
Cash Register Facing North
The cash register facing North is the single most universally practiced com...
Local term: कैश रजिस्टर — उत्तरमुखी (Cash Register — Uttarmukhī)
Modern Vastu consultants consider the North-facing cash register the single most practiced commercial Vastu rule in India — from multinational retail chains to street-side stalls. This rule transcends religious and regional boundaries. Contemporary extensions include aligning digital payment terminals, UPI QR codes, and even the checkout page of e-commerce websites to 'face North' symbolically.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Shastra compilations
Unique: Modern practitioners extend the principle to online commerce — the 'checkout' button on a website should be on the upper portion of the screen (symbolically 'North'), and the payment confirmation page should use blue/green tones (water element = Kubera's energy).
Cash Register Facing North
Architectural diagram for Cash Register Facing North

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N
The cash register, POS terminal, or billing counter faces North — Kubera's direction. The cashier faces North while transacting.
Acceptable
E, NE
East or NE facing is acceptable for certain business types.
Prohibited
S, SW
Cash register facing South aligns with Yama — revenue declines. SW-facing buries cash flow under earth energy.
Sub-Rules
- Cash register or POS terminal faces North▲ Moderate
- Cashier's seat positioned so the cashier faces North while billing▲ Moderate
- Cash register facing South or Southwest▼ Major
- Cash drawer opens toward the cashier (not toward North)▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

The cash register facing North is the single most universally practiced commercial Vastu rule across all Indian traditions. Kubera — the lord of wealth — governs the North. Every financial instrument, from the ancient Hundi to the modern POS terminal, should face his direction. The cashier facing North while transacting channels Mercury's commercial acuity through Kubera's wealth portal.
Common Violations
Cash register or billing counter facing South
Traditional consequence: Yama's direction repels wealth — customers feel uncomfortable at the billing counter, impulse purchases drop, and the business experiences a steady financial drain that cannot be explained by market conditions alone.
Cash drawer opens away from North (toward the cashier rather than toward Kubera)
Traditional consequence: Money symbolically flows away from Kubera — the drawer opening direction matters because it determines the first directional movement of cash. Opening toward South 'sends' money to Yama.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The Vedic tradition distinguishes between the Dhana Peti (cash box — faces North for active commerce) and the Kosha (treasury/vault — sits in SW for secure storage). The cash register is a Dhana Peti; the safe is a Kosha. Different rules apply.
Maharashtrian tradition adds that the cash register area should have a small turmeric mark (Haldi Kumkum) on the North wall behind it — a daily ritual marking that invokes Lakshmi's attention to the cash point.
Tamil tradition extends the facing rule to the digital payment QR code display — the QR code should be displayed on the North-facing side of the billing counter so that the payment flow enters from Kubera's direction.
Telugu tradition adds that the first transaction of the day should be made by a regular customer — not a random walk-in — to sanctify Kubera's direction with trusted commerce. This 'Boni' (auspicious first sale) custom is deeply connected to the North-facing register.
Jain tradition adds that the cash register should be elevated — placed on a raised counter, not on the floor or a low table. Wealth should be 'elevated' and treated with the same respect as a deity's image on a pedestal.
Kerala tradition has the 'Kubera Thaalam' — a dedicated alcove or shelf on the North wall where the cash box rests. This shelf is consecrated during the shop-opening ceremony and is treated as a mini-shrine to Kubera.
Gujarati tradition adds a Shri Yantra (sacred geometry of Lakshmi) placed inside the cash register among the notes — the yantra sanctifies every transaction. The Galla is opened with the first prayer to Kubera each morning.
Bengali tradition adds that the first note received each day should be touched to the forehead and placed facing North in the register — this 'Pranaam' to Kubera's direction consecrates the day's commerce.
Kalinga tradition adds a brass Kubera murti near the cash box — the deity faces the register, symbolically 'watching over' the flow of money and ensuring honest commerce.
Sikh-Vedic tradition emphasizes generosity alongside wealth orientation — the North-facing cash register should dispense change generously and never shortchange. Kubera blesses the generous merchant more than the miserly one.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Ensure the N zone has optimal lighting, ventilation, and ergonomic furniture — modern commercial Vastu standard
Modern VastuApply Vastu-compliant interior design with appropriate elemental colors in the N zone — contemporary practice
Modern VastuRotate the cash register or POS terminal so the billing surface faces North — the cashier naturally faces North while transacting
Place a small Kubera or Lakshmi image near the cash register, facing North — the deity guards the cash flow
If the counter cannot be rotated, place a mirror on the North wall behind the counter — symbolically doubles the wealth energy and reflects Kubera's blessing onto the register
Keep a small brass vessel of water near the cash register (NE side) — water element activates Kubera's wealth flow in the commercial context
Remedies from other traditions
Light a ghee lamp near the cash register every morning — Agni activates Kubera's blessing
Vedic VastuPlace 7 grains of rice inside the cash register — Lakshmi's symbolic abundance offering
Apply Hemadpanthi stone-quality construction principles to the N zone — Maharashtrian commercial Vastu standard
HemadpanthiConsecrate the N zone with turmeric and kumkum during the Vastu Puja ceremony — Peshwa-era office tradition
Classical Sources
“The Dhana-peti (money box) shall face Uttara, the direction of Kubera. As rivers flow toward the sea, so wealth flows toward the merchant who opens his treasury toward the lord of riches.”
“The treasury of the state faces North. The keeper of coins sits facing the quarter of Kubera, that the flow of revenue into the state may never diminish. The treasury door opens toward Uttara.”
“The Vyapari (merchant) places his Hundi (cash box) facing Uttara. The opening of the box shall greet Kubera's gaze each dawn. He who turns his money-chest away from Kubera turns wealth away from himself.”
“In the Vanijya-shala (commercial hall), the Mudra-patra (coin vessel) faces the direction of prosperity — Uttara. The merchant who handles money while facing Kubera multiplies his earnings as water multiplies in the northern sea.”
“The repository of coins and precious metals faces the guardian of wealth — Kubera in the Uttara direction. The custodian of trade funds shall position his counting table to face Kubera's quarter.”
“Where commerce is conducted, the seat of transaction faces North. Kubera's blessing falls upon those whose instruments of commerce — scales, ledgers, and money vessels — are aligned with his quarter.”

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