
Main Door Size Rule
Main door must be the largest door in the dwelling
Local term: मुख्य द्वार आकार नियम (Mukhya Dwār Ākār Niyam)
Modern Vastu consultants universally enforce the main-door-is-biggest rule. Architectural psychology supports this — the largest entrance creates a clear spatial hierarchy, directs visitor flow intuitively, and establishes the 'front' of the house unambiguously. Interior design principles independently recommend the same hierarchy.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice; architectural psychology
Unique: Modern practice adds that in apartments where the main door size is fixed by the builder, the interior of the main door should be enhanced — premium wood finish, brass fittings, decorative knocker — to assert dominance by quality when size cannot be increased.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
Main door exceeds all interior doors by at least 6 inches in height and 3 inches in width.
Acceptable
Main door is at least equal to the largest interior door, with superior ornamentation.
Prohibited
Any interior door larger than the main entrance — inverted hierarchy.
Sub-Rules
- Main door is clearly the largest door in the dwelling▲ Major
- Main door is equal to or marginally larger than interior doors▲ Minor
- One interior door slightly exceeds the main door size▼ Major
- Multiple interior doors exceed the main door size▼ Critical

Principle & Context

The main entrance door must be the largest door in the dwelling — larger than every bedroom, bathroom, kitchen, and utility door. This establishes an energy hierarchy: the primary intake (main door) must exceed all secondary openings so prana flows inward through the dominant channel and distributes to smaller interior spaces. An interior door exceeding the main door inverts this hierarchy, creating energy confusion and diminished authority for the householder.
Common Violations
Interior bedroom or living room door larger than main entrance
Traditional consequence: Energy hierarchy is inverted — prana prioritizes the larger interior opening over the main door. The household experiences authority confusion, where secondary members or concerns dominate over primary responsibilities. Career advancement stalls as the householder is bypassed for leadership.
Multiple interior doors exceed the main door in both height and width
Traditional consequence: Complete energy disorganization — prana has no clear primary channel. The dwelling experiences chronic confusion about priorities, fragmented decision-making, and inability to establish household routines. Financial resources scatter across competing demands without strategic allocation.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition adds that the main door should also be the most ornate — size and decoration together establish the energy hierarchy. A plain main door, even if largest, partially fails the hierarchy test.
Wada architecture often had two levels of hierarchy — the compound gate was largest, the house main door second largest, and interior doors smallest. This three-tier hierarchy is unique to Maharashtrian tradition.
Tamil tradition derives exact door proportions mathematically — the main door is not just 'the biggest' but a specific fraction of the building's frontage. This mathematical precision distinguishes Tamil practice from the qualitative 'bigger is better' approach.
Telugu tradition adds that the main door's threshold (Gadapa) must also be the highest — not just width and height but threshold elevation establishes hierarchy.
Jain tradition adds spiritual symbolism — the main door being largest represents Samyak Darshana (right perception), the widest opening in Jain philosophy. Just as right perception must be the broadest faculty, the main door must be the broadest opening.
Kerala Thachu Shastra provides the most precise carpentry formulas for door hierarchy — the main door is 1/7th of frontage, the principal room door is 5/6th of the main door, and the smallest service door is 2/3rd of the main door. This mathematical hierarchy is uniquely detailed.
Gujarati Haveli tradition merges Vastu compliance with social display — the grand main door simultaneously satisfies the door-hierarchy rule and communicates the family's prosperity to the community.
Bengali tradition uniquely prioritizes height over width for the main door hierarchy — in narrow urban row-houses, the main door compensates for constrained width by being the tallest opening. This is a pragmatic adaptation to Kolkata's housing density.
Kalinga tradition uses Jagannath Temple's four gates as the supreme example of door hierarchy — each gate is sized relative to its cosmic significance, with the Simha Dwara (east, main) being the largest.
Sikh tradition adds that the main door should face the rising sun where possible — combining size hierarchy with directional preference. The Golden Temple's main entrance exemplifies both principles.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuReplace the main door with a larger one that exceeds all interior doors in width and height
Add a decorative architrave, wider frame, or threshold extension to the main door to increase its visual dominance
Reduce the size of the oversized interior door(s) to restore hierarchy
Install a grand doorframe with ornamental carvings or brass fittings to assert the main door's status even if size cannot be changed
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 Mukhya Dwara (principal door) shall exceed all other doors in height and breadth. As the king is among subjects, so the main door is among openings — it must command authority by size, ornamentation, and threshold height.”
“The entry door of the dwelling shall be the broadest and tallest among all doors. An interior door that exceeds the entry creates confusion in the flow of Vayu — the winds serve secondary chambers before the principal hall.”
“The mouth of the house must be its widest opening. When a smaller mouth leads to a larger interior opening, the dwelling chokes on its own prosperity — abundance enters slowly but drains quickly through the larger internal passage.”
“Vishvakarma ordains: the Pramukha Dwara (main door) shall surpass all Antara Dwara (interior doors) in measure. The hierarchy of doors mirrors the hierarchy of energies — the primary must govern the secondary in all dimensions.”

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