Justice - Rider-Waite-Smith tarot card

Major Arcana · 11

Justice Tarot Card Meaning

Upright
fairnesstruthaccountabilitycause and effectclear judgment
Reversed
unfairnessdishonestyavoiding accountabilitybiased judgment
Yes or No
Maybe
Element
Air
Astrology
Libra

What the card shows

Between two stone pillars hung with a purple veil, a crowned figure in red robes sits facing you directly, eyes level and unavoidable. The right hand holds a double-edged sword straight upright; the left holds a set of golden scales at perfect rest. A square gleams on the crown, and one white-shoed foot edges out from under the robe, as if ready to stand and act on the verdict. There is no blindfold in this version of justice. She sees exactly who you are.

Justice: upright meaning

Actions are about to meet their consequences, and if you have acted honestly, that is good news. Justice governs the moment accounts get settled: decisions handed down, truths surfacing, effort finally weighed accurately, legal and formal matters moving toward fair resolution. The sword in her hand cuts both ways on purpose, the same honesty that vindicates you will also name your part in whatever went wrong. Drawing this card upright asks you to tell the truth, take responsibility for your side, and make decisions with your head clear of wishful thinking. Fairness is available here, but it starts with being fair yourself.

Justice: reversed meaning

Something in the scales is off. Reversed, Justice points to unfairness in play, being blamed beyond your share, a decision tilted by bias, a legal or formal matter dragging or breaking wrong, or to accountability being dodged, possibly by you. The most uncomfortable version is self-deception: a story you keep telling in which your own role has been quietly edited out. Before fighting the external unfairness, audit the internal ledger. Owning your actual share of a situation, no more, no less, is often the exact move that gets the scales moving again.

Justice: love & relationships

Upright

The relationship is being weighed, honestly, and imbalance is the thing to watch: who gives, who decides, who apologizes. Upright, fairness can be restored through frank, calm accounting. For singles, choose with your eyes open; the truth about a person is visible early if you let yourself see it.

Reversed

One-sidedness has set in, or a dishonesty is quietly warping things. Someone may be keeping score without ever showing the scoreboard. If you have been treated unfairly, say so plainly; if you have been unfair, repair it before resentment files its own verdict.

Justice: career & money

Upright

Contracts, negotiations, reviews, and legal or formal matters trend toward fair outcomes, especially when your documentation is clean and your dealings have been straight. You get what your work has actually earned, which cuts whichever way it cuts. Financially: honesty in the books, balance in the budget, agreements in writing.

Reversed

You may be facing a rigged game, credit taken, a review slanted, terms that read fine and land foul. Gather evidence rather than heat. Double-check your own compliance and paperwork too; reversed Justice loves finding the loose thread on both sides of a dispute.

Justice: yes or no?

Maybe.

Justice answers conditionally, which makes her a maybe with a rule attached: you will get what is fair, so the verdict depends on the honest merits of your case. If you have acted with integrity and your request is just, lean yes. If the question involves cutting corners or hoping something stays hidden, lean no. The scales do not do favors; they do accuracy.

Related cards

Frequently asked questions

It is the deck's clearest signal that a legal or formal matter is moving toward resolution on the merits, which favors you exactly to the degree that the facts do. Upright, honest dealings and good documentation tend to be rewarded; reversed warns of bias, delay, or weak spots in your own position. A card is reflection, not counsel, though. For anything with real stakes, your lawyer's advice is the reading that matters.

The scales weigh; the sword acts. Together they describe complete justice: careful, balanced assessment first, then a clean decisive cut once the truth is established. The sword is double-edged deliberately, judgment cuts both directions, including toward the person asking. In practice the card tells you to gather facts patiently, then decide firmly, and to skip neither half. Weighing forever is cowardice; cutting without weighing is cruelty.

It puts the relationship's fairness on the table: the balance of effort, voice, apology, and sacrifice between you. Justice often appears when one partner has been quietly over-functioning or when an unspoken grievance needs daylight. It favors the calm accounting conversation over the explosive one. It can also mark formal steps, agreements, cohabitation terms, even prenups, where clarity now prevents court later.

In the practical sense, yes: the card runs on cause and effect, what was done produces what arrives, and drawing it means a consequence cycle is completing. It is less mystical than the word karma suggests. No cosmic bookkeeper is punishing anyone; choices simply mature into outcomes. If your past actions in the matter were sound, expect vindication. If not, expect the bill, and remember that paying it cleanly is how the cycle closes.

Justice, card 11, is the courtroom: earthly accounts settled, fairness applied, decisions made with clear eyes in the middle of life. Judgement, card 20, is the resurrection: a summing-up near the end of a long cycle, hearing a call to rise into a new chapter, self-evaluation more than verdict. Justice weighs a situation; Judgement wakes a life. Drawing Justice means the current matter needs truth and balance now.

Two audits, in order. First the internal one: write down your honest role in the situation, the part your usual story minimizes, because reversed Justice thrives on self-editing. Then the external one: collect facts, documents, and dates about the unfairness you suspect, and address it through calm, evidence-based channels rather than heat. Accountability taken voluntarily is cheaper than accountability imposed, and it is usually what flips this card upright.

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