It's a sensible thing to check before you spend. Here's an honest look at how refunds on tarot readings work.
It depends on the policy
A tarot reading is a service, not a physical product, so refund policies vary from one platform or reader to the next. The single most useful habit is to check the policy before you book — a reputable provider makes its terms clear and easy to find. Vague, hidden, or absent refund terms are themselves a warning sign about who you're dealing with.
"I didn't like the message" isn't usually a refund
Worth setting expectations honestly: not liking what a reading says isn't normally grounds for a refund. A genuine reading offers honest insight, not a product tailored to what you hoped to hear — and an honest reading sometimes tells you something you'd rather not face. That's the reading doing its job, not failing. A reading can, of course, simply miss — but disappointment with the content is different from a quality problem.
What a fair service looks like
A trustworthy provider tends to:
- Publish a clear refund policy you can read before paying.
- Stand behind quality — often with some form of satisfaction guarantee.
- Keep pricing fixed and upfront, so there are no surprise charges to dispute in the first place.
These go hand in hand with choosing a genuine reader and paying safely.
Protect yourself from the start
The best refund is the one you never need. Pay by secure card through a reputable platform, favour fixed pricing, and steer well clear of anyone using curses, fear, or escalating fees — the classic scam signals. Good choices upfront prevent most problems.
A note
This is general guidance, not legal or consumer-rights advice — your protections can depend on where you live and how you paid, so check the provider's terms and your local rights if a dispute arises.
At Kalm
Kalm keeps pricing fixed and upfront and stands behind the quality of its readings, with clear terms and a guarantee for peace of mind. When you're ready, you can start one here. It's for guidance and reflection, never a guaranteed prediction.