Free tools · For the home you already live in

When something in your home feels off — start by naming it.

In more than five hundred homes, the same eight Vastu patterns turn up again and again where “nothing is obviously wrong” but growth has stalled, sleep is uneven, or relationships rub the wrong way. This page gives you two free ways to look at your own home properly — a ten-page guide to the patterns themselves, and a ten-minute walkthrough that scores your home, room by room, on what you can see today. No wall-breaking proposed. No remedies sold.

First, the patterns — what we look for in eight of every ten homes.

When the home is fine on paper but something is off in practice.

Most of the homes that come to us for a Clarity Path · Darshan look fine from the outside. The plan is reasonable. The light is good. The neighbours are kind. And yet — the earning member is working harder than the income suggests; sleep is shallower than the bed; the children’s room never quite settles; the same small frictions in the same rooms keep coming back. The owner did not call us because something obviously broke. They called us because something quietly will not lift.

Vastu has a vocabulary for this. The placements that do not look wrong but quietly drain a household are not exotic — they are common, recurring, and largely fixable without breaking a single wall. A misaligned bed. A pooja niche under a staircase. A kitchen extractor venting into the wrong direction. A heavy mirror facing the front door. The fixes, when they are needed, are usually under ten thousand rupees. Many cost nothing at all. Most take a weekend.

What follows is the same pattern library Rohit uses on the first read of every Clarity Path · Darshan. Use it on your own home. Spot what you see. If it is enough, you are done. If you want a senior eye to confirm what you are seeing — and to sequence the corrections so you do the right one first — the door at the bottom is open.

These are the eight patterns we see most often, in plain language.

The eight patterns we see in eight of every ten homes.

Read them in order — the first three are structural, the next three are room-level, the last two are about what you have placed inside the rooms.

  1. The brahmasthan is occupied.

    Looks like: A toilet, a kitchen, a heavy column, a staircase landing, or a permanent storage unit sitting in the geometric centre of the home.

    Tends to cause: A general heaviness, slow recovery from setbacks, money that comes in but does not stay.

    Check first: Walk to the centre of your floor plate. Look up. Look down. What is there?

  2. The north-east corner is heavy or cluttered.

    Looks like: Storage, a toilet, a guest room used as a junk room, or a heavy piece of furniture pinning the north-east corner of the home.

    Tends to cause: Mental fog, indecision, slow progress on long-term plans, a sense that fresh ideas are arriving and dying without traction.

    Check first: Stand in the north-east corner. Is it light? Is it open? Could a child sit there to read?

  3. The south-west is light, hollow, or missing.

    Looks like: A south-west extension, a south-west corner cut away, a toilet in the south-west, or the lightest construction (balcony, large window, basement opening) at the south-west.

    Tends to cause: Instability in the earning member’s life — work that does not consolidate, finances that do not settle, relationships that feel ungrounded.

    Check first: Is the heaviest part of your home in the south-west? Walls, master bedroom, the largest cupboard?

  4. The kitchen is in the wrong zone.

    Looks like: A kitchen in the north-east, the south-west, the north, or directly opposite the main door.

    Tends to cause: Recurring health concerns at home, friction between household members, unexplained drains on the family budget.

    Check first: Stand at the cooking range. Which compass direction are you facing as you cook? East-facing while cooking is the classical ideal.

  5. The master bed faces the wrong way.

    Looks like: The earning member sleeps with the head pointing north — or the master bedroom itself is in the north-east, where it pulls against household stability.

    Tends to cause: Shallow sleep, unease in the earning member, a sense of being one step behind even on good days.

    Check first: Lie down on your side of the bed. Which compass direction is your head pointing?

  6. There is a toilet, kitchen, or staircase in the north-east of the home.

    Looks like: A toilet, a kitchen, or a staircase landing in the north-east quadrant — the zone classically reserved for water, light, and the pooja or meditation space.

    Tends to cause: Spiritual restlessness, scattered focus, a recurring sense that something is being undermined that the household cannot quite name.

    Check first: Find the north-east. What is there?

  7. A mirror is doing what it should not do.

    Looks like: A large mirror facing the bed, a mirror facing the main door, or a mirror in the kitchen.

    Tends to cause: Disturbed sleep, fights that escalate without obvious cause, a feeling of being watched in a room that should feel private.

    Check first: From your bed, can you see your own reflection? From the front door, can you see a reflection of the door itself?

  8. The pooja or meditation space is misplaced.

    Looks like: A pooja niche in the south, the south-west, under a staircase, behind a toilet wall, or above the bed in the bedroom.

    Tends to cause: Restlessness in spiritual practice, irregular sadhana, the niche itself becoming dusty and ignored.

    Check first: If you have a pooja space, where is it? If you do not, where would feel right? The north-east is the classical answer.

Eight patterns sound like a lot. Most homes have one or two of them — not all of them.

Most asymmetries are not blocks.

It would be wrong to leave you with the impression that every misalignment in your home is quietly hurting you. It is not. Vastu is a directional and zonal discipline applied to a real-world building, and real-world buildings always carry small asymmetries — a slightly off-centre door, a beam that runs at the wrong angle, a window that ended up larger than the symmetric one across from it. The vast majority of these are noise, not signal. Treating noise as signal is how households end up “fixing” things that did not need fixing, spending money on remedies that do nothing, and worrying about a home that was always more or less fine.

The eight patterns above are the signal-level ones — the placements that, repeated across many homes, reliably correlate with the kind of quiet drain residents come to us about. If your home has none of them, it is most likely a fine home that does not need our attention. If it has one or two, the wizard below will help you put a label on them and rate severity. If it has more than that, a guided conversation with a senior eye is what we would gently suggest. Either way, the goal is the same — clarity, not anxiety.

If a ten-page version of all this — patterns, line drawings, the under-₹5,000 fixes, and a checklist at the back — would help, send it to your inbox.

Free PDF · 10 pages · 10-minute read

Email me the full guide.

The same eight patterns, expanded with line drawings, three under-₹5,000 fixes per pattern, one fix per pattern that costs nothing at all, and a five-minute yes/no checklist at the back so you can tell at a glance which patterns your home actually has.

A one-line hint helps us send a more relevant follow-up. Skip if you would rather just have the PDF.

One email, one PDF. No phone call, no sales follow-up unless you reply asking for one. Unsubscribe in one click. Read by Rohit, not a bot.

If you would rather walk through your own home right now — let’s do that.

Now do it on your own home · 10 minutes

Walk through your home, room by room.

You have just walked through the patterns. The wizard below applies them to the rooms you actually live in. Tell us what you have and where it is — kitchen, bedrooms, toilets, pooja space — and we will return four life-area scores: career, wealth, health, relationships, all read from your home itself.

“I’m not sure” is a valid answer on every field. The system grades what you give it, honestly.

Aayatan Veda · Free

What's blocking your growth?

Answer a few quick questions about your home. In 90 seconds, see which life area your current layout is most likely shaping — career, wealth, health, or relationships.

100% Free ~90 seconds By Vastu Architect (IIT-KGP)
1
Your Home
2
You
Your Home — Room by Room
Tell us where each room sits on the 16-zone compass. Tap the icon if you're unsure what "zone" or "facing" means.
Main Entrance
About the 32-position system. Senior Vastu consultants divide each wall of a property into eight equal segments, because the exact position of your entrance within a wall changes its energetic quality. That is why we offer this level of detail if you know it — but if you don't, your facing direction alone is a perfectly good starting point.

No problem. We will use your facing direction for now — the 32-pad precision is something we can confirm together in a consultation. Pick your facing direction below.

Facing = where the door is pointed when you stand inside and look out. Stand at your main door and look outward. The compass direction you are looking toward is your facing.

Stand at your door, look outward — that direction is your facing.

Tell us about your rooms
Room zone — which of the 16 sub-sectors does this room sit in? Stand at the centre of your home. Look toward the room. Is it in the north-east? North-north-east? East-north-east? Pick the closest sub-sector.

Add as many rooms as you want to share. The more you tell us, the more specific your read will be — but even one room is useful.

No rooms added yet. Most homes have at least a kitchen and a main bedroom — a good place to start.
You haven't added any rooms yet. That is okay — your read will use the entrance details only. If you have a minute, adding even one or two rooms makes the read significantly more specific.
Want a personal review by the architect?
Optional but powerful. Share a floor plan of your home plus a Google Maps link. If you do, a senior consultant will personally review your layout and call you back within 24 hours — free.
What to upload — a floor plan, an architect's drawing, a hand-sketched layout, or a clear photo of a printed plan. Image (JPG / PNG) or PDF. Max 10 MB.
North direction on the map — most floor plans have a small "N ↑" arrow somewhere in the corner. Tell us which way it's pointing on the image you uploaded.
Google Maps link — open your home in Google Maps, tap "Share", then "Copy link". Paste it below. This lets us see the surroundings, roads, slope, and nearby water bodies.
Your uploads are stored privately and used only for your consultation. They are never shared or published.
Almost there — where should we send the report?
Your results appear on screen immediately. A detailed follow-up reaches your inbox within 24 hours.

Pick the closest — "I'm not sure" is fine too.

Country code auto-fills when you select a country above.

What happens next
  • Your life-area read appears instantly on this page
  • A detailed report reaches your email within 24 hours
  • If you uploaded a floor plan, a senior consultant will personally review it and call you back within 24 hours — free
  • No spam, ever. Unsubscribe with one click.

We use your details only to send your report and follow up. Your information is never shared, sold, or used for unrelated marketing.

Your Home — Life Area Read

Here's what we see

How your current layout is shaping each major life area.

What we see in your home
Sorted by what matters most, based on your primary concern.

Want a prioritised remedy plan?

A Level 1 Quick Vastu Review gives you a senior consultant's full read — which zones are working for you, which are working against you, and the exact order in which to correct them. Most families start seeing shifts within 30 days.

Book a Level 1 Review

What the four scores are, and what they aren’t.

The four scores above are the read on what you shared with us. They are honest about the inputs they had — fields you marked as “I’m not sure” are reflected in the read, and your detailed-report email will say so plainly. They are not the whole picture. They are the start of a conversation, not the end of one. A good consultant will tell you which of the items the wizard surfaced are actually worth fixing first, which can wait six months, and which are noise that does not deserve your attention at all.

If the scores land broadly supportive and you can spot the one or two items you want to address yourself, you have what you need. If the scores land mixed — or if you would simply rather have a senior architect-Vastu eye sit with the home properly and sequence the corrections — the next step is the Clarity Path · Darshan. You send the floor plan, photos and a short video of each room, your family’s birth details. Rohit reads everything himself, runs the direction analysis, and comes back with a written report and a prioritised remedy checklist — what to do first week, first month, first quarter. Seven-to-ten-day turnaround. ₹11,000 per floor — and the fee is fully credited against any future Aayatan Veda engagement within sixty days. A one-month follow-up call is included.

Not ready to decide? The PDF guide above stays in your inbox — re-read it once more, then come back.

Two short reads from residents who took this same path.

“The service I received was outstanding, with insightful recommendations for Vastu adjustments. Rohit possesses an extensive understanding and expertise in this field. My house plan was rectified and aligned perfectly with my expectations, thanks to his diligent efforts in analysis and providing comprehensive details. Great communication and skill.”
— Saigal, Australia
“Rohit is very thorough in his analysis and he is the master of this trait. He has not just provided us with his report, he has also given us deeper understanding of Vastu and how energies of different areas in our house can affect our lives. We are very satisfied with Rohit’s professionalism and the service he provided.”
— Harry, USA

Questions we hear a lot.

Will I have to break walls?
Almost never. The vast majority of remedies the Clarity Path · Darshan recommends are non-structural — moving a bed, repositioning a mirror, changing the colour of a wall, opening a window that is currently shut, relocating a pooja niche. When something genuinely structural does come up, Rohit tells you that plainly, gives you a feasibility note (is it possible, what will it cost, what happens if you do nothing), and lets you decide. Nothing is proposed without a feasibility check.
Will I be asked to buy remedies, yantras, or pooja items?
Never. Aayatan Veda does not sell remedies. Where a specific item is genuinely useful — a mirror, a colour, a plant — the report tells you where to buy it yourself, usually for a fraction of what consultants charge for the same thing.
What if my four scores are low?
Low scores are common, and they are not a verdict. They are a flag that one or more of the eight patterns above is in play, and that the corrections would benefit from being sequenced rather than done at random. A guided Clarity Path · Darshan session is exactly the conversation that does that sequencing — and it is bookable below without a sales call first.

Or just send a message — Rohit reads every one himself.

Ready when you are.

No sales call. No hard pitch. Rohit reads every message himself and replies, usually within four working hours.