Entrance & Doors
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The Door Numbering

The total number of doors in a dwelling should ideally be even — representing Sa

All
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: दरवाज़ों की संख्या — सम/विषम (Darvāzoṁ kī Saṁkhyā — Sama/Viṣama)

Modern Vastu consultants include door counting as a standard inspection item. Even counts are recommended. In apartments where door count is fixed, awareness and simple remedies (adding a decorative panel) can adjust the count. This is considered a minor but easy-to-check Vastu point.

Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice

Unique: Modern practice treats door counting as a quick audit item — easy to check, easy to remedy, and worth including in any Vastu assessment.

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

all

Even total door count. Multiples of 4 ideal, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.

Acceptable

all

Odd count acceptable if auspicious number. Awareness of count is the minimum.

Prohibited

all

Total count of 13 or digits summing to 4/8 in Vedic numerology.

Sub-Rules

  • Total number of doors in the house is even Minor
  • Total door count is a multiple of 4 Minor
  • Total door count is an inauspicious odd number (13, etc.) Minor

The total number of doors in a dwelling should ideally be even — representing Sama (balance) in Vastu numerology. Even counts maintain symmetry in the dwelling's energy flow. Multiples of 4 are especially auspicious. An odd count is acceptable if the number itself is auspicious (3, 7, 9). The simple act of counting and being aware of the total door count is a basic but meaningful Vastu checkpoint.

Common Violations

Total door count is 13 or another inauspicious number

Traditional consequence: The inauspicious number creates a subtle Sankhya Dosha (numerological defect) in the dwelling's energy accounting. This is a minor but persistent imbalance that affects the home's overall Vastu score.

Door count is completely unknown to the occupant

Traditional consequence: Unawareness of basic dwelling metrics suggests overall Vastu inattention. The count itself may not be problematic, but the lack of awareness prevents any correction.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Vedic tradition links door count to the four Vedas — a multiple-of-4 count honors the fourfold knowledge structure.

Hemadpanthi

Wada architects planned even door counts from the blueprint — the count was a design constraint, not an afterthought.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil tradition integrates door count into the Ayadi Shadvarga verification system — it is not a standalone check but part of the mathematical whole.

Kakatiya

Agraharam community planning standardized door counts across homes — individual houses matched the settlement's even-count norm.

Hoysala-Jain

Jain mathematical precision makes door counting a mandatory Vastu checkpoint — not optional.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala counts doors, windows, and pillars together — all three must be even and in harmonious ratio.

Haveli-Jain

Jain merchant tradition treated door count as a business decision — even numbers represented balanced commerce.

Vishwakarma

The number 8 (Ashtalakshmi — eight forms of Lakshmi) is the most auspicious door count in Bengali tradition.

Kalinga

Kalinga temple symmetry extends to domestic door counts — even counts reflect the temple's bilateral symmetry principle.

Sikh-Vedic

Gurdwara four-door tradition (one per direction) influences domestic preference for multiples of 4.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: दरवाज़ों की संख्या — सम/विषम (Darvāzoṁ kī Saṁkhyā — Sama/Viṣama)
Deity: Brahma
Element: All Five Elements (Pancha Bhuta)
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction

Modern Vastu

Count all doors in the house and record the total. If odd, consider adding a small decorative panel door or storage niche door to make the count even

structural0–₹5,000medium

If the door count cannot be changed, place a small mirror inside a cupboard door to symbolically 'double' it and create an even energy count

symbolic100–₹500low

Ensure the main entrance door is counted as door number 1 and is the most prominent — the numbering hierarchy matters as much as the total count

behavioral0–₹0medium

Remedies from other traditions

Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan

Vedic Vastu

Adjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 60-64

The openings of the dwelling — doors, windows, ventilators — should be counted and their total kept Sama (even). An even count of Dwaras maintains balance in the Vastu Purusha's body — each opening has a corresponding counterpart, preventing asymmetric energy leakage.

ManasaraXXXII · 75-80

Let the Shilpi (architect) count all Dwaras in the Griha and ensure the total number accords with Ganita Shastra (mathematical science). Even numbers bring Sama (equilibrium); odd numbers apart from three, seven, or nine bring Vishama (imbalance).

MayamatamXIX · 50-54

The Dwara Sankhya (door count) of a dwelling is a Vastu Ganita consideration. The builder who leaves the total door count to chance neglects a simple checkpoint that affects the dwelling's overall balance. Even counts are Sama; odd counts require deliberate justification.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraXV · 40-44

Vishvakarma instructs the Shilpi to maintain awareness of every Dwara in the Griha. The total should be Yugma (even) — an even count completes the energy circuit. An odd count leaves one Dwara without a counterpart, creating a Vishama (asymmetry) in the dwelling's breath.

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