
The Mirror at Entrance
A mirror directly facing the main entrance reflects incoming prana back out — th
Local term: दर्पण दोष — शीशा दोष (Darpaṇ Dōsha — Shīshā Dōsha)
Modern Vastu unanimously prohibits mirrors facing the main door. This is one of the most widely known and easily actionable Vastu rules. Interior designers who are Vastu-aware recommend side-wall mirrors in the foyer for space enhancement — never opposite the door. Feng Shui also shares this exact prohibition.
Source: Contemporary Vastu and Feng Shui consensus
Unique: Modern practice notes the cross-cultural validation — Chinese Feng Shui independently arrived at the same prohibition. This suggests a universal spatial-energetic principle beyond any single cultural framework.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
No mirror should directly face the main door — side-wall mirrors perpendicular to the entry axis are excellent for space enhancement and are fully acceptable.
Acceptable
Angled mirror or frosted glass that doesn't create a direct reflection.
Prohibited
Mirror directly opposite the main entrance — especially floor-to-ceiling mirrors.
Sub-Rules
- No mirror directly facing the main door▲ Major
- Mirror directly faces the main entrance door▼ Major
- Mirror on a side wall of the foyer (perpendicular to entry axis)▲ Moderate
- Large floor-to-ceiling mirror facing the door▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

A mirror directly facing the main entrance reflects incoming prana back out — the dwelling rejects the energy it should absorb. This is one of the most commonly encountered and easily correctable Vastu defects. Mirrors on side walls (perpendicular to the entry path) are beneficial, as they multiply space and light without reflecting energy outward. The principle applies regardless of door direction.
Common Violations
Mirror directly facing the main entrance door
Traditional consequence: Incoming prana is reflected back out — the dwelling energetically starves while appearing to receive. Wealth opportunities arrive but bounce away. Relationships approach but retreat. The household experiences a pattern of 'so close but never quite' — things almost happen but never materialize.
Large floor-to-ceiling mirror facing the door
Traditional consequence: Maximum reflection — the entire incoming energy stream is bounced back. The larger the mirror, the more complete the rejection. Floor-to-ceiling mirrors facing the door can create a 'void' feeling in the home despite material comfort.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition specifies that a mirror on the North wall is always beneficial — it reflects Kubera's wealth energy back into the home, doubling it. The prohibition is specific to the door-facing position.
Maharashtrian practice extends the prohibition to polished metal Puja items placed facing the entrance — even reflective Puja thali (plates) can create a minor mirror effect.
Tamil tradition extends the mirror prohibition to any reflective surface — modern glass-cladded buildings with mirror-finish facades facing other buildings create a 'civic-scale Darpan Dosha'.
Telugu practice notes that a mirror facing the door also creates a security risk in traditional terms — an intruder can see the interior reflected before entering, removing the householder's advantage.
Jain tradition treats the entrance mirror as 'Moha Darpana' (mirror of worldly attachment) — seeing one's own reflection at the threshold symbolizes attachment to the ego that should be left outside before entering the sacred domestic space.
Kerala tradition notes the absence of mirrors in traditional Nalukettu homes — the Poomukham and Nadumuttam provided light and space without needing reflective surfaces. Modern Kerala Vastu treats the mirror rule as an imported but valid principle.
Gujarati merchant tradition adds a commercial dimension — a mirror facing the shop entrance reflects customers away. This is one of the most observed rules in Gujarat's business community.
Bengali tradition warns that a mirror facing the entrance creates 'Chhaya Purusha' (shadow person) — the reflected figure confuses protective energies, which cannot distinguish between the real householder and the reflection.
Kalinga tradition adds that the solar energy (Surya's rays) entering through an East-facing door must not be reflected out — the morning sun's prana is especially precious and must not be bounced back.
Sikh tradition distinguishes between vanity mirrors (prohibited at entrance) and mirrors used for self-reflection (acceptable in private spaces) — the entrance is a public/sacred threshold, not a place for personal grooming.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuRemove or relocate the mirror to a side wall perpendicular to the entry axis
Cover the mirror with a decorative curtain or sliding panel when not in use
Replace the plain mirror with frosted or textured glass that does not create a clear reflection
Place a potted plant or decorative screen between the door and the mirror to break the direct reflection line
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 reflecting surface placed before the Griha Mukha sends back what enters. As a polished shield deflects the warrior's arrow, so the Darpana (mirror) facing the door deflects the Prana that would nourish the dwelling.”
“No reflecting element — water vessel, polished metal, or Darpana (mirror) — shall face the Mukhya Dwara. That which reflects also rejects. The dwelling's mouth must receive, not return, the approaching energy.”
“The Darpana in the Griha serves to multiply light and space when placed on the flanking walls. But placed before the Dwara, it doubles the exit rather than the entry — positive energy sees its own reflection and retreats.”
“Vishvakarma instructs: the mirror is a tool of Jala Tattva (water element) — it multiplies whatever it reflects. Placed facing the entrance, it multiplies departure. Placed on the North or East wall, it multiplies the auspicious energies of Kubera and Surya.”

Check Your Floor Plan