Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles Tarot Meaning
Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles row toward sailing ships. Six of Swords ferries figure across water — transition, leaving trouble shore, calmer horizon ahead; Three of Pentacles watches vessels from cliff — craft mastery, confident outlook, opportunity approaching. Together they describe relocation after deciding drama ends, quiet exit toward regional opportunity, or you rowing while ships prove smoother shore was worth passage because transition aims outward.
The key insight is that passage can meet craft mastery. Six of Swords without Three of Pentacles can move without scaling aim; Three of Pentacles without Six of Swords can expand without leaving storm. Row — ships meet the boat.
Six of Swords & Three of Pentacles as Cards of the Day
Where the situation is heading
Likely outcome
How events will develop
Six of Swords & Three of Pentacles: Main Energy of the Combination
What this combination says
The story the cards tell together
Core theme
Six of Swords & Three of Pentacles in Love
New relationships
Existing relationships
Feelings between partners
Relationship prospects
Six of Swords & Three of Pentacles in Work and Career
New job or career start
Business and entrepreneurship
Growth and advancement
Collaboration and partnerships
What Does Six of Swords & Three of Pentacles Mean for You?
Why this combination now?
The message of this pair
What to pay attention to
Advice From the Six of Swords & Three of Pentacles Combination
What to do
What to avoid
Where to focus
When Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles Fall Together
When Six of Swords comes before Three of Pentacles
When Three of Pentacles comes before Six of Swords
Individual card meanings
- SiSix of Swords
The Six of Swords tarot card signals transition away from difficulty toward calmer ground. Upright it favors moving on; reversed it warns of resistance to change or unfinished emotional baggage.
Full meaning → - ThThree of Pentacles
The Three of Pentacles tarot card celebrates skilled collaboration, quality craftsmanship, and shared effort toward a solid result. Reversed it warns of poor teamwork or cutting corners.
Full meaning →
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers about this tarot card.
1What does Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles mean in tarot?
This combination signals quiet transition meeting craft mastery and collaboration. Six of Swords brings passage; Three of Pentacles brings growth and confident outlook. Together they mean: transitional craft mastery — leaving storm toward sailing ships.
2Is Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles a good combination?
Yes for healing relocations toward growth, fresh start with regional aim. Tender momentum. Caution is running without processing.
3What does Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles mean in love?
In love, leaving unhealthy bond toward shared adventure, or trip away that opens horizon.
4What does Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles mean for relationships?
For couples, quiet move toward craft mastery together, or passage before regional chapter.
5What does Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles mean for the future?
Calmer growth within months — boat reaches shore as ships arrive.
6What does Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles mean for work?
Professionally, quiet pivot to new market, relocation enabling regional craft mastery.
7Can Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles indicate a new person entering your life?
Yes — guide on transitional growth path, partner who rows toward shared horizon.
8What does reversed Three of Pentacles with Six of Swords mean?
Reversed Three of Pentacles with upright Six of Swords often means moving while craft mastery stalls — or escape without ships sailing.
9How often does this combination appear and what does it mean?
Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles appear around moving abroad for opportunity, couples leaving drama for tour. Timing when boat meets ships.
10How is Six of Swords and Three of Pentacles together different from each card alone?
Six of Swords alone moves without outward scale; Three of Pentacles alone expands without passage. Together they create transitional growth — boat meeting ships. The combination turns leaving into scaling.