
Threshold Height Between Rooms
Internal doorways should have small thresholds (1-2 inches) to maintain energeti
Local term: Threshold, door sill, transition strip, room boundary
Modern apartments typically omit internal thresholds for clean aesthetics and accessibility. Vastu practitioners recommend decorative metal strips or thin stone ridges at doorways as a compromise. Flush transitions are neutral — not harmful, just missing the energetic boundary benefit.
Source: All classical texts; modern interior design
Unique: Modern accessibility standards conflict with prominent thresholds — thin decorative strips offer a compromise.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
1-2 inch thresholds. In modern contexts, decorative metal strips are a good compromise, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
all
Flush transitions acceptable.
Prohibited
all
Broken thresholds should be immediately repaired.
Sub-Rules
- Internal doors have 1-2 inch thresholds marking room boundaries▲ Moderate
- Internal doors have no threshold — flush transition▼ Minor
- Thresholds are damaged, broken, or cracked▼ Moderate

Internal doorways should have small thresholds (1-2 inches) to maintain energetic boundaries between rooms. The threshold is the membrane that allows passage while keeping each room's energy field distinct. Flush doors are neutral; broken thresholds are harmful.
Common Violations
Broken or damaged threshold
Traditional consequence: A fractured boundary — the room's energy field leaks into the corridor. The room cannot maintain its restful or purposeful character. Minor but persistent energy drainage.
Excessively high threshold (over 4 inches) creating a trip hazard
Traditional consequence: The boundary becomes a barrier. Movement between rooms is obstructed. Physical hazard compounds the energetic excess.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic 'Prana Jhilli' — threshold as energy membrane — distinctive to Vedic practice per the Brihat Samhita and Vishwakarma Prakash.
Wada brass-bound thresholds — decorative and functional — distinctive to Hemadpanthi practice per the Samarangana Sutradhara and Hemadpanthi building traditions.
Tamil Vasal colour-matched to room's element — distinctive to Agama Sthapati practice per the Mayamatam and Kamika Agama.
Telugu Gadapa as ritually significant — distinctive to Kakatiya practice per the Samarangana Sutradhara and Kakatiya inscriptions.
Jain 'Seema Rekha' — threshold as precise boundary line — distinctive to Hoysala-Jain practice per the Manasara and Aparajitapriccha.
Kerala carved teak Umara — the most elaborately crafted threshold tradition in India.
Gujarati brass threshold tradition — distinctive to Haveli-Jain practice per the Vishwakarma Prakash and Jain Vastu texts.
Bengali threshold as pause point — spiritual significance of the boundary moment.
Kalinga precise threshold dimensions — archaeological evidence.
Gurdwara Deori Sahib threshold — ritually significant in Sikh tradition.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Stone threshold: ₹500-3,000. Metal strip: ₹200-1,000. Door mat: ₹100-500.
Modern VastuInstall a 1-2 inch stone, marble, or wood threshold at internal doorways — simple addition to existing door frames
Replace broken or damaged thresholds with new stone or wood pieces
Use a decorative metal or brass strip at the doorway level — creates a visual and symbolic threshold even at minimal height
Place a thin door mat at each internal doorway — creates a symbolic threshold boundary
Remedies from other traditions
Stone threshold installation.
Vedic VastuStone or brass threshold.
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The Dehleez (threshold) between chambers shall rise one to two Angula from the floor. This ridge is the boundary of each room's Prana field — without it, the rooms are one continuous space with no energetic differentiation.”
“Each chamber of the dwelling possesses its own energy body. The threshold at the doorway is the skin between bodies — permitting passage while maintaining the boundary that keeps each room's character distinct.”
“The Umara (threshold) shall be of stone or hard wood, rising one Angula above the floor plane. This ridge between rooms separates the sleeping chamber's restful energy from the cooking chamber's fiery energy.”
“Vishvakarma places the Dehleez between every pair of rooms: a gentle ridge that your foot crosses without obstacle but your room's energy does not cross without permission.”
“The Sutradhara specifies: each doorway must have its Sthula (ridge). The ridge need not be high — one Angula suffices. But it must exist. Without it, the rooms lose their individual boundaries.”
“The Ratnakara compares the threshold to the eyelid — it opens and closes the passage while maintaining the boundary between inner and outer. A room without a threshold has no eyelid — it cannot rest.”

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