
Aquarium Fish Count
An aquarium with 9 fish (8 goldfish + 1 blackmoor) in the N or NE is one of the
Local term: नव मत्स्य — उत्तर / ईशान्य (Nava Matsya — Uttara / Īśānya)
The 9-fish aquarium is one of the most widely recommended modern Vastu remedies. Consultants universally specify 8 goldfish (or other gold/orange fish) + 1 black fish (blackmoor, black molly, or similar). The N/NE placement is consistent across all modern guides. Emphasis on maintenance — a neglected aquarium reverses the prosperity effect.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice
Unique: The 9-fish formula is perhaps the most universally cited modern Vastu decorative remedy — it appears in virtually every Vastu consultation as a prosperity enhancer.
Aquarium Fish Count
Architectural diagram for Aquarium Fish Count

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, NE
9 fish (8 gold + 1 black) in N/NE. Clean filtered water. Immediate dead fish replacement.
Acceptable
NNE, NNW, ENE
NNE-NNW-ENE corridor. Regular 20-30% water changes.
Prohibited
SE, SW, S
Aquarium in SE/SW/S. Dead fish in tank. Dirty or green water.
Sub-Rules
- Aquarium with 9 fish (8 goldfish + 1 black fish) in N or NE zone▲ Moderate
- Aquarium water is clean, filtered, and well-maintained▲ Minor
- Aquarium placed in SE/SW/S causing elemental conflict▼ Moderate
- Dead fish not removed promptly or dirty aquarium water▼ Major

Principle & Context

An aquarium with 9 fish (8 goldfish + 1 blackmoor) in the N or NE is one of the most recommended Vastu prosperity installations. Eight goldfish represent Ashta-Lakshmi (eight forms of wealth); one black fish absorbs negative energy. The number 9 completes the Nava-Graha alignment. Maintain clean water and replace dead fish immediately — an incomplete or poorly maintained aquarium reverses the prosperity function.
Common Violations
Aquarium in SE/SW/S causing elemental conflict
Traditional consequence: A large water body in the SE (fire zone) creates severe 'Jala-Agni Virodha' — the fire element is overwhelmed by water, leading to loss of vitality, digestive problems, and creative stagnation. In the SW, water destabilises earth energy, causing relationship instability. In the S, water conflicts with Yama's transformation.
Dead fish not removed or dirty aquarium water
Traditional consequence: Dead fish in the aquarium are 'Mrita-Jiva' (death within the living system) — their decomposition broadcasts Mrityu-Shakti (death energy) into the prosperity zone. Dirty water is Mrita-Jala (dead water) — it reverses the wealth-attraction function to wealth-repulsion.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition treats the 9-fish aquarium as a living Nava-Graha Yantra — more dynamic than a metallic yantra because it contains Jivant-Shakti (living energy).
Maharashtrian tradition specifically recommends the aquarium for businesses — the N-zone office aquarium is one of the most common commercial Vastu installations.
Tamil tradition sometimes recommends 9 or 11 fish (always odd numbers) based on Jyotisha (astrological) considerations — the specific count may vary by birth chart.
Telugu tradition emphasises water quality above all — the Kakatiya engineering standard for clean water bodies extends to aquarium maintenance.
Jain tradition adds the Ahimsa dimension — if keeping an aquarium, fish welfare (spacious tank, clean water, good food) is an ethical requirement, not just Vastu maintenance.
Kerala's natural water abundance (Kayal, backwaters) gives the indoor aquarium a cultural resonance beyond Vastu — it echoes the landscape's inherent water prosperity.
Gujarati tradition integrates the aquarium into ornate Haveli-style decor — the tank itself becomes a decorative element matching the room's aesthetic.
Bengali tradition is the most strict about maintaining the count of 9 — even one dead fish must be replaced within 24 hours to maintain the Nava-Graha alignment.
Kalinga's Chilika Lake connection — the indoor aquarium echoes the natural water-prosperity of Asia's largest lagoon.
Fish in the Golden Temple's Amrit Sarovar are considered auspicious — the domestic 9-fish aquarium echoes this sacred precedent.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Relocate decorative element to the North zone per Modern tradition
Modern VastuPlace aquarium in the N or NE zone with exactly 9 fish — 8 goldfish (orange/golden) + 1 black fish (blackmoor)
Replace dead fish immediately — the count of 9 must be maintained. An incomplete count weakens the Nava-Graha alignment
Keep aquarium water clean with proper filtration — change 20-30% water weekly. Green or cloudy water reverses the prosperity effect
Move aquarium from SE/SW/S to N/NE; if relocation is impractical, remove the aquarium rather than keep it in the wrong zone
Remedies from other traditions
Relocate decorative element to the Uttara zone per Vedic tradition
Vedic VastuRelocate decorative element to the Uttar zone per Maharashtrian tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“Nava-Matsya (nine fish) in the Jala-Patra (water vessel) of the Uttara attracts Kubera's Nava-Nidhi (nine treasures). Eight golden fish represent Ashta-Lakshmi — the eight forms of wealth. One dark fish absorbs Dosha (blemish) and negative vibrations, protecting the household from unseen threats.”
“The Matsya-Griha (fish house/aquarium) in the Uttara or Ishanya creates a living Jala-Yantra (water mechanism). Nine fish in total — eight of golden hue for Shri (prosperity) and one of dark hue for Raksha (protection) — form the most auspicious aquarium configuration.”
“Living fish in the dwelling's water vessel keep the Jala-Tattva in constant motion — they are Jivant-Jala-Chalaka (living water movers). The count of nine honours the Nava-Graha and ensures the aquarium's energy is complete, not partial.”
“Matsya (fish) in the Griha-Jala-Kunda (house water basin) are Dhana-Akarsaka (wealth attractors). The golden Matsya — eight in number — swim as Ashta-Lakshmi in liquid form. The dark Matsya — one — is Dosha-Grahi (blemish absorber), consuming the negative energy before it reaches the household.”

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