Tarot reading online: sessions with an expert tarot reader
Tarot is one of the most powerful and accessible divinatory supports. On Voyanz, experienced tarot readers offer personalized online readings by chat, phone or video. Marseille tarot, Rider-Waite, Belline oracle, Lenormand: each practitioner uses the decks they master to offer you an accurate reading.
A tarot consultation isn't just about drawing cards: it's the art of interpreting them in connection with your situation, your energies and the question you ask. A good tarot reader doesn't just recite the meanings of the arcana, they feel their resonance with your personal story.
What tarot spreads can you request?
- Cross spread: 5 cards for an overview of a situation.
- Square spread: 4 cards to analyze a decision (pros/cons/advice/result).
- Relationship tarot: analysis of a relationship between two people.
- 12-month spread: monthly forecasts for the year ahead.
- Yes/No: quick reading for a closed question.
- Karmic tarot: exploration of life lessons and family inheritance.
Marseille tarot or Rider-Waite: what's the difference?
The Marseille tarot (17th century) is more traditional, symbolic, focused on energies and archetypes. It suits global and spiritual questions. The Rider-Waite (1909) is more narrative, illustrated with complete scenes, ideal for concrete questions about daily life and relationships.
Oracles (Belline, Lenormand, angel oracle) come as complement: they bring different insight, often more emotional or intuitive. An experienced tarot reader combines several supports depending on the question.
How to best prepare your tarot reading?
To optimize your consultation:
- Formulate a clear, open question ('What energies surround my relationship with X?' rather than 'Will X and I get married?').
- Avoid multiple questions in the same reading.
- Be mentally available: no reading between two doors.
- Note the messages received: they often make sense in the weeks that follow.
- Stay open to unexpected answers: tarot says what needs to be heard, not what is hoped for.