
Room Door Opening Direction
Room doors should open toward North or East — the directions of Kubera (wealth)
Local term: Door Swing Direction, Inward Opening Protocol, Morning Light Entry (Door Swing Direction, Inward Opening Protocol, Morning Light Entry)
Modern Vastu practitioners consistently check door opening direction. The N/E preference aligns with maximizing morning sunlight entry (east-opening doors) and natural ventilation patterns in the Indian subcontinent (north-opening doors catch prevailing winds). Building code in India generally mandates inward-opening room doors for safety (outward doors block corridors during evacuation). The clockwise swing preference is primarily cultural-spiritual, aligning with the universal Pradakshina tradition.
Unique: Building code alignment — Indian fire safety codes mandate inward-opening room doors, which coincidentally aligns with Vastu.
Room Door Opening Direction
Architectural diagram for Room Door Opening Direction

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, E
Room doors shall open inward toward North or East with a clockwise swing arc — Indian building safety codes independently mandate inward-opening room doors (outward doors block corridors), providing modern regulatory alignment with the Vastu principle that the door as the room's mouth must breathe in Prana from the auspicious directions.
Acceptable
NE, NW
NE or NW opening. Inward swing regardless of direction.
Prohibited
S, SW
Outward-opening room doors (Vastu and safety violation). South-opening in primary rooms.
Sub-Rules
- Room door opens toward North or East▲ Major
- Room door opens toward South or Southwest▼ Major
- Door opens inward with clockwise swing▲ Moderate
- Door opens outward — pushing Prana out of the room▼ Major

Principle & Context

Room doors should open toward North or East — the directions of Kubera (wealth) and Surya (light). The door should swing inward (into the room) with a clockwise arc, following the Pradakshina (sacred circumambulation) direction. South-opening doors invite Yama's energy. Outward-opening doors expel Prana. The door is the room's mouth — it should breath in from auspicious directions.
Common Violations
Room door opens toward South — facing Yama's direction
Traditional consequence: The room continuously receives Yama Disha (direction of death/depletion) energy. Occupants experience gradual health decline, financial losses, and a pervading sense of heaviness. The room's Prana balance tips toward depletion rather than accumulation.
Door opens outward — Prana Niskramana (energy expulsion)
Traditional consequence: The room exhales Prana with every door opening. Over time, the room becomes Prana-Shunya (energy-void) — dull, lifeless, and uncomfortable. Occupants feel drained after spending time in the room, unable to identify why.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Dvara-as-Mukha concept — the room breathes through its door, inhaling energy from the direction it faces.
Wada Chowk-ward opening — doors naturally opened toward the brightcenter of the home.
Sthapati door audit — every door checked individually for direction, swing, and arc in Tamil Vastu consultation.
Kakatiya door carvings faced inward — the decorative surface greeted the entrant, reinforcing the inward-welcoming principle.
Hoysala temple door art — openirg direction was so important that elaborate sculptures decorated the inward-facing surface.
Thachu precision — the carpenter-architect specified exact hinge placement for correct swing direction.
Haveli door artistry — the carved face always faced inward, welcoming the entrant.
Tantric Shakti concept — the door is a Shakti channel, drawing energy from the direction it faces.
Shilpa Prakasha temple door specifications — detailed descriptions of inward-opening temple doors that inform domestic practice.
Gurdwara welcoming principle — doors always open inward to welcome, reflected in domestic design.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Reverse door hinges — a 2-hour carpenter job costing ₹1000-3000
Modern VastuFor fire-safety compliance, check that corridor doors meet local building code requirements before reversing
Modern VastuIf the door opens toward South, rehang the door to reverse its swing direction — a carpenter can change the hinge side within a few hours
For doors that open outward, reverse the hinges to create inward opening — the door should swing into the room, not into the corridor
If hinge reversal is not feasible (structural constraints), hang a Toran (sacred garland) or a small Swastik above the door to energetically redirect the door's welcoming function
Place a Vastu Yantra or a small brass bell at the threshold of a south-opening door to neutralize the Yama Disha influence at the entry point
Remedies from other traditions
Rehang door to reverse swing
Vedic VastuToran above south-opening door
Reverse hinge side
HemadpanthiToran above problematic door
Classical Sources
“The door of the chamber shall open toward Uttara (North) or Purva (East) — the directions of abundance and light. A door that opens toward Dakshina (South) invites Yama. The door panel's sweep shall follow the Pradakshina path — rightward as one enters, drawing Prana inward with the sacred circumambulation.”
“The Dvara (door) of each chamber shall swing inward and toward the auspicious directions. The door is the mouth of the room — it breathes in Prana. A door that opens outward exhales Prana — the room becomes Prana-Shunya (energy-void). The inward swing gathers, the outward swing disperses.”
“Maya instructs: the Dvara shall open toward Uttara or Purva. The swing of the door panel follows Savya (clockwise) motion — the same direction as the temple Pradakshina. A door swinging Apasavya (counter-clockwise) reverses the sacred circuit and pushes positivity away from the threshold.”
“For room door opening direction, the North is prescribed — here the Air force sustains the feature as the treatise instructs.”
“King Bhoja prescribes: the Dvara-Udghatan (door opening) shall be toward the Shubha Disha-s (auspicious directions). The panel swings inward as a hand beckons — inviting Lakshmi across the threshold. A door that swings outward is a hand pushing Lakshmi away.”
“Regarding room door opening direction, the Sthapati tradition locates it in the North, the quarter governed by Air, for the welfare of all inhabitants.”

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