Six years ago, I attempted to map the 16 Myers-Briggs Type Indicators (MBTI) to the 16 Tarot court cards using a symbolic wheel and a mixture of structure, intuition, and trial-and-error. At the time, I included David Kiersey’s temperament groupings in my calculations and tried to distribute the four pairs of traits evenly among the Tarot ranks (Page, Knight, Queen, King) and suits (Pentacles, Swords, Cups, Wands).
I’ve returned to this project with a simpler approach. While I still believe that Tarot and MBTI are not systems meant for one-to-one correspondence, I’ve found surprising results in aligning them through trait-to-symbol associations.
This post compares the Kiersey-MBTI version from 2019 with an MBTI-centered version, both of which explore how these two systems may echo each other.
The 2019 Version: Kiersey Modification of MBTI Mapped with the Tarot Court Cards
I assigned the suits to the MBTI cognitive functions:
Sensing (S) → Pentacles
iNtuiting (N) → Wands
Thinking (T) → Swords
Feeling (F) → Cups
The Attitudes (E/I) and Lifestyles (J/P) could fall into any rank, but I made sure each MBTI temperament group (SJ, NJ, SP, NP) and each Kiersey group (NF and NT) got one card of each rank. Here’s how that looked.
The 2025 Version: MBTI-Centered Mapping
This time, I aligned the four MBTI pairs with all the characteristics of the court cards:
Extraversion (E) → Knight
/ Introversion (I) → Queen
Judging (J) → King
/ Perceiving (P) → Page
Sensing (S) → Pentacles
/ iNtuiting (N) → Wands
Thinking (T) → Swords
/ Feeling (F) → Cups
Each type was assigned one Tarot court card, matching both suit and rank constraints. Here's how they lined up:
SJs – Grounded, Loyal, Responsible
ESFJ King of Cups - Nurturing, emotionally steady leader
ISFJ Queen of Pentacles - Devoted, grounded caretaker <-- me
ESTJ King of Pentacles - Practical and authoritative
ISTJ Queen of Swords - Cool-headed, dutiful, principled
NJs – Visionary, Structured Intuitives
ENFJ King of Wands - Bold, motivational, future-focused
INFJ Queen of Cups - Gentle, empathic, inwardly deep
ENTJ King of Swords - Commanding strategist with clear logic
INTJ Queen of Wands - Confident, inwardly fiery, visionary
SPs – Observant, Action-Oriented
ESFP Knight of Cups - Emotionally expressive, spontaneous
ISFP Page of Cups - Gentle, artistic, emotionally sensitive
ESTP Page of Pentacles - Practical, curious, hands-on learner
ISTP Page of Swords - Cool, alert, quick-thinking
NPs – Inventive, Idealistic Explorers
ENFP Knight of Wands - Energetic, expressive, visionary
INFP Page of Wands - Dreamy, imaginative, hopeful
ENTP Knight of Swords - Fast, sharp, idea-driven
INTP Knight of Pentacles - Steady, cerebral, dedicated
Final Thoughts
The earlier system was an ambitious attempt to align the tarot court with both MBTI and Kiersey’s modifications. It was inconsistent. Many court cards felt misaligned with the emotional tone or functional energy of their paired type.
In contrast, the current system is cleaner, more internally consistent, and symbolically richer. It’s based directly on MBTI’s four dichotomies and maps onto the Tarot suits and ranks surprisingly well. Neither version is “correct,” of course. But this newer approach feels more like a conversation between systems, rather than a forced equivalency.
If you’ve worked with Tarot or MBTI, or both, I’d love to hear what resonated for you. What court card do you see in yourself?

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