Quick answer: Five plants appear consistently across Vastu recommendations: tulsi (entrance or east, never inside enclosed spaces), money plant (north or east direction, at height), bamboo (east or south-east), jasmine (north or east, near a window), and aloe vera (north or east, near the kitchen or bathroom). The most consistently cited placement rule is that thorny or cactus plants should stay outside or on the balcony, not inside the home. Plants with milky sap — like rubber plants and certain euphorbias — are also commonly advised to keep outdoors in Vastu.
A note on how to read this: Vastu is a system of directional and elemental principles that different practitioners interpret differently. The placements below reflect the mainstream consensus across multiple Vastu sources, not a single school’s exact rules. If your family follows a specific Vastu tradition, that takes precedence over anything here.
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Why Direction Matters in Vastu Plant Placement
Vastu divides the home into eight directions plus the centre, each associated with an element, a planet, and a quality. Plants are placed to reinforce or balance the energy of each zone.
The practical read-through: north and east are the directions most Vastu systems associate with growth, prosperity, and light (north gets indirect light in the northern hemisphere; east gets morning sun). These are the directions where most Vastu-recommended plants thrive physically anyway, which is part of why the recommendations hold up in practice.
South and south-west get less Vastu plant activity. Most recommendations for these corners involve either nothing or very specific plants, because heavy plants in the south-west are thought to stabilise that zone, which has different energy associations.
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Five Vastu Plants and Where to Place Them
Tulsi (Holy Basil)
Direction: East or north-east. At the entrance or in the puja room.
Tulsi is the most consistently mentioned plant in Vastu across all regional traditions. It goes outside the main entrance (if you have a courtyard or verandah) or on the east-facing balcony or window ledge. Some families place it in the puja room, which is also acceptable.
What Vastu consistently says: tulsi should not be in an enclosed dark corner, a bathroom, or a bedroom. It needs direct sun (4 to 6 hours minimum) to stay healthy, and most Vastu recommendations align with this — the east entrance gets morning sun.
Care: Water daily. Tulsi wilts fast on missed days in summer. It flowers and goes to seed — pinch the flowers off regularly to keep the plant bushy.
A ceramic log medium planter at Rs 320 in a 10-inch size works well for a full tulsi plant. The glazed surface handles outdoor monsoon exposure.
Money Plant (Pothos/Epipremnum)
Direction: North or east. Place it at height — on a shelf or hung where the vines trail downward.
Money plant in the south-east is one of the few specific directional recommendations that appears in multiple Vastu sources, where the south-east is associated with the fire element and Venus — thought to attract wealth. North is also commonly cited.
The specific advice about height comes from the belief that money plant should grow upward (which it does naturally if given something to climb) rather than trail on the floor. A tiered planter stand in the north corner of the living room places the pot at height and lets the vine grow upward from there.
Care: Water every 3 to 4 days. Handles low light well, which is why it survives north corners and shaded interiors.
Lucky Bamboo (Dracaena sanderiana)
Direction: East or south-east.
Lucky bamboo in a vase of water is a very common Vastu gift, particularly for housewarming. The number of stalks matters in this tradition: 3 is for happiness, 5 for wealth, 6 for health, 7 for luck. Single stalks are generally avoided.
It is worth noting that lucky bamboo is not actually bamboo — it is a dracaena. But it is so firmly established in Vastu gifting culture that it functions as one.
Care: Keep in indirect light, change the water every 7 to 10 days, and use filtered or distilled water if possible. Tap water with high fluoride content yellows the tips.
A small ceramic log plate planter at Rs 270 repurposed as a base tray for the bamboo vase keeps it stable and looks more considered than a plain glass on a shelf.
Jasmine (Mogra)
Direction: North or east, near a window. Outdoors or on a covered balcony in summer.
Jasmine is recommended in Vastu for both fragrance (thought to calm the mind) and flowers (associated with prosperity in several regional traditions). It needs at least 2 to 3 hours of indirect light indoors, or direct morning sun if placed near an east window.
The practical advantage: mogra flowers in the evening, which means the fragrance is present when the family is home and sitting together.
Care: Water every other day. Does not like waterlogged soil. Flowers from April through October.
Aloe Vera
Direction: North or east. Near the kitchen window is a common placement.
Aloe is recommended in Vastu for its purifying associations and practical uses. In the north kitchen corner or on an east-facing window ledge, it gets enough light to thrive without direct afternoon sun.
Care: Water every 10 to 14 days. One of the few plants that rewards neglect. Remove offshoots when they appear and pot them separately — each offset becomes a new plant.
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Plants Vastu Recommends Keeping Outside or on the Balcony
| Plant | Why | Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Cactus and thorny succulents | Associated with sharp energy, not recommended for interiors | Keep on open balcony in full sun |
| Bonsai trees | Some practitioners associate stunted growth with restricted prosperity | Outdoors only, or omit |
| Rubber plant (Ficus elastica) | Milky sap, some traditions recommend outdoor placement | Keep on covered balcony |
| Dead or dried plants | Associated with stagnant energy | Remove immediately |
| Tamarind or any fruit tree | Fine outdoors; not recommended inside homes | Garden or terrace only |
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Pot Placement Notes for Vastu
The pot material itself appears in some Vastu guidelines. Earthen pots (terracotta) are most commonly recommended because they are considered natural and grounding. Glazed ceramic is generally considered acceptable — it still uses fired clay as the base material.
For outdoor Vastu plants (tulsi at the entrance, balcony jasmine), glazed ceramic handles Indian weather better than unglazed terracotta, which cracks through the monsoon-summer moisture cycle. The ceramic pots range at Little Decor Things covers both indoor and outdoor use in glazed finishes.
For indoor Vastu plants on stands, placing the pot slightly above floor level is consistent with the directional recommendations — raised pots get better air circulation and the height element appears in several Vastu placement suggestions. A planter stand in the north corner of the living room handles this practically.
For which plants survive which direction in Indian apartments regardless of Vastu, see the best plants for balcony in India guide — the light and direction analysis applies indoors as well.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Which plant is best for home according to Vastu?
Tulsi is the most universally recommended plant in Indian Vastu traditions across all regional schools. It goes at the entrance or east-facing window, needs direct morning sun, and should not be placed in enclosed dark rooms or bathrooms. Money plant in the north or east is the second most consistently cited recommendation.
Can we keep cactus at home as per Vastu?
Most Vastu practitioners recommend keeping cactus and other thorny plants on the balcony or in an outdoor garden rather than inside the home. The association is with sharp or aggressive energy. Succulents without thorns (like aloe vera) are treated differently and are generally considered fine for indoor placement.
Where should I place a money plant in my home for Vastu?
North or east direction, at height. The traditional recommendation is that the money plant should grow upward rather than trail on the floor. A shelf in the north corner of the living room, or a hanging planter near the east window, are both practical and Vastu-consistent placements.
Is lucky bamboo good for home as per Vastu?
Yes, in specific stalk counts. Three stalks for happiness, five for wealth, six for health. It goes in the east or south-east direction, in indirect light. Keep it in fresh water changed every 7 to 10 days, and avoid direct afternoon sun which yellows the leaves.
Can we keep aloe vera inside the home according to Vastu?
Yes. Aloe vera in the north or east direction is a common Vastu recommendation. It is also one of the most practical indoor plants for Indian homes — it survives fortnightly watering, handles indirect light, and produces useful gel. Near a north kitchen window is a standard placement.
