Not every spell has to unravel the fabric of the cosmos or reduce your enemies to a smoldering pile of ash. Sometimes, you need a spell to aid you in your everyday life; a spell that can do many different, yet relatively minor things. What if I told you that with a slight gesture and mumbled incantation, you could heat a cup of tea, snuff out a roaring campfire, or even have a shower of silver sparks spell out your name? Prestidigitation offers you all of this and more.
If you've got roleplaying aspirations and want to save those precious spell slots for the heat of battle, prestidigitation might just be your next favorite cantrip.
- What does prestidigitation do?
- Who can cast prestidigitation?
- Why we love this spell
- Prestidigitation FAQs
What Does Prestidigitation Do?
Prestidigitation is a cantrip from the transmutation school. It has a wide range of uses. The fact that you can get so much utility out of a spell that requires no spell slots and only needs verbal and somatic components makes it an extremely valuable and fun tool for the imaginative spellcaster. These uses include:
- The creation of a harmless sensory effect, such as a puff of wind, a small display of sparks or lights, distant or faint music, or even smells and flavors.
- Lighting or snuffing out a small flame.
- Cleaning or dirtying an object less than one cubic foot in size.
- Chilling, warming, or affecting the flavor of up to a cubic foot of nonliving matter.
- Having a symbol, colors, or writing appear on the surface of an object for one hour.
- Creating a nonmagical hand-sized trinket or object that lasts until your next turn.
As you can see, some of the uses of this spell are limited only by your imagination (and what the DM lets you get away with). We address some of the most egregious examples of pushing the spell beyond its limits in our FAQ section.
Prestidigitation vs. Other Cantrips
Prestidigitation has a great deal of range, but it really shines when a spellcaster finds a creative use for one of its many effects and not when used as a replacement for other cantrips. For example, the small campfire you can create with prestidigitation won't immediately harm a creature because that's what create bonfire is meant for. That said, if a creature were to walk into the campfire after it was started, it could certainly do damage. Following a similar vein, minor illusion can create much more complex sensory effects than prestidigitation, be it an intricate sound or detailed illusion. But prestidigitation can create smells, which minor illusion cannot.
You should pick prestidigitation over these other cantrips if you're looking for a spell that increases your utility rather than combat prowess. Like the cleric's cantrip thaumaturgy or the druid's druidcraft, prestidigitation can be used in social and exploration encounters to great effect, though it likely won't move the needle in terms of your damage output.
Who Can Cast Prestidigitation?
Wizards, artificers, bards, warlocks, and sorcerers have the ability to pick up this versatile cantrip at 1st level and whenever their respective class gains a new cantrip. It's also available to various subclasses that gain access to one of these class's spell lists, such as Arcane Tricksters. Beyond this, the ability to cast prestidigitation can be obtained through various magic items, the Magic Initiate, Aberrant Dragon Mark, or Strixhaven Initiate feats, or by choosing a race that grants a free cantrip, like the high elf.
Why We Love This Spell
We love prestidigitation because it's as powerful and fun as a player's creativity. Need to change the taste of a cup of wine to disguise all that nasty poison you poured into it? Prestidigitation has you covered. What about tricking a shop owner with a fake bag of gold or a shiny ruby that vanishes the moment you've made the exchange? You even could conjure up a fake invitation to a noble's wedding or leave a fake clue that leads right to a trap for that would-be pursuer in a dungeon.
Aside from its practical uses in roleplay, prestidigitation can add a great deal of flavor and color to your game, literally! Imagine improving the taste of an innkeeper's shoddy ale for a night, magically cleaning your boots before entering a divine temple, or silencing a roaring fire as you enter a room, so that everyone turns to see that a powerful spellcaster has just made their presence known. The possibilities are endless, and that's why the spell is just so much fun. Remember though, if you conjure a magical fart for hijinks, the rules of "they who smelled it dealt it" still apply, so be slick about it.
FAQ: Prestidigitation
Can prestidigitation create fire?
Yes! But with some caveats. According to the rules as written (RAW), prestidigitation can light a candle, a torch, or a small fire. Be mindful that unless you're starting a fire in a very dry and flammable place, it's going to take a while for that fire to become significant. When it comes to lighting other surfaces—or enemies!—on fire with prestidigitation, it's going to be up to your DM's judgment on whether or not you're overextending the power of the spell.
Can prestidigitation cure a hangover?
No, prestidigitation isn't a healing spell. However, you could change the taste of an alcoholic beverage to trick an unknowing NPC into accidental intoxication, right before a battle or a surprise attack. That would be cool.
Can you use prestidigitation to shave?
Like so many things, this could be the DM's call. As written, prestidigitation can only do small, temporary, sensory changes. The spell might be able to wash your face, but something like a shave would likely take more power than is available in the spell.
Can prestidigitation create a key?
You can certainly use prestidigitation to create a key, though whether that key worked on a lock would be a whole different matter. Some elements your DM might require to make an effective key with prestidigitation would be having an existing copy of the key or having proficiency with thieves' tools.
Can prestidigitation desalinate seawater?
Though you can warm and cool a beverage or disguise the flavor of seawater so that it tastes fresh, prestidigitation has its limits and cannot turn seawater into drinkable freshwater.
Michael J. Karr (@mikeyjkarr) is an elvish wizard trapped in the body of a human screenwriter. When they aren't trying to will magic into existence, they're busy creating stories through movie magic. You can often find them traversing the planes with their friends, but barring a very complicated spell of summoning, social media should work just fine.
Gotta love pres-... presto-... prestidigi-...
Ahh, screw it: The Swiss-Army-Cantrip
My favorite spell!
I was glad to see that you could use it to wash your face as I was thinking about taking the spell for a PC that wanted to be clean, and have the kit be clean after every battle.
One of my favourite spells. Even if the effects it has are minor there’s so many of them and they can be used so ingeniously that this little cantrip is invaluable
This is easily my favourite spell; I have two current casters that have both prestidigitation and thaumaturgy, one also has mage hand and minor illusion for maximum hijinks. I love, love, love cantrips that can be used creatively, as I use them all the time both for utility and flavour.
Come on! We have to address the 800 pound elephant in our drawers.
Can Prestidigitation be used to make someone soil themselves?
I don’t think you can do that… But you would be able to make them smell is if they had.😂
Can Prestidigitation create a spell focus?
Let's be real: This spells is mainly for wash yourself and dispose of number twos
As a DM, I'd certainly allow the spell to be used for someone shaving their face (or legs, etc.), as it fits in with the spirit of cleaning something with the spell and, more importantly, it's comparable to the extensive list of cantrips given when Gygax originally wrote about them in Dragon magazine. Most of those cantrips have been merged to make Prestidigitation, and I allow anything comparable that wasn't explicitly mentioned today to still be possible. So a caster could briefly summon a live mouse, for instance, that would vanish after a minute or when it takes damage.
The warlock in the party I DM uses this a lot to con people. He buys cheap wine, makes fancy labels using his forgery kit, and uses prestidigitation to make the wine taste like fine wine, selling it on at a tidy profit. I hope no one gets wise to his scam... that would be a shame... 😬
Hmmmm, it never occurred to me that casting it on your armor would negate most mundane heat and cold weather injuries.
The "have a mark or a symbol appear on a surface for an hour" feature sounds ideal for a scout leaving behind directions or messages for the rest of the party. Though you can only have three active at a time.
Once walked through a castle dungeon as we made our 'escape' just snapping - prestidigitation - as we when and every cell that I passed that had the little hay mattes on the floor lit them up and walked on, the rest of the party made sure that no one was trying to put them out as we left. Eventually, we had enough smoke cover and another "swiss-army cantrip*" with just enough breeze to keep from dying from smoke inhalation to make our way out with freed slaves.
*Thank you Schmikipedia for that term, it's my new favorite.
Not sure I agree with the take about being able to wash or shave your face since it says you can clean or soil an OBJECT (emphasis mine) and your face, being part of you, and you are a creature would not be able to be the target of that specific condition of the spell
Just used it in a one-shot to stealthily smear/dirty the ground around an npc duelist's feet as he fought our fighter. It caused him to slip and fall, giving our fighter advantage, leading to an action surge that ended the fight. Made a 1000 gold off his victory. Cheers!
My eldritch knight saved his party’s bacon during an encounter recently against an invisible foe by using Prestidigitation to create smoke rings and watching to see when and where they were disturbed.
Maybe not in the strictest sense, but as long as it's just a fun, harmless effect there's no need to get all draconic about it.
My character uses Presto to fix her makeup and wash her clothes while wearing them. Her clothes aren't folded into a 1' cube at that moment, but they could be, so why add an extra step that adds nothing to the game except tedium?
Its also good for cleaning a crime scene!
I know someone who said his character used Prestidigitation to "change" urine into a beverage before drinking it and claimed that nobody could explain why it seemed disgusting. I tried to say that the spell doesn't change it into something else and that flavored urine is still urine.