Entrance & Doors
ED-035★☆☆ Moderate Full Details

The Number of Main Entrances

A dwelling should have one clearly defined main entrance — one mouth through whi

Air All
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: मुख्य प्रवेश द्वार — गौण द्वार (Mukhya Pravēsh Dwāra — Gauṇ Dwāra)

Modern Vastu recommends one clearly defined main entrance for apartments and houses. In larger homes with multiple doors, a hierarchy must be established through size, ornamentation, lighting, and signage. The modern concern extends to energy efficiency — multiple equal openings create cross-ventilation that can be beneficial for air but problematic for energy containment (both Vastu and thermal).

Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice; Architectural design principles

Unique: Modern practice adds the ventilation and energy-efficiency dimension — multiple equal openings on opposite walls create cross-drafts that are difficult to control. This practical concern aligns with the Vastu 'wind-tunnel' warning.

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

The dwelling must have one clearly defined main entrance with a complete secondary door hierarchy — differentiated by size, lighting, decoration, and signage to establish unambiguous primacy.

Acceptable

Two entrances on adjacent walls with size and prominence differentiation.

Prohibited

Multiple equal-sized doors on opposite walls — creating a wind tunnel.

Sub-Rules

  • Single clearly defined main entrance Moderate
  • Two entrances on adjacent walls with clear hierarchy Minor
  • Two entrances on directly opposite walls Moderate
  • Three or more main-sized entrances Moderate

Principle & Context

A dwelling should have one clearly defined main entrance — one mouth through which prana enters and the household's identity is expressed. Two entrances on adjacent walls are acceptable if hierarchically differentiated. Two on opposite walls create a wind tunnel. Three or more dissipate identity. The principle is non-directional — the count and arrangement matter regardless of compass orientation.

Common Violations

Two main-sized entrances on directly opposite walls

Traditional consequence: Prana enters from one door and exits through the opposite — the dwelling becomes a Vayu Nala (wind channel). Wealth enters and exits simultaneously. The household cannot retain what it earns. Relationships pass through rather than staying. The home functions as a corridor rather than a container.

Three or more main-sized entrances

Traditional consequence: The dwelling's energetic identity dissolves — it cannot be a container when it has more openings than walls. The householder's focus is scattered across multiple fronts. Decision-making suffers from too many equally weighted options.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Vedic tradition specifies the metaphor precisely: one mouth for speech, one Mukha for the dwelling. The secondary door is 'Guna Dwara' (subordinate) — it complements but never competes.

Hemadpanthi

The Wada's Darwaja was a status symbol — its size, carving, and brass fittings declared the household's importance. Multiple equal doors would dilute this statement.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil practice uses threshold height as the hierarchy marker — the main door's Padithurai is taller, requiring a more deliberate step to enter. Side doors have lower thresholds.

Kakatiya

Kakatiya military architecture formalized the gate hierarchy — the Maha Dwaram was always the tallest, most fortified, and most ornate. This martial clarity of gate hierarchy influenced Telugu domestic Vastu.

Hoysala-Jain

Hoysala star-plan temples demonstrate that multiple entrances can work IF strict hierarchy is maintained. The Maha Dwara's ornamentation level was always highest. This architectural nuance allows flexibility.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala's Nalukettu ('four-block') houses inherently have multiple doors — the architectural solution is to make one vastly more prominent through size, carving, and alignment with the compound entrance.

Haveli-Jain

Gujarat's Pol system nested entrance hierarchies: Pol gate > Haveli main gate > room doors. This multi-layered hierarchy naturally enforced single-entrance primacy at every scale.

Vishwakarma

The Bengali term 'Dui Mukhi Bari' (two-faced house) carries a moral connotation — a house with two equal faces is two-faced, dishonest, untrustworthy. This social pressure reinforced the single-entrance norm.

Kalinga

Jagannath Temple's four gates (Singha, Ashwa, Vyaghra, Hathi) demonstrate that multiple gates can work with strict hierarchy — Singha Dwara is primary. This temple model informs domestic design.

Sikh-Vedic

The Golden Temple's four entrances are a theological statement (openness to all four directions/castes). In domestic practice, pragmatic Sikh tradition maintains single-entrance focus while honoring the theological principle of openness.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: मुख्य प्रवेश द्वार — गौण द्वार (Mukhya Pravēsh Dwāra — Gauṇ Dwāra)
Deity: Vayu (NW — governs airflow and prana channel dynamics)
Element: Air (Vayu)
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice; Architectural design principles

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction

Modern Vastu

Establish clear hierarchy — make the main entrance larger, more ornate, or more prominent than secondary doors

structural5,000–₹30,000high

If opposite-wall doors exist, keep the secondary door closed most of the time and use it only for service access

behavioral0–₹0medium

Place a screen, curtain, or partition to break the direct visual and airflow axis between opposite doors

structural2,000–₹15,000high

Add a toran (garland), nameplate, and bright light to the main entrance only — visually and symbolically marking it as primary

symbolic500–₹5,000medium

Remedies from other traditions

Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan

Vedic Vastu

Adjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 22-26

The Griha shall have one Mukhya Dwara — one mouth through which the dwelling breathes. As a man with two mouths speaks contradictions, a house with two equal entrances receives contradictory energies. If a second Dwara is required, it shall be smaller and subordinate — a Guna Dwara, not a second Mukha.

ManasaraIX · 100-108

The number of Dwaras in a Griha follows sacred arithmetic. One is unity — complete, focused, powerful. Two is acceptable when on Parsva (flanking) walls — they complement like two eyes. Two on Prathyaksha (opposite) walls create a Vayu Nala (wind channel) — energy passes through without residing.

MayamatamXII · 8-14

The Mukhya Dwara defines the Griha's identity. A dwelling with many equal entrances has no identity — it is a Chowk (junction) rather than a Griha (home). The hierarchy of doors must mirror the hierarchy of the household — one primary, others subordinate.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraXIV · 18-24

Vishvakarma instructs: the Griha shall breathe through its Mukhya Dwara as a man breathes through his nose. Additional openings serve as Vaata Yana (ventilation) — they support but do not supplant the primary intake. A home with equal entrances on all sides is a Mandapa (pavilion), not a Griha.

Check Your Floor Plan

Is your entrance Vastu-compliant?

Upload your floor plan and check your entrance against all applicable Vastu rules.