top of page

Tarot Personality Card & Soul Card: Discover Yours by Birth Date — Complete Guide with Calculator

tarot personality card reading scene with mystical woman and tarot cards

What Is a Tarot Personality Card and a Soul Card?


This tarot personality card calculator allows you to instantly discover your personality and soul card using your birth date.


Most people think of tarot as a reading tool — a deck of cards shuffled and drawn to reflect a moment in time. But there is a quieter, more personal branch of tarot that has nothing to do with fortune-telling: tarot numerology, and specifically the system of Personality Cards and Soul Cards.


These two cards are derived from your date of birth using a simple addition formula rooted in the tradition of the Major Arcana. Unlike a daily card pull, which changes with the day, your Personality Card and Soul Card are fixed for life — they are considered your archetypal companions, the energies that run through everything you do.


The system was developed and popularised by tarot scholar Mary K. Greer in her foundational book Tarot for Your Self, and has since become one of the most widely used personal tarot methods in the world.


  • Your Personality Card reflects how you engage with the outer world: your approach to challenges, your visible strengths, and the lessons life tends to bring you repeatedly.

  • Your Soul Card reflects the deeper current beneath your personality: your inner drive, your soul's longer purpose, and what you are ultimately moving toward across your lifetime.


Together they form a portrait that many people find startlingly accurate — not because tarot is magical, but because the Major Arcana archetypes are distilled from thousands of years of human psychology, mythology, and storytelling.


How to Calculate Your Tarot Birth Cards?


The calculation is straightforward. You add all the digits of your full birth date (day + month + year) together, then reduce until you reach a number between 1 and 21. That number corresponds to a card in the Major Arcana.


Step 1: Write out your full birth date as numbers. For example: 18 August 1990 = 18 + 08 + 1990


Step 2: Add them together. 18 + 8 + 1990 = 2016


Step 3: Add the digits of that sum. 2 + 0 + 1 + 6 = 9 → The Hermit (Personality Card)


Step 4: If your Personality Card is a two-digit number, add those digits together for the Soul Card. If it is a single digit, Personality and Soul Card are the same.


Example with a two-digit result: 12 August 1985 = 12 + 8 + 1985 = 2005 → 2 + 0 + 0 + 5 = 7 → The Chariot (Personality Card) → 7 is single digit, so Soul Card = The Chariot also.


Example yielding two different cards: 29 October 1987 = 29 + 10 + 1987 = 2026 → 2 + 0 + 2 + 6 = 10 → Wheel of Fortune (Personality Card) → 1 + 0 = 1 → The Magician (Soul Card)





The 21 Major Arcana: Meanings for Every Personality & Soul Card?


I — The Magician


Archetype: The Creator. The Initiator. The One Who Acts.


The Magician is the card of conscious, skillful creation. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone who moves through the world as a maker — someone who sees raw material where others see nothing, and who knows instinctively how to assemble the tools at hand into something real. You do not wait for permission or perfect conditions. You begin.


The Magician's table holds all four elemental tools: the cup, the wand, the sword, and the pentacle — representing emotion, will, intellect, and material reality. Having this card means you have access to all four. Your challenge is focus: not the absence of power, but the discipline to direct it.


As a Soul Card, The Magician points to a life purpose rooted in manifestation — in turning vision into form. You are here to demonstrate that intention, applied with skill, changes the world.


Wear it when: You are beginning something new. Launching a project, a chapter, a conversation that matters.



II — The High Priestess


Archetype: The Keeper of Silence. The Knower.


The High Priestess sits between two pillars — one black, one white — holding a scroll she does not show you. She represents the knowledge that cannot be transferred through words: the deep, felt knowing that arrives not from thinking but from listening. If this is your card, you receive information differently from most people. You sense what is unspoken. You read the room before anyone opens their mouth. You feel the truth of a situation in your body before your mind has assembled the evidence.


This is not mysticism — it is a highly developed form of pattern recognition that your nervous system performs constantly. The High Priestess asks you to trust it rather than override it with logic.


As a Soul Card, she points to a life of inner authority. Your deepest purpose involves accessing, holding, and sometimes transmitting a wisdom that cannot be taught — only lived.


Wear it when: You are navigating something uncertain, something that requires you to trust your inner compass over external noise.



III — The Empress


Archetype: The Nurturer. The Creator of Life. The Abundant One.


The Empress is the great generative force of the natural world rendered as a woman — fertile, sensory, patient, and breathtakingly powerful. If this is your Personality Card, you have an enormous capacity to make things grow: relationships, ideas, organisations, families, creative works. You feel the world through your senses. You find beauty habitually. You give generously, often more than is wise.


The Empress's challenge is receiving. She is so naturally abundant that she can forget to replenish herself, and what cannot be replenished eventually runs dry. This card asks you to treat your own needs as sacred — not because self-care is fashionable, but because your creative power literally depends on it.


As a Soul Card, The Empress points to a life purpose rooted in creation and care — in bringing things into being and tending them into flourishing.


Wear it when: You are in a creative season. When you are building something and need to remember that your energy is the foundation everything else stands on.



IV — The Emperor


Archetype: The Architect. The Builder of Systems. The Father.


The Emperor sits on a stone throne decorated with ram's heads — the symbol of Aries, of initiative and force. He has built something. He governs it. He is responsible for it. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone who thinks structurally — who sees systems where others see chaos, and who has a natural authority that others follow without quite knowing why.


The Emperor's power comes not from dominance but from reliability. He is the person who shows up, who builds the framework that others can work within, who makes the hard call and lives with it. His challenge is learning that structures designed to serve can, over time, become cages — and that the wisest builders know when to tear down and rebuild.


As a Soul Card, The Emperor points to a lifelong purpose of creating lasting order — institutions, families, enterprises, or bodies of work that outlive the builder.


Wear it when: You are stepping into leadership. When you need to remember that your authority is real and your structure serves others.



V — The Hierophant


Archetype: The Bridge. The Teacher. The Keeper of Tradition.


The Hierophant stands between worlds — between the institutional and the sacred, between what has been handed down and what the individual makes of it. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone who understands at a deep level that shared meaning matters. That community, ritual, and tradition are not constraints — they are containers that allow the sacred to be held and transmitted across generations.


You may be a teacher, a mentor, a spiritual guide, or simply the person in any room who holds the memory of how things have been done and why. The Hierophant's challenge is distinguishing between tradition that still serves and tradition that has calcified — and having the courage to update the latter.


As a Soul Card, The Hierophant points to a purpose of transmission: receiving wisdom from what has come before and passing it forward in living form.


Wear it when: You are teaching. When you are working to build something that will outlast you — a community, a body of work, a way of doing things.



VI — The Lovers


Archetype: The Chooser. The Integrator. The One Who Loves Whole.


The Lovers is consistently the most misread card in the Major Arcana. It is not simply about romantic love — it is about the choices that define us, and about the alignment between who we are and how we live. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone who cannot sustain inauthenticity. Your whole system rejects it. You feel the wrongness of a misaligned choice — in your body, in your sleep, in the texture of ordinary days — and you are unable to ignore it indefinitely.


This card asks: are your choices truly chosen, or merely convenient? It points to a life in which genuine alignment — in love, work, values, and self — is not optional but essential.


As a Soul Card, The Lovers points to a purpose of integration: learning to hold the opposites within yourself, and to make choices from your deepest truth rather than your surface comfort.


Wear it when: You are standing at a crossroads. When you need to remember that the right choice is the honest one, not the easy one.



VII — The Chariot


Archetype: The Victor. The One Who Does Not Stop.


The Chariot is pulled by two sphinxes facing in different directions — and the charioteer holds no reins. His control comes not from pulling them into line but from an inner mastery so complete that opposing forces move forward together. If this is your Personality Card, you have a capacity for focused, sustained effort that most people do not. You can hold contradictory impulses — emotion and logic, caution and boldness — and direct them as a single force toward a goal.


The Chariot's lesson is not how to accelerate but how to choose direction. Its challenge is recognising that not every battle is worth winning, and that the deepest mastery sometimes looks like stillness.


As a Soul Card, The Chariot points to a purpose of triumphant perseverance — of demonstrating, across a lifetime, that will and discipline applied with integrity can carry a person through anything.


Wear it when: You are in a season of sustained effort. When you need to remember that the momentum you've built is real, and that you have what it takes.



VIII — Strength


Archetype: The Gentle One Who Does Not Break.


Strength shows a woman closing the mouth of a lion — not with force but with her bare hands, with a flower crown on her head, and with a composure that suggests she and the lion have met before. If this is your Personality Card, you carry a quality of courage that is easily underestimated by others because it does not perform. You do not need applause to continue. You do not need conditions to be easy in order to show up fully.


Your particular form of strength lies in how you meet the difficult things inside yourself — the grief, the anger, the fear — with something that is closer to compassion than suppression. This is rarer than any other kind of power, and it is the quality that allows you to be genuinely helpful to people who are struggling.


As a Soul Card, Strength points to a life purpose of courageous tenderness — of demonstrating that love and patience are not weakness, but the most enduring forces in the world.


Wear it when: You are navigating something that requires your full steadiness. When you need to remember that your gentleness is not a gap in your armour — it is the armour.



IX — The Hermit


Archetype: The Seeker. The Lantern-Bearer. The One Who Walks Alone.


The Hermit stands on a mountain peak in the dark, holding a lantern that illuminates only the next step. He has not climbed to escape the world — he has climbed to see it clearly, and to return carrying something real. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone for whom solitude is not a consolation prize but a genuine necessity. You need periods of withdrawal not because you are antisocial but because something essential in you can only be heard in the quiet.


You likely know things — about people, about situations, about yourself — that you arrived at through experience and reflection rather than instruction. This makes you an unusually honest and trustworthy guide for others, precisely because what you offer is not borrowed wisdom but your own.


As a Soul Card, The Hermit points to a purpose of illumination: lighting the way for others through the knowledge you have gathered by walking your own path honestly.


Wear it when: You are in a season of turning inward. When the world is loud and you need to remember that the quiet you seek is not absence — it is arrival.



X — Wheel of Fortune


Archetype: The Cyclical One. The Reader of Tides.


The Wheel of Fortune turns constantly — and the figures on it rise and fall not because of their merit but because the wheel moves. If this is your Personality Card, you have a relationship with change that most people do not. You understand, perhaps from hard experience, that conditions are always temporary: the difficulties and the abundances alike. This gives you a resilience that others find remarkable — when things fall apart, you are not destroyed, because you know this is not the final state.


The Wheel's gift is the ability to work with momentum rather than against it: to ride currents that others resist, and to rest in stillness when the rushing would be futile.


As a Soul Card, the Wheel of Fortune points to a life of conscious participation in change — of learning, across many turns, to flow rather than grip.


Wear it when: You are between seasons — when something is ending and something else has not yet arrived. As a reminder that the turn is not the end.



XI — Justice


Archetype: The Truth-Teller. The One Who Sees Clearly.


Justice holds scales and a sword — instruments of measurement and decisive action. If this is your Personality Card, you have an unusually calibrated sense of fairness that functions almost like a physical sense.


You feel imbalance the way others feel temperature. You are drawn to situations that require clear discernment, honest assessment, and the willingness to name what is true even when it is inconvenient.

Justice does not mean harshness — it means honesty applied with care. The card's challenge is extending to yourself the same honest compassion you apply to others.


As a Soul Card, Justice points to a purpose of truth-bearing — of living and working in ways that add clarity and fairness to the world.

Wear it when: You are navigating something that requires you to hold your ground ethically. When you need to remember that the truth, spoken clearly and with care, is always the right choice.



XII — The Hanged Man


Archetype: The Willing Surrenderer. The One Who Waits.


The Hanged Man is suspended upside-down from one foot — and his expression is serene. He has chosen this position. The reversal has given him a perspective that is unavailable to those still rushing through their days right-side-up. If this is your Personality Card, you have a gift for suspension that others often mistake for passivity. You can tolerate not-knowing. You can wait for clarity rather than forcing a decision before its time.


This is extraordinarily rare, and it is the quality that allows you to make choices that are genuinely considered rather than reactive. The card's invitation is always the same: what old way of seeing are you being asked to release in order to perceive something truer?


As a Soul Card, The Hanged Man points to a life purpose of voluntary sacrifice and perspective-shifting — of being willing, repeatedly, to give up the view you are comfortable with in order to see more clearly.


Wear it when: You are in a season of uncertainty — when you cannot move forward yet and need to remember that the waiting is not wasted time.



XIII — Death


Archetype: The Transformer. The Sacred Threshold-Keeper.


Death is the most feared card in the tarot and, in practice, one of the most liberating. It almost never indicates physical death. It indicates the end of something — a role, a relationship, a chapter, a version of yourself — that has run its full course. If this is your Personality Card, you have likely been through multiple profound transformations already. You have lost things that felt like they were you, only to find that what remained was something more honest, more durable, more truly yours.

You do not cling to what is finished. This is a quality of unusual courage, and it makes you a profoundly regenerative presence in the lives of those around you: someone who has walked through endings and come back able to show others that the other side exists.

As a Soul Card, Death points to a life purpose of transformation — of being the person, in every room and every relationship, who helps things release so that something new can begin.

Wear it when: You are in the middle of an ending. When you need to remember that the ground beneath your feet is solid even when everything above it is changing.

XIV — Temperance

Archetype: The Alchemist. The Blender of Opposites.

Temperance shows an angel pouring liquid between two cups — endlessly, patiently, without spilling a drop. The word itself comes from the Latin temperare: to mix in due proportion. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone who finds the middle way — not as a compromise that satisfies no one, but as a genuine synthesis, a third thing that neither extreme could produce alone.


You work slowly and work well. You do not rush processes. You understand, perhaps better than anyone, that transformation cannot be forced without breaking what you are trying to transform. Your calm is not the calm of someone who doesn't feel — it is the calm of someone who has learned to feel without being swept away.


As a Soul Card, Temperance points to a purpose of alchemical integration — of being the person who brings together what seems irreconcilable and shows that wholeness is possible.


Wear it when: You are in a long process — one that requires patience and steady attention rather than heroic effort. As a reminder that you are not behind.



XVI — The Tower


Archetype: The Catalyst. The One Who Has Survived the Lightning.


The Tower is struck by lightning and figures fall from its windows — and what the image does not show is what comes after: the clearing of air, the honest assessment of what the structure actually was, and the beginning of something built on ground that is genuinely solid. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone who has experienced sudden, significant disruption — and who has discovered that you are still standing when the dust settles.


You carry something that those who have never been through a Tower moment rarely possess: the knowledge that catastrophe and ending are not the same thing, and that what falls in a Tower event was, on some level, always going to fall.


As a Soul Card, The Tower points to a life purpose of catalysis — of being the person who, through your own honest reckoning with disruption, helps others see that breakdown can precede breakthrough.


Wear it when: You are rebuilding. When you need a reminder that what you are building now is on better ground than what came before.



XVII — The Star


Archetype: The Hope-Bringer. The One Who Pours Anyway.


The Star follows The Tower in the Major Arcana — she appears after the lightning, in the stillness that follows devastation. A figure kneels by water and pours from two vessels, giving freely, to the earth and to the stream. If this is your Personality Card, you are someone who carries hope not as a performance of positivity but as a genuine, cellular-level orientation toward renewal. People feel better in your presence, often without being able to explain why.


The Star's hope is not naive — she has seen The Tower. She knows what has fallen. She pours anyway, because she understands that the earth can still receive, and that growth is still possible. This is the rarest kind of courage: not the courage to fight, but the courage to keep giving.


As a Soul Card, The Star points to a life purpose of healing and inspiration — of being a source of quiet, genuine hope for the people and places your life touches.

Wear it when: You are someone else's light right now — when you are giving hope to others and need to remember to replenish your own. When things have been hard and you need something to remind you that the sky is still full of stars.



XVIII — The Moon


Archetype: The Deep Diver. The One Who Sees in the Dark.


The Moon illuminates without the clarity of the Sun — it casts shadows, it distorts, it makes the familiar strange. A wolf and a dog howl beneath it, a crayfish emerges from the depths, two towers stand at the edge of the known world. If this is your Personality Card, you live closer to the unconscious than most people ever will. You feel moods and atmospheres that others do not register. You perceive the unspoken thing in the room — the tension behind the smile, the fear beneath the confidence.


This is a gift that can feel like a burden when it is not understood. The Moon asks you to befriend the depths rather than fear them — to understand that the strange and shadowy parts of you are not threats but territories of extraordinary wisdom waiting to be inhabited.


As a Soul Card, The Moon points to a life purpose of depth and inner navigation — of bringing the unconscious into awareness, for yourself and for those around you.


Wear it when: You are navigating something emotionally complex. When you need to remember that your sensitivity is not a vulnerability — it is your most precise instrument.



XIX — The Sun


Archetype: The Illuminator. The One Who Warms Everything.


The Sun is the card of uncomplicated, radiant joy — the kind of happiness that does not wait for conditions to be right before it decides to shine. If this is your Personality Card, you carry a warmth that is almost solar: rooms feel different when you enter them, people feel more alive and more seen in your company, and your enthusiasm for the things you love is genuinely contagious.


This is not naivety. You are not unaware of difficulty. You have simply chosen, with full knowledge of the world's complexities, to be a force of light within them. The Sun's challenge is maintaining that genuine warmth without performing it — staying actually joyful rather than merely cheerful.

As a Soul Card, The Sun points to a life purpose of illumination — of bringing clarity, warmth, and genuine joy to the people and places your life touches.

Wear it when: You want to remember what you are at your best. When life has been heavy and you need something to carry your own light back to you.

XX — Judgement

Archetype: The Awakened One. The One Who Answers the Call.

Judgement shows figures rising from open tombs, arms lifted, faces turned upward — awakening to something that can no longer be ignored. The angel above them blows a trumpet: not a warning, but a summons. If this is your Personality Card, you have felt this summons — that recurring sense that your life is asking something of you that goes beyond comfort, safety, and the expectations of others.

This is not grandiosity. It is the honest recognition that you carry gifts designed for a larger scope than you have perhaps allowed yourself so far, and that the world is asking you to use them more fully. Judgement also carries the invitation to forgive — to release the verdicts you have rendered against yourself and others that have hardened over time into walls.

As a Soul Card, Judgement points to a life purpose of awakening — of being someone who, through your own answering of the call, helps others recognise and answer theirs.


Wear it when: You are at a threshold moment — when you know something is being asked of you and you are deciding whether to answer. When you need to remember that the trumpet is not sounding to judge you. It is sounding to wake you up.



XXI — The World


Archetype: The Complete One. The Dancer.


The World shows a figure dancing inside a wreath — held by the whole, moving freely within it, surrounded by the four elements, the journey behind her and everything open ahead. If this is your Personality Card, you have a deep, hard-won relationship with completion. You know what it means to see something all the way through — to arrive at a place that once seemed impossibly far, to stand in it, and to find that it is real.


There is a wholeness to you that others sense: not the wholeness of someone who has never been broken, but the richer wholeness of someone who has brought all of it — the joy and the loss, the expansion and the grief — into something coherent and alive. The World dances because the dance itself is the point.


As a Soul Card, The World points to a life purpose of integration — of being someone who demonstrates, through your full embodied presence in the world, that wholeness is possible.


Wear it when: You have completed something. When you need to remember that you are allowed to stand in what you have built, what you have survived, and what you have become — and let it be enough.



About MioMondoo's Tarot Card Necklaces


MioMondoo is an Istanbul-based jewelry brand founded in 2013 by Kaan Gürdil. Every piece in the Tarot Card collection is handcrafted in 925 sterling silver, with options in oxidized silver and 18k gold plating. Each necklace is cast from an original design — not printed or laser-cut — with a pendant height of 25.4mm (1 inch) on a Dodge chain in a range of lengths.


The Tarot Card Necklace Collection currently includes: The Magician, The High Priestess, The Empress, The Emperor, The Hierophant, The Lovers, The Chariot, Strength, The Hermit, Wheel of Fortune, Justice, The Hanged Man, Death, Temperance, The Tower, The Star, The Moon, The Sun, Judgement, The World, and The Fool.


All pieces are available directly at miomondoo.com/tarot-card-jewelry. MioMondoo also supplies museum shops, cultural institutions, and wholesale buyers — enquiries at info@miomondoo.com.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is a tarot personality card?


A tarot personality card is a Major Arcana card calculated from your full date of birth using numerology. It reflects your characteristic way of engaging with the outer world — your visible strengths, recurring life lessons, and the archetypal energy that colours your personality. The system was developed by tarot scholar Mary K. Greer.


What is a tarot soul card?


A tarot soul card is derived from your personality card: if your personality card number is two digits, you add those digits together to find the soul card. It represents the deeper current beneath your personality — your inner drive, longer-term purpose, and the quieter, more enduring energy that shapes your life choices from below the surface.


How is a tarot personality card different from a zodiac sign?


A zodiac sign is based on the position of the sun on the date of your birth and reflects a broad personality type shared by roughly one-twelfth of the population. A tarot personality card is calculated from your complete birth date — day, month, and year — producing a result specific to you. The Major Arcana's 21 archetypes offer a different, narrative-based lens: rather than describing personality traits, they describe life themes, challenges, and purposes.


Can my tarot card change?


Your Personality Card and Soul Card, calculated from your birth date, are fixed for life — they are considered your lifetime companions. Other tarot systems, such as the Tarot Year Card (calculated from your current year's birthday) do change annually and describe the themes of a specific period.


What does it mean to wear your tarot card as a necklace?


Wearing your tarot card as a necklace functions as a wearable archetype — a daily reminder of the qualities you are cultivating, the challenges you are working with, and the deeper purpose your birth date points toward. It is not a superstition or a talisman in any literal sense, but a meaningful object that keeps your attention on something true about who you are and what you are here to do. Many people find it a more personally resonant form of symbolic jewelry than a zodiac sign, because it reflects the specific configuration of their entire birth date rather than their birth month alone.


Are MioMondoo tarot necklaces made from real silver?


Yes. All MioMondoo tarot card necklaces are cast in 925 sterling silver. Each piece is available in three finishes: polished silver, oxidized silver (which brings out the engraved detail in a darker contrast), and 18k gold plating. Pendant dimensions are 25.4mm height × 15.6mm width, on a Dodge chain with various length options.


Which tarot card necklace should I buy as a gift?


If you know the recipient's birth date, use the calculator at the top of this page to find their Personality and Soul Card — this makes for an unusually personal and meaningful gift. If you don't know their birth date, consider the card whose meaning most closely reflects who they are or what they are navigating: The Star for someone rebuilding after difficulty, The World for someone who has just completed something significant, The Sun for someone who brings light to others, or The Lovers for someone standing at a meaningful crossroads.


Explore the Full Collection


Every Major Arcana card described in this guide is available as a handcrafted 925 sterling silver necklace, in silver, oxidized silver, and gold plated finishes.



MioMondoo — Ancient Coin & Symbolic Jewelry. Istanbul, founded info@miomondoo.com · +90 542 225 3333

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page