A money jar spell is an easy abundance magic technique that even a beginner can pull off.
With simple, accessible materials like pennies and herbs, you can whip one of these together in 15 minutes or less.
Whether you’re just beginning to experiment with spell jars, or you want to improve your relationship with money and finances, a money spell jar is a great way to encourage positive financial energy.
Contents
Wait! Before you do this . . .
Be real with yourself.
In order to spells to work, you must be willing to put the work in. One of the most common mistakes new witches make is expecting the universe to do the heavy lifting while they sit around and twiddle their thumbs.
Don’t be that witch.
Make sure you’re doing all the things—-being intentional about your spending, accepting work opportunities that will truly benefit your growth, and making smart financial decisions about your future.
Magic helps those willing to help themselves.
Money Jar Spell Magical Correspondences
All spells should include elements that are chosen for their specific magical intent. This one includes items traditionally associated with abundance, financial well-being, and money wisdom.
Pennies or Low-Value Coins
Pennies and coins are obvious money symbols. Including pennies in a spell jar (or as an offering) is a classic technique in modern spellcraft.
Mint
Mint is frequently included in abundance magic to clear the mind and focus your attention. It’s a money-drawing herb, but not in the way you might think. Mint attracts financial wellness by sharpening the senses to aid the practitioner in making smarter, wiser financial decisions.
Allspice
In modern witchcraft, allspice symbolizes multiplication and the exponential increase of potential.
It’s also a protection herb, and it’s especially good for protecting the practitioner from herself. Specifically, the part of yourself that gets a little too carried away on Amazon.
Eucalyptus Essential Oil
Eucalyptus essential oil improves workflow and clears away negative energy at work. Which, of course, is essential to gaining ground and increasing your financial wellness.
You Will Need
-1 small, clean glass jar
-10-20 shiny new pennies
-small handful allspice berries
-dried mint
Step 1
On the first night of the waxing moon, assemble your jar in this order: mint, allspice, pennies, and essential oil.
Leave the jar on your altar until the full moon.
Step 2
On the night of the full moon, leave the jar to charge in the moonlight.
Return it to your altar and leave it for up to three full moon cycles.
That’s all, witches!

Sources & References
Contributors
Article Author: Lumina Indigo (Moody Moons)
- Over 20 years of experience with the modern pagan community
- Professional tarot reader and kitchen witch culinary wizard
- Founder of Moody Moons (established 2012)
- Specializes in in-depth research and reporting on modern spirituality topics
Article Reviewed by: Tina Caro
- 10+ years of professional spellcasting experience
- Certified yoga instructor and astrologer
- Works with 1000+ clients worldwide
- Founder and owner of Magickal Spot
Claims with Published Sources
- Money jar spells as abundance magic technique for beginners: Contemporary spellcraft and beginner witchcraft documentation.
- Spell jars as witchcraft practice: Contemporary spellcraft traditions and jar spell documentation.
- Waxing moon as appropriate lunar phase for intention-setting spells: Contemporary Wiccan and pagan lunar magic traditions.
- Full moon as appropriate for charging and activating spells: Lunar magic and contemporary witchcraft documentation.
- Pennies and coins as classic money symbols in spellcraft: Modern spellcraft traditions and money magic correspondence.
- Mint as money-drawing herb in abundance magic: Cunningham, Scott. Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs (1985). Llewellyn Publications.
- Mint associated with clearing mind and mental focus: Herb magic and contemporary witchcraft correspondences.
- Mint promoting mental clarity for financial decisions: Contemporary abundance and prosperity magic.
- Allspice symbolizing multiplication and exponential increase: Modern witchcraft herb correspondences.
- Allspice as protection herb: Cunningham, Scott. Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs (1985). Llewellyn Publications.
- Eucalyptus improving workflow and clearing negative work energy: Herb correspondences and contemporary witchcraft.
- Eucalyptus essential oil for financial wellness and workplace magic: Contemporary spellcraft and professional success magic.
Claims Based on Personal Practice & Experience
- Money jar spell as 15-minute beginner project (Lumina Indigo, 20+ years pagan community experience with beginner practitioners)
- Observations on common beginner witchcraft mistakes regarding spell work (professional educator and researcher experience)
- Concept that spells require personal effort and intentional action (Lumina Indigo, 20+ years community teaching and observation)
- Recommendation that practitioners engage in intentional spending and wise financial decisions (professional practitioner life wisdom)
- Suggestion that practitioners accept beneficial work opportunities (Lumina Indigo, 20+ years observing successful spellcraft)
- Guidance that “magic helps those willing to help themselves” (professional practitioner philosophy)
- Allspice protection specifically from excessive personal spending (Lumina Indigo, contemporary humor and kitchen witch observation)
- Selection of specific ingredients for this particular money jar formulation (professional practitioner spell design experience)
- Timing recommendations (waxing moon to full moon, three full moon cycles) (Lumina Indigo, 20+ years moon phase and spellcraft practice)
- Personal recommendations for jar assembly order and placement (kitchen witch and spellcraft expertise)
Recommended Reading on Money Magic & Jar Spells
- Cunningham, Scott. Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs (1985). Llewellyn Publications.
- Dugan, Ellen. The Wiccan Year: Sabbats and Esbats (2003). Llewellyn Publications.
- Starhawk. The Spiral Dance: A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Goddess (1979). HarperCollins.
Related Articles
- 9 Witchcraft Mistakes Beginners Always Make
- Witch Bottles: The Art of Spell Craft in a Jar
- 10 Ways to Use the Waxing Moon in Witchcraft
- 25 Ways to Honor the Full Moon
- Ritual Offerings for Spell Craft: How to Use Them
- 10 Magical Uses for Peppermint
- 9 Sacred Protection Herbs & Spices to Know
- Eucalyptus and Witchcraft: 9 Ways to Use It
Note
This article combines contemporary spellcraft documentation, published herb magic correspondences from established references, lunar phase information from Wiccan and pagan traditions, and modern money magic correspondences with Lumina Indigo’s 20+ years of experience in the modern pagan community as an educator, practitioner, and kitchen witch. Claims about herb properties and magical correspondences sourced in published references are cited as documented sources; observations about beginner witches and common spellcraft mistakes, recommendations for personal effort and intentional action in spellwork, spell design choices, ingredient selection, timing recommendations, and guidance based on professional community teaching and observation are labeled as contributor (Lumina Indigo) professional practitioner and community educator experience for transparency. The article emphasizes practical magic and responsible spellcasting for beginners while honoring the importance of personal agency alongside magical practice.




