Free Chinese tarot reading online
You can do a Chinese tarot reading — the Yi Jing — for free, directly online. The principle: one question, one figure, a reading that illuminates your situation. No prediction, no fortune telling: an image to look at, to decide more clearly.
How to do a free reading
First phrase the question on your mind — a choice, a tension, a decision. Avoid “will it work?” questions: prefer “how do I approach…?” or “what attitude should I take…?”. Then draw a figure, and read it in relation to your situation.
The free reading takes a few seconds, with no sign-up. The drawn figure is drawn at random — it is the source of the reading, not the algorithm.
Free online, or in the app
The web version lets you draw and read for free. The Daoa app goes further: it keeps the trace of your readings (your Path), offers an AI-supported reading tied to your question, and a concrete next step.
Asking your question well
The quality of the reading rests mostly on the quality of the question. A good question is open, honest and about you — your attitude, your next step — rather than about what others will do. Take a moment before drawing: that act of clarifying is what gives the reading its value.
Common figures and what they illuminate:
Do a free reading now
Ask your question and draw a figure — free, no sign-up.
Frequently asked questions
- Is the reading really free?
- Yes. You can ask a question and draw a figure for free online, with no sign-up and no card.
- Do I need to create an account?
- Not for the online reading. The Daoa app offers an account to keep the history of your readings (your Path), but the free reading doesn't require it.
- How many readings can I do?
- As many as you like online. What helps most is to draw for a real question, then let the reading work, rather than drawing again and again.
Other themes
- Chinese tarot cardsThe “cards” of Chinese tarot are the 64 Yi Jing figures: how you draw and read them.
- Chinese tarot and loveLooking at a relationship differently, instead of predicting what the other will do.
- Chinese tarot and workClarifying a career choice: which move is right, and when.
- The meaning of the hexagramsWhat the 64 hexagrams mean, and how to read the one you draw.
- Chinese tarot: yes or no?Why the Yi Jing doesn't answer yes or no — and what it offers instead.
- Chinese tarot and the futureThe Yi Jing doesn't predict the future: it illuminates the present it's decided from.