
Internal Door Size Hierarchy
Doors must follow a size hierarchy: Main entrance (largest) > Room doors > Bathr
Local term: Door hierarchy, main door prominence (Door hierarchy, main door prominence)
Modern Vastu strongly recommends door size hierarchy. In contemporary apartments with uniform flush doors, the hierarchy is achieved through: (1) wider frame on main entrance, (2) premium handle/lock hardware, (3) distinct colour or material, (4) raised threshold. The principle remains even when exact size differences aren't feasible — visual prominence matters.
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis
Unique: Modern practice adapts the dimensional hierarchy to apartment constraints using material, finish, and hardware quality as substitutes for size difference.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
Doors must follow a strict size hierarchy: Main entrance door > Room doors > Bathroom doors. The main door is the dwelling's Mukha (mouth) — it must be the largest, tallest, and most imposing door. Room doors should be uniform but smaller than the main door. Bathroom doors should be the smallest — waste-function spaces deserve the least prominent openings. This hierarchy channels prana proportionally: the widest channel (entrance) receives the most energy, distributing progressively less through smaller openings.
Acceptable
all
All room doors being the same size (uniform) is acceptable if the main entrance door is visibly larger. The critical rule is: main door > everything else. Slight variations between room doors are tolerable.
Prohibited
all
A bathroom door larger than a bedroom door inverts the waste-prominence hierarchy. A room door larger than the main entrance suggests the internal function overpowers the home's primary energy gateway. Any door taller or wider than the main entrance is a Vastu violation — the entrance must be supreme.
Sub-Rules
- Main entrance door is the largest door in the home▲ Moderate
- A bathroom door is larger than a bedroom door▼ Moderate
- An internal room door is larger than the main entrance▼ Major

Doors must follow a size hierarchy: Main entrance (largest) > Room doors > Bathroom doors. The entrance is the dwelling's mouth — it must be the most imposing opening. An internal door larger than the entrance inverts the prana hierarchy.
Common Violations
Internal door larger than main entrance
Traditional consequence: Prana hierarchy inverted — the internal function overpowers the home's primary energy gateway, causing the main entrance to feel subordinate. Visitors and energy sense the inversion.
Bathroom door larger than bedroom door
Traditional consequence: Waste function given prominence over rest function — symbolically elevates impurity. Creates subconscious unease about the relative importance of spaces.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition specifies fractional ratios: room doors = 3/4 of main door width; bathroom doors = 1/2 of main door width.
Wada architecture provides the most visible historical demonstration of door size hierarchy — the gateway is 3-4x the size of internal doors.
Tamil tradition is unique in mathematically computing door dimensions from the building module — hierarchy emerges from calculation, not estimation.
Kakatiya palace doors provide archaeological evidence of strict dimensional hierarchy.
Jain tradition inverts the logic for the holiest space — the temple Garbhagriha has the smallest door (humility through littleness). But for residential spaces, the entrance remains largest.
Kerala Thachu provides the most precise fractional relationships — 2/3 for rooms, 1/2 for bathrooms, with specific Kol-based measurements.
Haveli tradition achieves hierarchy through ornamental quality when size is constrained — carved vs plain vs minimal.
Bengali tradition pragmatically adapts the hierarchy to modern constraints — material and finish quality substitute for dimensional superiority.
Kalinga temple Simha Dwara provides the most dramatic demonstration of entrance-hierarchy — the main gate is many times larger than any interior opening.
Gurdwara four-entrance design demonstrates the Sikh principle of universal welcome — all entrances are prominently large.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Apartment fix: upgraded main door hardware (₹2,000-5,000) + door frame surround (₹3,000-8,000) + raised threshold (₹1,000-3,000) = total ₹6,000-16,000 for clear hierarchy.
Modern VastuIf main entrance cannot be enlarged, add a door frame surround, heavier hardware, or a decorative arch to make it visually more prominent
Add a raised threshold (Dehliz) to the main entrance — adds visual and energetic height that internal doors lack
Replace oversized bathroom doors with standard-size doors during renovation
Use premium materials (solid wood, brass fittings) on the main door to establish visual dominance through quality rather than size
Remedies from other traditions
Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The Mukha Dwara (main door) shall exceed all other doors in height and breadth. Room doors shall be of uniform lesser measure. The bathing chamber door shall be the smallest — the opening to waste must not rival the opening to prana.”
“Doors shall observe Kramanusara (order of precedence). The dwelling's mouth is the widest; subsidiary openings descend in width as functions descend in sanctity. The great door admits Lakshmi; lesser doors serve lesser purposes.”
“The principal entrance shall be the noblest door — widest, tallest, finest in material. No interior door shall equal or surpass it, lest the household's energy hierarchy be inverted.”
“The divine architect Vishvakarma instructs that Air features belong in the proper direction, where their nature is amplified.”
“The jewel of placement is in the proper direction, where Air force governs — this the ancient Sthapatis have confirmed through practice.”
“The placement of internal door size hierarchy finds its authority in the proper quarter, where Air energy has been measured by the ancients as most favourable.”

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