
Straight answer: a mirror can live in your bedroom, provided it never reflects the bed. That single rule carries most of the classical concern; the rest is placement detail.
Why mirrors get rules at all
In Vastu’s language, a mirror multiplies whatever stands before it: light, space, clutter, and by the old reading, the restlessness of a sleeping body. Sleep is the one state where the house should subtract stimulation, not double it. Hence the care.
The three working rules
One, the mirror must not face the bed; if it does, reposition it or curtain it at night. Wardrobe mirrors count; sliding doors with mirrors get a simple cloth or frosted film. Two, prefer the north or east walls for mirrors, where reflection carries light rather than heaviness. Three, no mirrors facing the bedroom door edge to edge, and no broken or spotted mirrors anywhere in the house.
Dressing tables and modern rooms
Angle the dressing mirror away from the bed line, or choose a model with a folding or covered mirror. In compact flats where no wall escapes the bed line, a curtain rail over the mirror is a two-hundred-rupee correction that ends the issue honestly. A Mirror Placement Remedies plan handles trickier rooms, and a full Master Bedroom Vastu Consultation reads the room end to end.
Common questions
Mirror opposite the main door?
Avoid it; the entrance is what the house receives, and bouncing it straight back out is the one reflection everyone agrees against. The entrance rules live in the main door guide.
Do mirrors expand small rooms as decor people say?
They do, and Vastu agrees, on north and east walls in living areas. The bedroom is the exception because sleep is the exception.
Is a TV screen a mirror?
When off, it reflects like one. A cabinet with doors, or a cloth at night, treats it the same way.
Unsure about one stubborn wall? Send two photos and book a consultation; small questions get small, honest answers.

