The Cleric is one of the most versatile and formidable spellcasting classes in Dungeons & Dragons. Frequently underrated as meek sideline healers, Clerics can hold their own next to Fighters and other martial classes. A Cleric knows that the best way to keep your allies on their feet is often to chop your enemies off at theirs. The 2024 Player’s Handbook recognizes the raw divine power that Clerics bring to the table and offers you a smorgasbord of customizable options like Divine Strikes or Potent Spellcasting to build out heroes worthy of the gods they champion.
Below, we’ll highlight key changes to the 2024 Cleric that you’ll find in the new Player’s Handbook. If there’s a feature we don’t cover, such as basic spellcasting, that means it remains unchanged or only saw minor changes.
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2024 Cleric Class Features Overview

Divine Order — Level 1
As you’ve likely noticed, the biggest change to the 2024 Cleric is that you no longer receive a subclass at level 1. This might take a little getting used to, but there is a pretty beneficial new feature in the exchange. In the 2014 Cleric, some subclasses carried the features of Heavy armor training and Martial weapon proficiency. But some didn’t.
Now when you build a 2024 Cleric, you get to decide for yourself if you want:
- Protector: Proficiency with Martial weapons and training with Heavy armor.
- Thaumaturge: An extra cantrip from the Cleric spell list. You also gain a bonus to your Intelligence (Arcana or Religion) checks equal to your Wisdom modifier (minimum of +1).
Moving this feature out of the subclass column into the base Cleric perks gives you a lot more customizability for your role in the world from the jump. This is a repeated theme with the 2024 Cleric, as we hinted at above and will get into below.
Channel Divinity — Level 2
An upgrade from the 2014 Cleric, you gain two uses of Channel Divinity at level 2 and get an extra usage at level 6. You also get more options on how to use it as a base Cleric:
- Divine Spark: This is actually a two-fer! As a Magic action, you can focus divine energy towards a creature you can see within 30 feet of yourself. Then you can choose to heal or harm them. You roll a 1d8 and add your Wisdom modifier, and if you’re choosing to heal, they’ll recover that number in Hit Points. This ability scales up as you gain levels, with 2d8 at level 7, 3d8 at level 13, and 4d8 at level 18. But you can also force the creature to make a Constitution saving throw and deal that number in your choice of Radiant or Necrotic damage if they fail the save, or half that if they succeed.
- Turn Undead: Turn Undead at level 2 remains mostly the same. The 2024 Player’s Handbook specifies that the Undead creatures who fail their save against your Channel Divinity (equal to your spell save DC) have the Frightened and Incapacitated conditions for 1 minute. It still uses its movement to get as far away as possible but no longer uses its action to Dash, thanks to the Incapacitated condition.
Building off the major change from level 1, the 2024 Cleric’s level 2 looks different in that you aren’t getting a Channel Divinity feature from your subclass yet. Don’t fret, those will be coming along at level 3, and your patience is rewarded by getting a whole new use of Channel Divinity that isn’t tied to your subclass.
Turn Undead is certainly one of those quintessential Cleric abilities, but sometimes there just aren’t any Zombies around. Having a default ability that lets you heal up some allies or deal some damage to an enemy is a nice little perk and a welcome addition to the Channel Divinity feature. Heck, you might even be able to get away with not preparing any healing spells and just holding onto those Divine Sparks for when your party runs head-first into the enemy’s blades.
Cleric Subclass — Level 3

At level 3, the 2024 Cleric gains their subclass. This brings the Cleric in line with the other class options in the 2024 Player’s Handbook.
It’s important to note that while mechanically, you don’t get the benefit of subclass features till level 3, that doesn’t mean you can’t roleplay your Cleric’s connection with their deity at prior levels. It also gives you the opportunity to play your character for a couple of levels before feeling like you need to decide on a subclass. This can be helpful if you follow a deity who straddles different domains. A Cleric of Selune, for example, could easily be of the Light or Trickster Domain.
The 2024 Player’s Handbook presents four familiar domains for Clerics, and with one exception, the features are nearly identical to their 2014 Cleric version. Each of these subclasses has also had some adjustments to their always-prepared Domain Spells, including new spells for each.
- Life Domain: Disciple of Life and Preserve Life have moved to level 3, and Blessed Strike has become a base Cleric ability. But your Domain Spells of Bless, Cure Wounds, and Lesser Restoration have been joined by Aid, which replaces Spiritual Weapon as a Life Domain spell. Disciple of Life is now restricted to only the turn that you cast the spell, and you can now use Preserve Life on Undead and Constructs.
- Light Domain: These holy light bulbs’ Warding Flare and Radiance of the Dawn abilities are available at level 3. See Invisibility replaces Flaming Sphere as a Light Domain spell. Warding Flare works on other creatures from the start, instead of just yourself, as in the 2014 version. Improved Warding Flare lets you grant Temporary Hit Points to the target of the triggering attack, and it lets you regain your expended uses of Warding Flare when you finish a Short Rest. Finally, Corona of Light imposes Disadvantage against Radiance of the Dawn as well as spells dealing Fire or Radiant damage.
- Trickery Domain: These mischievous Clerics now gain Blessing of the Trickster and Invoke Duplicity at level 3. Blessing of the Trickster can now be used on yourself, and it lasts until you finish a Long Rest (instead of 1 hour) or until you use this feature again. Invoke Duplicity now takes a Bonus Action instead of an action and no longer requires Concentration. For Domain Spells, Invisibility replaces Mirror Image, Hypnotic Pattern and Nondetection replace Blink and Dispel Magic, and Confusion replaces Polymorph. At level 17, your illusion grants Advantage to you and your allies when they attack a creature within 5 feet of it, and when the illusion ends, you can grant a number of Hit Points equal to your Cleric level to a creature within 5 feet of it.
- War Domain: You can now make an Unarmed Strike with the Bonus Action conferred by the War Priest feature, and you regain all uses of War Priest after either a Short or Long Rest. Also, Guiding Bolt, Fire Shield, and Steel Wind Strike replace Divine Favor, Stoneskin, and Flame Strike, respectively, as War Domain spells. Finally, the level 6 feature War God’s Blessing has been changed from a bonus to an attack roll and now allows you to cast Shield of Faith or Spiritual Weapon without a spell slot, and without requiring Concentration, for up to 1 minute.
Sear Undead — Level 5
Taking the spirit of the 2014 Destroy Undead ability and reimagining it in a way that gives it more utility in battle, Sear Undead is a big upgrade for your 2024 Cleric. With Sear Undead, whenever you use your Channel Divinity to Turn Undead, you can roll a number of d8s equal to your Wisdom modifier. Each Undead, regardless of CR level, that failed their save against your Turn Undead suffers Radiant damage equal to your roll, and the Turn Undead effect also remains in place.
This exciting change really ups the effectiveness of this Channel Divinity for all 2024 Clerics. The CR threshold in previous versions often meant that Destroy Undead had very limited use. It was rare that a party of level 5 adventurers was still facing off against CR ½ monsters, so it was always kind of an all-or-nothing effect. With Sear Undead, you can potentially deal damage to every Undead within 30 feet. With even a +2 or +3 Wisdom modifier, you still have a chance of destroying Undead, but if not, they’ll still take a hefty amount of damage.
Blessed Strikes — Level 7
A variation on Blessed Strikes was introduced as an optional level 8 rule in Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything and has now become a standard feature of the class in the 2024 Player’s Handbook at level 7.
When you first level up to level 7, you choose one of the following two options:
- Divine Strike: Once per turn, when you hit a creature with a weapon attack roll, you can add an extra 1d8 of your choice of Radiant or Necrotic damage.
- Potent Spellcasting: Add your Wisdom modifier to the damage dealt with any Cleric cantrip.
Neither of these choices is wholly new to the Cleric class, but previously they were tied to your domain. Some subclasses had empowered strikes and others had a boost to their spellcasting. Moving them to the base class and letting players choose which option you get ups the customizability of the Cleric by choosing the mechanics that best fit your playstyle regardless of the flavor of your domain.
Because the 2024 Player’s Handbook is designed to work with previously published D&D fifth edition sourcebooks, if you’re using a subclass found in an older book that has either feature as an ability, you only select one option for your 2024 Cleric.
Divine Intervention — Level 10
Few features in D&D live at the perfect intersection of flavorfully cool but functionally frustrating as the 2014 Divine Intervention. Because it required the use of percentile dice, the odds of it actually working were usually fairly slim, and when it did, the feature was written in a way that was a bit too vague. This led to a lot of discussion of how it would work in the moment. The feature often boiled down to the effect of a Cleric spell, so the difficulty of using it and the 7-day delay in even attempting it again added up to a pretty steep barrier of entry for an ultimately middling impact.
The 2024 Divine Intervention takes a big step up in clarity and functionality. The feature now allows a player to choose any Cleric spell of level 5 or lower that doesn’t require a Reaction to cast, and you can cast it without expending a spell slot or Material components. The 7-day delay in using it again is gone now as well, meaning you can invoke Divine Intervention again after completing a Long Rest.
The changes to Divine Intervention really emphasize the 2024 Cleric’s role as a conduit to their chosen god. Giving them ostensibly a once-per-day ability to pack a powerful punch, or pull out a spell like Revivify in a clutch moment, plays into the spirit of the feature while also providing a mechanic that feels like it can be actively used.
Improved Blessed Strikes — Level 14
The Blessed Strike feature at level 7 lets you customize if your Cleric emphasizes cantrip casting or weapon attacks as their main form of combat. At level 14, you see a boost to the option you previously chose.
- Divine Strike: If you chose Divine Strike at level 7, you now get a 2d8 of extra Radiant or Necrotic damage when you hit a creature with a weapon attack.
- Potent Spellcasting: When you deal damage with a Cleric cantrip, you can grant Temporary Hit Points equal to twice your Wisdom modifier to yourself or another creature within 60 feet of you.
Both options can be pretty useful for a Cleric, whether you’re trying to take an enemy down faster or trying to help you or an ally stay on their feet just a little longer.
Epic Boon — Level 19
Epic Boons are a new type of feat introduced in the revised core ruleset, that all carry a prerequisite of level 19+ to access. A level 19 Cleric has access to one Epic Boon of their choice or another feat they qualify for. There are twelve Epic Boons found in the 2024 Player’s Handbook.
The following is the recommended Epic Boon for the Cleric:
- Boon of Fate: Increase one ability score by 1, to a maximum of 30. When you or another creature within 60 feet of you succeeds or fails on a D20 Test, you can roll 2d4 and add or subtract the result from the d20 roll. Once you use this feat you can’t use it again until you complete a Short Rest, a Long Rest, or roll for Initiative.
Greater Divine Intervention — 20
The level 20 version of Divine Intervention for the 2024 Cleric truly leans into the idea of your Cleric being your god’s most special princess. Now your Cleric can use their Divine Intervention to cast the Wish spell.
The features of the Wish spell are largely similar in the 2024 Player’s Handbook, so the complications that can result from using it and the toll that it takes on the caster’s body and health really fit the mold of the impact on a mortal Cleric who is fully opening themselves up to the full might of their god’s power. After using Divine Intervention to cast Wish, you'll need to wait 2d4 Long Rests before using the feature again.
Pray for the Cleric’s Enemies
The 2024 Player's Handbook is now available on the D&D Beyond marketplace, which means it's time to set out on new adventures with fresh or familiar characters!
The 2024 Cleric continues the tradition of pure divine fury with new combat options and clarity-of-use updates that will help you move into the fray. Now regardless of your Domain, your Cleric can bring the radiant smackdown on a foe or kick up the impact of a Toll the Dead by adding more damage. And if being a back-line support healer is more your Cleric vibe, you’ve got a bevy of new healing options like Divine Spark and Divine Intervention that can boost you and your allies when the chips are down.
We’re delighted to share with you the changes to fifth edition D&D that appear in the 2024 Player’s Handbook. Make sure to keep an eye out on D&D Beyond for more useful guides on using the wealth of new options, rules, and mechanics found in the 2024 Player's Handbook!

Riley Silverman (@rileyjsilverman) is a contributing writer to D&D Beyond, Nerdist, and SYFY Wire. She DMs the Theros-set Dice Ex Machina for the Saving Throw Show, and has been a player on the Wizards of the Coast-sponsored The Broken Pact. Riley also played as Braga in the official tabletop adaptation of the Rat Queens comic for HyperRPG, and currently plays as The Doctor on the Doctor Who RPG podcast The Game of Rassilon. She currently lives in Los Angeles.
This article was updated on August 13, 2024, to issue corrections or expand coverage for the following features and subclasses:
- Channel Divinity: Clarified that you now get one more use of Channel Divinity at all levels, compared to the 2014 Cleric.
- Cleric Subclass (Life Domain): Expanded coverage to outline the full breadth of changes.
- Cleric Subclass (Light Domain): Expanded coverage to outline the full breadth of changes.
- Cleric Subclass (Trickery Domain): Expanded coverage to outline the full breadth of changes.
- Cleric Subclass (War Domain): Expanded coverage to outline the full breadth of changes.
- Divine Intervention: Clarified that this ability allows you to ignore Material components.
A. I stand corrected, Sorcerers do get wish but all of the other classes I mentioned in my original post still don't.
B. New Divine Intervention 10 level ability: For me (and lots of other people apparently) if given a choice between using a feature that very rarely worked (until level 20) vs one that works every time from levels 10-19, I'm taking the latter. You call it boring, and lazy, I call it fun, and reliable. Perhaps if they (WoTC) decides to they could develop a subclass called the Chaos Domain Cleric then they could bring back the old version of this feature.
C. New Divine Intervention Capstone: WoTC/JC has stated that there have been changes made to the Wish spell so losing it, especially for clerics, may not even be thing anymore. Currently, it just states you get it back after 2d4 days without providing further details.
D. You: "I am aware that people have more than one combat a day". Good, so we can agree that resource management is important meaning using more cantrips/weapons to save spell slots when possible is ideal.
Without knowing the spell changes yet, a final verdict cannot be made yet, but…these changes look like nice improvements to me.
i dunno what games others play, but my 14th Death Cleric has to resort a lot to cantrips as combat lasts often 10 rounds and terrain / monster abilities matter. Yeah, I will have a concentration spell running, but I cannot for example spam inflict wounds every turn and hope I got juice left after this combat.
as for the whole DI discussion: unless you get extremely lucky, there is a huge chance you will never see the old DI proc. The base succesrate is too low (10%), the scaling is underwhelming (1% per level up to 19% before your God(ess) takes pity on you at level 20 and then isnt home for the next 7 days) and to add insult upon injury, 7 day cd on a success.
Best use of old DI = pray each night for an awesome gear item or beneficial effect
most realistic use of old DI = waste an action when you really really couldnt afford to waste one.
New DI = awesome! Reliable! Diamonds are rare in some settings, so a free rezz without having it taking up one of your prepared slots as hostage in the meantime: yes please!
Possibly bonkers with the likes of Planar Binding or Hallow.
Will take this -any- day over the old one. An extra fifth or lower spell for free with no components and instant cast is not trivial and remains strong, whether at level 10 or level 19
New DI capstone = old DI capstone, with a bigger chance of a smaller cd and with better guidance (depending on new wish spell rules though).
Dont see it as “wish but 3 levels later”.
its “wish, on a class that wasn't suppose to have access to wish but now gets a flavorfull wish”.
Could have been a 1d4 cd though. I mean, we are after all our Godess’s favorite Princess ;)
just my 2 copper pieces
Not getting the domains/subclass at level 1 is a terrible change. Just one more reason to stick to the old rules. It was fine for classes to gain things at different levels. Not everything has to be the same.
it's really not. it actuall gives the chance for players to work out their playstyle before they pick a domain also means the DM can give the player details abouts gods and their domains overtime instead of needing to rush it
narratively, it kind of is. What level 1 clerics have a sign on their chest 'priest looking for divine being to represent call 1 000 4321987 Ask for Kallie'
Honestly, not a big deal, just means practically no campaign will ever start anywhere by level 3, hopefully they wise up and don't bother with level 1-2 parts of campaign books and save that for the starters, one shots. Everyone is kind of meh at level 1. Which is fair, but I would have preferred they fix the dead levels on classes instead making every class have the same 2 dead levels.
Narratively it is an issue. I would make a character pick a god to be a cleric of at level 1 anyway. With that said though, many gods fit more than 1 domain and the player could take the time to decide which of the appropriate domains fits bet for them. Narratively speaking , level 3 is just the time where the cleric's divine domain becomes apparent in their powers. It is not the time they are selecting their deity.
I can not stand the self-congratulatory tone in these articles. The fact that they are supposed to be a comparrison document to explain the changes to the class but even there WotC wants to make sure they are marketing and telling you that you will be happy with the changes rather than just explaining the changes well and letting us make the determination. Just so so tired of it.
Ranger players are like the vegans of D&D. No matter the conversation or topic a Ranger main will somehow find a way to complain about how they haven’t fixed the class yet.
the level 20 feature sounds a lot of fun to me but it might get real OP ....
if i take Arcana domain and choose wish as the 9th lvl spell as the 17th lvl feature ( i know arcana domain is not in the 2024 PHB, but like they said, you can play old subclasses in the 2024 PHB) you could have it that you are casting 2x wish in a single combat ( ok, you will need to recover the DI feature in 2d4 long rests, but 2x wish is still a lot of power )
That and its a "free" casting of Wish from your god. The Cleric still gets to keep their 9th level spell slot ontop of being given Wish for free every 2d4 days.
Getting access to the most powerful spell in the game at level 20 to compliment your existing toolkit that includes 9th level spellcasting seems like a good deal, lol.
The worst thing a Cleric could do is try to use it for something their god doesn't approve of, but at 20th level, why would your players bother doing anything beyond the Wish spell's scope, unless you're literally in a life or death situation that calls you to do that (in which case, that 66% chance to do something is better than your 100% chance a DM does something menially beneficial lol).
Wish being part of the cleric is basically the return of Miracle (the divine version of Wish) from previous editions which 5e removed. It is a decision that was odd. A mortal magician can do more than a deity intervening never made sense to me. This at least brings something back.
Your God's most special princess?? who even writes like this? A teenager? A Cleric is not a Prince or a Princess, they are a Holy Warrior. Is this your way of secularizing a Cleric?
Ridiculous. Not even Dungeons and Dragons anymore.
So does that mean Forge cleric's automatic heavy armor prof will get buffed, or is that just going to double up now and be redundant if you chose protector?
Armor/weapon proficiency does not stack so it would be redundant if you picked protector but if you picked Thaumaturge you still get heavy armor.
My only questions are: if Divine Strike and Potent Spellcasting have become a class feature (which honestly thank god) and moved to level 7 instead of 8 then are we getting new subclass features at level 8? Was it moved higher so the gap between our third and fourth subclass feature wasn't so big? Was it completely removed (which I don't doubt as being likely)? Hell, with gaining our subclass at level 3 now instead of 1 are all the subclass features moved to later levels because getting our first subclass feature(s) at level 3, second at level 6 only three levels later, and then third at level 8 just two levels later is very cramped? And why is none of this talked bout in the article or the videos?
No new subclass features.
So, if both the level 1 and level 2 features get accessed at level 3, does that mean Clerics will get 3 features at 3rd level? And since the 2014 stuff is supposedly backwards compatible, will that mean Twilight cleric will get 4? That's kind of nuts just from a level progression standpoint.
You realize like half of the cleric subclasses get Potent Cantrips right? The other half get Divine Strike, so all they've done is give you the option regardless of subclass. On top of that, there are plenty of viable ways to play a melee cleric, and cantrips are for rank and file enemies. If you're NOT still using your cantrips by that level, you're just wasting your resources.
Spiritual Weapon is an amazing spell tf you mean? It's so good they had to nerf it by making it a concentration spell lmao
Agreed. I know that it (Spiritual Weapon) can be up-cast now, however there are more useful/powerful spells that could be cast at its level, and certainly above that also use concentration. Also, why didn't they increase its movement from 20ft to at least 30ft? Sadly, I think this spell will see even less use now but we'll see.