
Visitors Face South or West
The visitor faces South or West — the directions of 'receiving' and 'yielding' —
Local term: विजिटर सीटिंग — दक्षिण/पश्चिम (Visitor Seating — Dakshiṇ/Pashchim)
Modern Vastu consultants universally recommend the host face N/E and visitor face S/W. This is one of the most actively applied Vastu principles in Indian corporate offices — from traditional family businesses to MNC cabins.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Shastra compilations
Unique: Modern practitioners extend this to video calls: the host/presenter should have North or East behind the camera (facing N/E), so the remote visitor 'views' the host from the S/W perspective — maintaining the authority dynamic even virtually.
Visitors Face South or West
Architectural diagram for Visitors Face South or West

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
S, W
Visitor chairs should face South or West in all cabins and meeting rooms. The host/occupant faces North or East.
Acceptable
SW
Southwest-facing visitor seating for negotiation scenarios.
Prohibited
N, E, NE
Visitors facing North or East receive empowering energy — reversing the authority dynamic. The host, forced to face S/W, loses professional authority.
Sub-Rules
- Visitor chairs face South or West in the occupant's cabin▲ Moderate
- Occupant (host) faces North or East during visitor meetings▲ Moderate
- Visitor chairs face North or East — reversing the authority dynamic▼ Moderate
- Both host and visitor face the same direction (no authority distinction)▼ Minor

Principle & Context

The visitor faces South or West — the directions of 'receiving' and 'yielding' — while the occupant faces North or East — the directions of 'commanding' and 'growing.' This directional authority arrangement is a cornerstone of Vastu workplace design, derived from the royal audience-chamber tradition where the king faced North and the supplicant faced South.
Common Violations
Visitor chairs facing North or East (gaining energetic authority)
Traditional consequence: The visitor dominates the interaction — negotiations swing in the visitor's favor, the host's authority is undermined. Clients dictate terms, salespeople lose deals.
Host/occupant facing South or West while visitor faces North or East
Traditional consequence: Complete authority reversal — the host absorbs Yama's draining energy while the visitor receives Kubera's prosperity. Consistent loss in negotiations and reduced professional authority.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The Vedic tradition is strict: the visitor ALWAYS faces the host, never beside or at right angles. Side-by-side seating eliminates the authority differential that the host needs.
Maharashtrian tradition adds that the visitor's chair should be slightly lower than the host's — elevating the host physically as well as directionally.
Tamil tradition draws a compelling parallel: just as the devotee faces the deity during Darshan, the visitor faces the host during a professional meeting. The energy flow follows the same pattern — authority radiates from the seated host.
Telugu tradition adds that in large conference rooms with multiple visitors, all visitors should face the same direction (S or W) — mixed visitor orientations create energetic confusion.
Jain tradition adds a hospitality nuance: while the visitor faces S/W for authority purposes, the host should offer water from the NE direction — maintaining the hierarchy while expressing hospitality.
Kerala tradition specifies that the visitor should enter from the host's left (the North side when host faces East) and take the seat opposite — the entry path reinforces the directional hierarchy.
Gujarati tradition adds that the visitor's chair should be comfortable but not more comfortable than the host's — luxury visitor seating (plush sofas) can energetically elevate the visitor above the host.
Bengali tradition emphasizes the 'Atithi Devo Bhava' (guest is god) balance — while the directional arrangement maintains authority, the host must compensate with hospitality gestures (offering tea, standing to greet).
Kalinga tradition adds that the visitor's seat should not have a window or opening behind it — the visitor receives no 'escape' energy from behind. The solid wall behind the visitor contains them energetically.
Sikh-Vedic tradition adds a hospitality balance: while the visitor faces S/W, the host must offer 'Cha-Paani' (tea-water) before beginning business — authority is maintained through direction, respect through hospitality.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Ensure the S zone has optimal lighting, ventilation, and ergonomic furniture — modern commercial Vastu standard
Modern VastuApply Vastu-compliant interior design with appropriate elemental colors in the S zone — contemporary practice
Modern VastuReposition visitor chairs to face South or West in all cabins and meeting rooms
Ensure the host's desk faces North or East — visitor seating naturally falls opposite
In rooms where furniture is fixed, ensure the host chooses the North- or East-facing seat during meetings
Remedies from other traditions
Perform Vastu Shanti puja in the S zone of the office to align commercial energy — Vedic North Indian tradition
Vedic VastuPlace a copper Yantra corresponding to the directional deity on the S wall — Varanasi Sthapati practice
Apply Hemadpanthi stone-quality construction principles to the S zone — Maharashtrian commercial Vastu standard
HemadpanthiConsecrate the S zone with turmeric and kumkum during the Vastu Puja ceremony — Peshwa-era office tradition
Classical Sources
“The petitioner faces the direction of the setting sun, while the lord of the house faces the rising sun. Thus the suppliant is humbled and the master is empowered by the natural order of directions.”
“Ambassadors and supplicants shall face the South or West seat before the throne. The king, facing North, commands the field of discourse. He who faces the king's direction receives; he who sits with back to it commands.”
“In the audience chamber, the received guest faces Dakshina or Paschima while the host faces Uttara or Purva. This arrangement preserves the Grihastha's dominion over the interaction.”
“The arrangement of seats governs the flow of authority. He who faces the ascending direction (Purva or Uttara) holds Shakti. He who faces the descending direction (Dakshina or Paschima) yields to it.”

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