The World Tarot Card Meaning
The World represents completion, achievement, and fulfillment. A cycle has ended, and you are ready for the next phase.
Core Meanings
Upright
The World represents completion, achievement, and fulfillment. A cycle has ended, and you are ready for the next phase.
Reversed
Incompletion, no closure, emptiness.
Card Details
Element
Earth
Astrology
Saturn
Number
21
Yes/No
Yes
Description
A figure dances inside a laurel wreath, holding two batons. In the corners are the four living creatures (lion, ox, eagle, man).
Reading Positions
Past
You completed a major cycle or achieved a long-term goal. You found your place in the world. This completion set the stage for your new journey.
Present
You have arrived. The cycle is complete. Enjoy the feeling of wholeness and achievement. You are in sync with the universe and ready for the next level.
Future
Success and completion are assured. You will achieve your heart's desire and travel to new worlds. A happy ending and a new beginning.
In Context
Celtic Cross
In "Outcome," the best possible result. Completion. In "Self," wholeness.
Three Card Spread
The end of the journey. Fulfillment. Total integration.
Yes / No
In Yes/No, it is a "Yes"—the world is your oyster.
Love & Relationships
Fulfillment, marriage, travel with partner, happy ending.
As Feelings
Not specified
Career & Finance
Reaching a goal, international travel, success.
Spiritual & Manifestation
Twin Flame
Not specified
Manifestation
Shadow Work
What is keeping you from finishing? The shadow World is incompletion. Are you afraid to close the door? Or do you feel like you don't belong? Embrace your wholeness.
Meditation
Visualize yourself dancing in the center of a laurel wreath. You are surrounded by the four elements. You are weightless, spinning in joy. You are one with the cosmos. Everything is perfect.
Archetypal Journey
The Hero's Path
The journey is complete. The World represents the integration of all lessons, the union of self and universe. The hero is no longer separate but dances in the center of the cosmos. It is wholeness, completion, and the beginning of a new cycle on a higher level.
Numerology
21 (Twenty-One). 2+1=3 (Empress). The World is the ultimate manifestation and fulfillment. It represents the synthesis of the beginning (Magician) and the end (Truth). It is the number of cosmic consciousness.
Jungian Psychology: The World
Archetype
The Self (Individuation) / Wholeness
Shadow Aspect
The World represents Wholeness and the completion of the cycle (Individuation). The shadow is Incompletion and Stagnation. This manifests as the 'failure to launch' or the inability to finish what one starts. The person gets 99% of the way there and self-sabotages at the finish line because they fear the emptiness that follows completion (the void before the new cycle). It can also appear as the 'Ouroboros Trap'—stuck in a loop, repeating the same cycle over and over without evolving to the next level. The individual feels trapped in their own life, unable to break out of the pattern. There is a sense of heaviness, as if carrying the weight of the world, rather than dancing with it.
Integration Advice
Integrating The World is the realization of the Self. As Carl Jung wrote in *The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious*, 'The self is not only the centre, but also the whole circumference which embraces both conscious and unconscious.' To integrate this card, you must accept that you are already whole. You do not need to add anything to yourself; you only need to integrate what is already there. Actionable advice: Celebrate your completions. Make a list of everything you have finished in the last year, no matter how small. If you feel stuck, look for the 'missing piece'—is there a lesson you are refusing to learn? Once you acknowledge it, the cycle will close. Step through the wreath into the new world.
Historical Evolution & Symbolism
Evolution Timeline
- 115th Century (Visconti-Sforza): Depicts two putti holding a globe containing a city (possibly the New Jerusalem or Milan), representing the perfection of the world or the celestial city.
- 21650s (Tarot de Marseille): 'Le Monde' establishes the image of a naked figure (often appearing female or androgynous) dancing inside an oval laurel wreath, surrounded by the four living creatures (angel, eagle, lion, bull).
- 31909 (RWS): Waite depicts a dancer wrapped in a purple sash, holding two batons (polarities), dancing within a green wreath. The four Evangelists in the corners observe the completion of the cycle.
- 41944 (Thoth): Renamed 'The Universe', Crowley depicts a dancing maiden manipulating a great serpent (Kundalini). The imagery suggests the total integration of all elements and the cosmic dance of Shiva.
Academic Citations
- Waite, A. E. (1911). *The Pictorial Key to the Tarot*. 'It represents also the perfection and end of the Cosmos... the state of the restored world.'
- Case, P. F. (1947). *The Tarot*. 'The World represents the cosmic consciousness... the dancer is the Truth.'