objective foundation that appeals to people who want their guidance rooted in something measurable.

Neither approach is inherently "better" — they're different kinds of knowing. But if you're someone who finds comfort in systems, data, and verifiable positions, horary's astronomical basis may resonate more.

The answer: narrative vs. verdict

Tarot tends to give you a story. The cards paint a picture of the energies at play, the challenges ahead, and the possible outcomes. A tarot reading about a job question might explore your feelings about work, the dynamics with your colleagues, and the emotional journey ahead.

Horary tends to give you a verdict. The chart shows whether the significators connect or don't — and from that, you get a yes or no. A horary reading about the same job question tells you: yes, you'll get it, probably in about three weeks. Or: no, this one isn't going to work out, and here's what the chart suggests about why.

Both are valuable. Sometimes you need the story. Sometimes you need the answer.

Reproducibility

If you do a tarot reading and then do another one on the same question an hour later, you'll draw different cards. The interpretation may shift. This isn't a flaw — it reflects the fluid, intuitive nature of the method. But it does mean that tarot's answers can feel unstable if you're prone to re-asking.

A horary chart is cast once. The chart for "Will I get this job?" asked at 2:47 PM on Tuesday is fixed. You can look at it again next week or next month and the planets haven't moved (in the chart). The answer doesn't change. Traditional horary astrologers are also clear: don't ask the same question twice. The first chart holds.

Specificity of timing

Tarot can suggest timing through various systems (seasons, numbers on cards, astrological correspondences), but timing is not its strongest suit. A reader might say "soon" or "within a few months," but precise timing is difficult.

Horary can often pinpoint timing with surprising specificity. The degrees between applying planets translate to days, weeks, or months, depending on the signs involved. "The Moon applies to Jupiter in 4 degrees in a cardinal sign — expect news in about 4 days." This kind of timing is built into horary's structure.

When tarot is the better choice

Tarot excels in situations where:

  • You need emotional exploration — when the question isn't really yes-or-no, but about understanding your feelings and the energies around a situation
  • You want creative insight — the imagery of the cards can spark realizations and new perspectives that a planetary chart might not provide
  • The situation is complex and multi-layered — tarot spreads can address multiple dimensions of a situation at once (past, present, future, advice, obstacles)
  • You're seeking spiritual or psychological guidance — many people use tarot as a reflective practice, almost like journaling with symbols
  • You value the personal connection with a reader — a good tarot reader brings their own wisdom and empathy to the session

Tarot is wonderful at opening up a conversation. It invites you to explore, reflect, and find meaning. For many people, the act of sitting with the cards is itself therapeutic.

When horary astrology is the better choice

Horary excels when:

  • You need a direct answer — yes or no, will this happen or won't it
  • Timing matters — you want to know when, not just whether
  • You want objectivity — the chart is the same regardless of who reads it
  • You're analytically minded — you want to understand the reasoning behind the answer, not just trust someone's intuitive hit
  • The question is concrete — "Will I get the apartment?" rather than "What does the universe want me to know about my living situation?"
  • You've already explored your feelings — you know how you feel, you've thought it through, and now you just want to know what's going to happen

Horary is especially useful for people who've tried tarot and found themselves pulling cards repeatedly, hoping for a different answer. The horary approach gives you one chart, one answer, and clear reasoning for why.

Can you use both?

Many people do — and it works well when you use each for what it does best.

A common approach:

  1. Start with tarot when a situation first arises, to explore the energies and understand the landscape
  2. Turn to horary when you've crystallized a specific question and need a definitive answer
  3. Return to tarot if the situation evolves and you need to process new developments

For example, imagine you're considering a major career change. You might:

  • Pull tarot cards to explore your feelings about leaving your current job, what fears are holding you back, and what energies are available to you
  • Ask a horary question: "Will I get the position at Company X?" to get a concrete answer about a specific opportunity
  • After the outcome, use tarot again to reflect on the experience and plan your next steps

There's no conflict between the two. They're different lenses on the same situation.

What about accuracy?

This is the question everyone wants to ask, and it deserves an honest answer.

Both tarot and horary have long traditions of providing useful guidance. Both also have limitations and can be wrong.

Tarot's accuracy depends heavily on the reader. A skilled, experienced reader with strong intuition can be remarkably insightful. But the subjective nature of interpretation means quality varies widely. The same spread can be read in very different ways.

Horary's accuracy depends on the astrologer's technical skill and the clarity of the question. The method has a documented track record going back centuries — William Lilly's 17th-century case files show impressive results. The rules-based approach means there's less room for subjective interpretation, but technical errors or unclear questions can still lead to wrong answers.

If you're curious about horary's track record, we explore this in depth in our article on whether horary astrology is accurate.

What practitioners say

Many experienced practitioners actually use both methods. Some tarot readers have added horary to their toolkit for times when clients need clear, actionable answers. Some horary astrologers pull tarot cards for personal reflection.

The divide between the two is more about method than philosophy. Both start from the same premise: that the moment you sincerely ask a question, something in the fabric of things reflects the answer. Tarot finds that reflection in the cards. Horary finds it in the sky.

Making your choice

Here's a quick guide:

Choose tarot if your question sounds like:

  • "What should I know about this situation?"
  • "What energies are at play in my love life?"
  • "What's blocking me from moving forward?"
  • "What do I need to understand about myself right now?"

Choose horary if your question sounds like:

  • "Will I get this job?"
  • "Is this person coming back?"
  • "Should I buy this house?"
  • "When will I hear an answer?"

And if you're not sure, ask yourself: do I need to explore or do I need to know? Exploration points to tarot. Knowing points to horary.

Try horary for your next question

If you've got a specific question that you've been sitting with — something concrete, something you genuinely need answered — horary can give you the clarity you're looking for. No cards to shuffle, no intuitive interpretation required. Just the planets, your question, and centuries of astrological tradition.

Ask your question now and let the chart speak.


New to horary? Start with our guide: What Is Horary Astrology?

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