The Sun - Rider-Waite-Smith tarot card

Major Arcana · 19

The Sun Tarot Card Meaning

Upright
joysuccessvitalityclarityconfidence
Reversed
dimmed joydelayed successforced positivityclouded confidence
Yes or No
Yes
Element
Fire
Astrology
Sun

What the card shows

An enormous sun with a serene human face fills the sky, its rays alternating straight and waved, pouring light onto a garden wall crowned with four great sunflowers. Before the wall, a naked child sits laughing astride a white horse, arms flung wide, a red feather curling from the wreath on his head and a huge red banner streaming from one hand. No saddle, no bridle, no fear. It is the most unguarded moment in the whole deck.

The Sun: upright meaning

Some cards need interpreting; this one mostly needs accepting. The Sun is joy, plain and at full wattage: success that is visible to everyone, health and vitality returning, clarity after confusion, the warmth of things simply going well. The child rides without saddle or fear because nothing here requires defense, and that is the card's deeper instruction, let yourself enjoy this openly, without bracing for the catch or apologizing for the shine. Whatever you asked about stands in good light. Wins arrive, truths clarify, energy comes back. Take the win at face value; not every gift has fine print.

The Sun: reversed meaning

Even reversed, the Sun refuses to become a dark card; it becomes a dimmed one. Success is still coming but delayed, or achieved and strangely unsatisfying because you have not paused to feel it. Joy may be blocked by exhaustion, pessimism running on habit, or the peculiar modern trap of performing happiness instead of having it, forced positivity is this reversal's signature. Occasionally it flags ego glare: shining so hard you cannot see others squinting. The light is intact behind the cloud. Rest, drop the performance, let yourself be genuinely pleased by one true thing today, and the warmth returns.

The Sun: love & relationships

Upright

Warmth without games: a relationship in a genuinely happy season, affection expressed openly, fun restored to a bond that had gone administrative. For singles this card is radiant, joy is magnetic, and the connections formed under it start honest. Celebrate each other visibly; the light multiplies when shared.

Reversed

The love is real but the light is low, a couple too depleted for delight, happiness performed for the group chat while flatness sits at home, or small resentments filtering the sun. Nothing here is broken. Schedule actual joy together, the silly, unproductive kind, and watch the temperature recover.

The Sun: career & money

Upright

Visible success: the launch that lands, recognition in front of the room, work that energizes instead of drains. An excellent card for anything requiring confidence, interviews, presentations, going public with a project. Money warms too, rewards arriving, ventures growing in full view. Enjoy it without waiting for permission.

Reversed

A win is delayed or landed flat, achievement without the satisfaction that was supposed to come with it. Burnout may be filtering everything, or the goal was inherited rather than chosen. Before pushing harder, reconnect with what you actually enjoy about the work; effort powered by real interest reads differently to everyone, including you.

The Sun: yes or no?

Yes.

Yes, the clearest yes in the deck. The Sun affirms your question with unusual confidence: success, joy, and clarity attend the outcome, and no hidden clause lurks behind the warmth. If any card permits optimism without hedging, it is this one. Move forward in full daylight, and let yourself actually enjoy what you are building toward.

Related cards

Frequently asked questions

If the question is where is the purest good news in the deck, most readers point here. The World may mark grander completion and the Star gentler hope, but the Sun is joy with no asterisk: success, vitality, and clarity all at once, upright meanings with essentially no dark side. Even its reversal only dims rather than negates. When it appears, the reading's weather report is sunshine, and you are allowed to believe it.

Because the state the card describes is childlike, not childish: unguarded joy, the ability to be delighted without irony or armor. The child rides a white horse with no saddle or bridle, pure trust in motion, arms wide because nothing needs defending. Waite frames it as innocence restored on the far side of experience. In readings it invites you to drop the bracing and enjoy openly, the catch you are waiting for is not coming.

It is the deck's strongest vitality card: energy returning, recovery progressing, the body's basic aliveness reasserting itself. People often draw it as convalescence turns the corner or when the honest prescription is sunlight, movement, and play. Read it as encouragement about direction, never as a diagnosis or a reason to skip care, tarot reflects, doctors treat. If you are unwell, the Sun pairs beautifully with an actual appointment.

Yes, it is the deck's most resilient reversal. Upside down, the Sun means delayed or dimmed rather than denied: the success still arrives but later, the joy exists but exhaustion or forced positivity is filtering it. The card's core promise survives inversion. Treat the reversal as a maintenance notice, rest, stop performing happiness, reconnect with genuine pleasure, rather than a change in forecast. The light is behind the cloud, not gone.

Four great sunflowers crown the garden wall, flowers famous for turning to face the light, thriving in full exposure, and standing in rows like a small crowd. Readers take them as flourishing made visible: growth that does not hide, joy that faces its source. Some link the four to the four suits or elements, all of life blooming at once. For you, they endorse living turned toward what warms you, publicly.

It is the arcana's own order, 18 then 19, and one of its most hopeful arcs: confusion resolving into clarity. Read it as a fog now, daylight soon story, the uncertainty, anxiety, or hidden information of your Moon season is temporary, and what follows is not merely relief but genuine joy. Practically: avoid locking in big decisions during the foggy stretch, because the landscape looks completely different once the Sun arrives, and it is arriving.

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