Multi-Story Rules
MS-021★☆☆ Moderate Full Details

Number of Floors Guidance

An even total number of floors (G+1, G+3) is auspicious — each level pairs with

Earth All
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: Floor Count Guidance (Floor Count Guidance — even-number preference as a moderate-severity secondary guideline)

The even-floor preference is acknowledged as a moderate-severity guideline but rarely drives design decisions. Building regulations (FSI/FAR), family size, and budget are the primary determinants of floor count. G+2 (three floors) is India's most common residential format.

Unique: Modern building regulations make floor count a regulatory outcome rather than a design choice. The even-floor preference is subordinate to all directional, function, and weight-gradient principles.

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

all

Even total floor count (G+1, G+3), per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.

Acceptable

all

Odd count with strong compensation — a defect-free G+2 outranks a defective G+1.

Prohibited

all

Odd count combined with multiple other Vastu defects.

Sub-Rules

  • Even total number of floors (G+1, G+3) Moderate
  • Odd total exceeding one (G+2, G+4) creating unpaired top floor Moderate
  • Single-story dwelling (neutral — neither bonus nor penalty) Minor
  • Total floor count matches an auspicious number in the Sankhya system (2, 4, 8) Moderate

An even total number of floors (G+1, G+3) is auspicious — each level pairs with another for Yugma (paired) harmony. Odd totals exceeding one (G+2, G+4) create Vishama-Dosha (imbalance defect), leaving the topmost floor without a complement. This is a moderate-severity guideline — other Vastu principles (weight, direction, function) carry more weight.

Common Violations

Odd total floor count exceeding one (G+2, G+4) creating an unpaired topmost level

Traditional consequence: The dwelling's crown has no complement — energetic incompleteness at the highest point. The unpaired floor creates Vishama-Dosha (imbalance defect), leading to instability in the household's fortunes

Floor count exceeds the occupant's social/economic station (overbuilt dwelling)

Traditional consequence: A dwelling taller than the occupant's station creates Aabhimanya-Dosha (pride defect) — the structure's ambition exceeds its foundation, leading to financial strain and social overextension

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

The Yugma-Saamya (paired balance) concept provides the most systematic numerical framework for floor count guidance.

Hemadpanthi

Wada courtyard-centered design made floor count secondary to plan geometry.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil Agama treats floor count as subordinate to Pada grid compliance — a perfectly gridded G+2 building outranks a defective G+1.

Kakatiya

Telugu residential tradition treats floor count as a preference, not a mandate — other principles dominate.

Hoysala-Jain

Jain Shubha-Sankhya (auspicious number) system — even numbers reflect Samyak (rightness) in all aspects of life.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala's spatial-division naming (Nalukettu, Ettu-Kettu) emphasizes plan geometry over floor count.

Haveli-Jain

Gujarat Pol house narrow-plot constraints often override floor count preferences — practicality above numerology.

Vishwakarma

Kolkata's G+2 normalization — the colonial three-story townhouse became culturally accepted despite Vishama status.

Kalinga

Kalinga Deula vertical proportion formula applied to residential buildings — ratio matters more than count.

Sikh-Vedic

Punjabi joint-family space requirements often necessitate G+2 — practical needs accepted over numerical preference.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: Floor Count Guidance (Floor Count Guidance — even-number preference as a moderate-severity secondary guideline)
Deity: All Dikpalas
Element: All Five Elements (Pancha Bhuta)

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Treat terrace as a functional floor (behavioral). Strengthen all other Vastu principles (compensatory). Vastu Yantra at topmost floor center (symbolic).

Modern Vastu

If the total floor count is odd (G+2), treat the terrace as a functional level (garden, open-air living) to conceptually create an even count — the terrace becomes the fourth 'floor'

behavioral10,000–₹50,000medium

Strengthen all other Vastu principles (SW weight, staircase direction, function hierarchy) to compensate for the Vishama-Dosha (odd-floor imbalance) — a perfectly Vastu-compliant odd-floor building outperforms a defective even-floor one

behavioral0–₹10,000medium

Install a Vastu Yantra or copper pyramid at the center of the topmost floor to symbolically complete the unpaired level's energetic pairing

symbolic2,000–₹10,000low

Remedies from other traditions

Multi-story structural correction per Vedic vertical proportion rules

Vedic Vastu

Multi-story structural correction per Maharashtrian vertical proportion rules

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

ManasaraXVI · 12-18

The floors of the dwelling shall be Yugma (even) in total count — two, four, or eight. The Sama-Tala (even-floor) dwelling achieves Yugma-Saamya (paired balance), where each level finds its complement in another. The Vishama (odd count exceeding one) creates an orphan level — unmatched and unstable.

MayamatamXII · 8-14

Even-numbered stories create stability through pairing. The ground floor pairs with the first, the second with the third. An odd total beyond one leaves the topmost floor without a partner — energetically incomplete, like a bird with uneven wings.

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 22-26

Varahamihira recommends that the total count of levels in a dwelling follow the Sama (even) principle. Two stories are ideal for a household. Four stories suit a prosperous merchant. Odd totals beyond one create Vishama-Dosha (imbalance defect) — the unpaired level disturbs the structure's harmony.

Samarangana SutradharaXIV · 18-24

The number of ascending levels should follow the Yugma-Sankhya (even-number) system. The paired arrangement ensures that every level has a complement — ground matches first, second matches third. An unpaired topmost floor creates an energetic vacuum at the dwelling's crown.

Check Your Floor Plan