
Nameplate and Signage
The nameplate is the dwelling's declared identity in the material and cosmic wor
Local term: गृह-नाम-फलक (Gṛha-Nāma-Phalaka)
Modern Vastu consultants recommend a brass or stainless steel nameplate on the North or East side of the entrance. The nameplate should be clearly legible, well-lit (especially for evening visitors), and regularly maintained. A nameplate projects household identity — its condition directly reflects how the family presents itself to the world.
Source: Contemporary Vastu practice
Unique: Modern practice adds lighting requirement — a well-lit nameplate is visible and energetically active even after sunset.
Nameplate and Signage
Architectural diagram for Nameplate and Signage

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, E
Install a brass or copper nameplate on the North or East side of the entrance — clearly legible, well-lit for evening visibility, and polished regularly.
Acceptable
NE, W
Stainless steel, marble, or wood nameplate on any non-S/SW side.
Prohibited
S, SW
No nameplate at all. Faded or damaged nameplate. Plastic nameplate.
Sub-Rules
- Nameplate in brass/copper on N or E side of entrance▲ Moderate
- No nameplate at the entrance▼ Moderate
- Nameplate is clearly legible and well-maintained▲ Minor
- Nameplate is faded, tarnished, or damaged▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

The nameplate is the dwelling's declared identity in the material and cosmic world. Placed on the North (Kubera — wealth) or East (Surya — recognition) side in brass or copper, it attracts prosperity and recognition to the named family. A missing, faded, or poorly placed nameplate weakens the household's energetic identity.
Common Violations
No nameplate at the entrance
Traditional consequence: The home is energetically anonymous — it has no declared identity in the cosmic register. Prosperity, recognition, and social standing struggle to find and attach to an unnamed dwelling.
Nameplate on the South or SW side
Traditional consequence: Family identity falls under Yama's (South) shadow — the name is associated with karmic burden rather than prosperity. SW placement destabilises the family's rooted identity.
Faded, tarnished, or damaged nameplate
Traditional consequence: Diminished family identity — as the nameplate deteriorates, so does the household's public standing, recognition, and self-image. A tarnished name literally reflects a tarnished reputation.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition connects the nameplate to the cosmic Nama-Rupa principle — naming the dwelling gives it identity in the universal order.
Hemadpanthi Kul-Nama carved in stone — the family identity was literally built into the architecture, not just affixed to it.
Tamil nameplate with Kolam-inspired borders — weaving the daily renewal art tradition into the permanent nameplate design.
Kakatiya temple inscriptions as the precedent for residential nameplates — stone-carved identity declarations lasting centuries.
Jain Namokar Mantra emblem alongside the family name — declaring spiritual identity alongside family identity.
Tharavad naming system — the nameplate carries generational ancestral identity, not just current occupant name.
Haveli ornate calligraphy nameplates — family identity expressed through elaborate script artistry in brass or stone.
Bengali Gotra inclusion — declaring clan identity alongside family name connects the household to its wider kinship structure.
Jagannath Temple inscription tradition — elaborate sacred name declarations carved in stone, inspiring residential nameplate practice.
Sikh spiritual identity on the nameplate — Ik Onkar or Waheguru above the family name, declaring divine identity alongside familial.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuInstall a brass or copper nameplate on the North or East side of the main entrance — clearly legible, well-lit
Polish the existing nameplate regularly — a gleaming nameplate reflects active family prosperity
Replace faded or damaged nameplate immediately — a deteriorating nameplate broadcasts declining family identity
If nameplate cannot be moved from S/SW, add a small brass lamp or light above it to introduce Agni (fire) element that counters Yama's shadow
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 Griha-Nama-Phalaka (house nameplate) proclaims the dwelling's identity. Placed where Kubera's light falls — the North — it attracts Dhana (wealth) to the named family. Placed where Surya rises — the East — it brings Keerti (fame, recognition).”
“The name of the householder, inscribed in enduring metal upon the dwelling's face, declares his dominion. The wise place it where Kubera's grace illuminates the inscription — for a named home attracts prosperity.”
“Vishvakarma instructs: the Griha-Nama (house name) shall be cast in Pitala (brass) or Tamra (copper) — metals that endure and gleam. Its position on the Uttara (North) or Purva (East) wall declares the family's Sthiti (standing) under auspicious guardianship.”
“The dwelling's Abhidhana (name) is its Asmita (identity) in the material world. As a person's name carries their Karma, so the dwelling's nameplate carries its energetic signature. Let it be placed where beneficial Dikpala (directional guardians) bless it.”
“The nameplate is the dwelling's Mukha-Chihna (face-mark) — its identity in the world. A gleaming Pitala (brass) nameplate on the Uttara (North) side draws Kubera's recognising gaze upon the household.”

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