
The Main Door Direction
Main entrance ideally faces North (Kubera) or East (Surya)
Local term: Main door / Entrance (Main door / Entrance / Front door)
Main entrance should face North or East for maximum benefit. NE combines both wealth (Kubera) and vitality (Surya) energies. West is acceptable with proper pada alignment. South-facing entrances are to be avoided but can be remedied. This is the most commonly checked Vastu factor in Indian real estate.
Unique: Modern practice often reduces this to a binary (N/E = good, S/SW = bad) without the nuanced pada-level analysis or Ayadi calculations that traditional practice requires. The simplified version is valid but less precise.
The Main Door Direction
Architectural diagram for The Main Door Direction

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, E, NE
Main entrance facing North (Kubera — god of wealth) or East (Surya — health and vitality). NE combines both benefits.
Acceptable
W, NW
West-facing doors are acceptable with proper pada alignment. NW brings air energy — good for transient spaces.
Prohibited
S, SW, SE
South-facing doors invite Yama's energy (death/discipline). SW door destabilizes the earth element. SE door conflicts fire with entry air.
Sub-Rules
- Door is the largest opening in the building▲ Moderate
- Door opens clockwise (inward, left to right)▲ Minor
- Clutter or shoes directly outside the main door▼ Moderate
- Main entrance well-lit with a bright light and nameplate▲ Moderate

Principle & Context

The main door is the mouth of the house — it literally breathes prana in. North brings wealth (Kubera), East brings vitality (Surya). A south door invites Yama's stern energy where welcoming energy should flow.
Common Violations
South-facing main door
Traditional consequence: Yama energy at threshold — obstacles, health challenges, conflict
SW-facing main door
Traditional consequence: Earth destabilization — financial and domestic instability
Door directly faces a wall or dead-end
Traditional consequence: Blocked prana — stagnation in career and relationships
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
North Indian tradition has the strongest Kubera (North) preference among all traditions — the real estate premium for north-facing homes is directly traceable to this Vastu principle.
Hemadpanthi Wada architecture developed the Osari (covered entrance vestibule) as a prana-buffering zone — visitors pause here before entering the inner courtyard, allowing graduated energy transition.
Tamil tradition is unique in requiring mathematical verification (Ayadi Shadvarga) of door dimensions — not just compass direction. This six-formula system calculates whether the door dimensions produce Aaya (gain) or Vyaya (loss) for the household.
Kakatiya tradition developed elaborate stone gateway (Thorana) art — the famous Warangal Thorana arches face East. This monumental entrance tradition directly influenced domestic door orientation practice in Telangana and Andhra.
Hoysala star-plan temples always maintained East-facing primary entrances despite complex geometric layouts — demonstrating that even highly innovative architecture respected entrance direction principles.
Kerala's 9-pada per wall system (vs standard 8-pada/32 total) provides finer granularity for entrance placement. The dual-entrance system (Padippura + Poomukham) is unique to Kerala — it creates two prana-filtering stages before energy enters the living space.
Gujarat's Pol (gated community lane) system applied entrance direction principles at the neighborhood scale — the Pol gate itself followed N/E preference, making entire communities Vastu-aligned rather than just individual homes.
Bengali tradition uniquely emphasizes the 'first sight upon entering' (Prothom Drishti) — the door direction matters, but what you see when it opens matters equally. This psychological-spiritual principle is distinct from purely directional analysis.
Kalinga tradition's East-facing entrance preference is the strongest among all 11 traditions — directly influenced by the region's extraordinary solar temple tradition (Konark). The Singha Dwara (lion gate) concept from Jagannath Temple Puri influenced domestic entrance design.
Sikh architecture balances Vastu directional principles with pragmatic defense considerations. The Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple) has four entrances — one in each cardinal direction — symbolizing openness to all, while maintaining directional sanctity in the overall complex layout.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
For unavoidable south/west-facing doors: bright warm lighting, Ganesha image above the frame, raised threshold, and toran (decorative garland). These can mitigate but not fully substitute for correct direction.
Modern VastuIf south-facing, place a Ganesha idol or image above the door frame
Place a bright yellow or golden light outside the main door
Add a raised wooden or stone threshold (minimum 2 inches)
Hang a toran (decorative garland) on the door frame
If possible, add a secondary entrance on North or East side
Remedies from other traditions
For south-facing doors: Ganesha idol above the door frame. Brass Kubera Yantra on the inner wall facing the entrance.
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The principal door shall face the quarter of Kubera or Indra, for through these the auspicious winds enter.”
“The main entrance of a dwelling, if placed in the North or East, attracts prosperity. In the South, it leads to sorrow.”
“The wise man builds his door to catch the first rays of the morning sun.”
“The Mukhya Dwara (main entrance) is the dwelling's mouth — through it flows all Prana, all fortune, all opportunity. Its placement on the Pada grid determines the quality of energy entering the home. The North and East doors receive Kubera and Indra; the South door requires Pada-shuddhi.”
“The door is where outer world meets inner world. Its height, width, material, direction of opening, threshold height, and pada position all contribute to the quality of energy that enters. A well-placed door in the correct pada is the single most impactful Vastu feature.”
“The gates of the Nagara (city) and the Griha (house) follow the same Pada system. The entrance pada determines the deity who governs the threshold. Auspicious padas — Mukhya, Pushpadanta, Jayanta — bring prosperity. Inauspicious padas bring obstacle and conflict.”

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