House number calculator
House Number Numerology Calculator
Enter your house or flat number and your date of birth to see whether your home sits well with you. We total the number — including any letter, the Chaldean way — reduce it to a single number and find its ruling planet, then compare it with both your radical number and your Life Path number to show whether the home is favourable, neutral or best avoided, and why.
How a house number is judged in numerology
In numerology every number carries the energy of a planet. To read a house or flat number, the whole number is totalled — and if it includes a letter, like 12A or B-204, that letter is turned into a number using the Chaldean system and added in — then reduced to a single number from 1 to 9, which is linked to its ruling planet, for example 6 is Venus and 8 is Saturn.
Whether the home suits you depends on how its planet relates to the planets behind your own numbers — your radical number, from the day you were born, and your Life Path number, from your full date of birth. When the planets are natural friends the home is favourable; when they are at odds it is best avoided; otherwise it is neutral. The friendships follow the classical relationships in the Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra, so each verdict is shown with its reason rather than as a bare yes or no.
How to choose a favourable home number
If you are house-hunting or comparing a few places, you are looking for a reduced number whose planet is friendly, or at least not hostile, to your radical and Life Path numbers. Total any address you are considering, reduce it to a single figure, and check it here before you decide.
A few practical notes: a merely neutral number is perfectly fine — not every home has to be “lucky”; and a number is a small influence next to light, layout, location and how a place actually feels to live in. Treat a favourable number as a gentle plus, not a deciding factor.
What a house-number check is good for
Checking the number is a small, practical step. A few ways people use it:
- Compare a shortlist of homes when you are house-hunting.
- Sense-check a place before you sign a lease or buy.
- Understand the feel of a home you already live in.
- Apply the same idea to an office, shop or second property.
Treat a favourable number as a gentle plus — guidance for a big decision, not a verdict on the home.
What each number means for your home
Once your house number reduces to a single digit, here is how each number is traditionally read for a home. These are interpretations, not guarantees — a number is a small influence next to how a place actually feels to live in.
Number 1 — Independence and ambition
A home that suits independent, ambitious people — self-starters who like to set their own direction. It carries a bright, individual energy and rewards those building something of their own. It can feel a little solitary, so make a point of warmth and company to balance it.
Number 2 — Peace and family warmth
A gentle, nurturing home, well-suited to couples and families who value peace and emotional warmth. It favours rest, harmony and close relationships over hustle. Sensitive by nature, it is happiest when kept calm and settled.
Number 3 — Cheerful and social
A cheerful, sociable home, full of life and good for families, students and creative people who love to gather and entertain. It brings an upbeat, growing energy. Its one caution is a tendency towards overspending or clutter from all the activity.
Number 4 — Stability and structure
A solid, grounded home that rewards discipline and steady effort — good for those building firm foundations and a stable routine. It favours order and hard work. The same energy can feel heavy or bring the odd repair, so keep it well maintained and add warmth.
Number 5 — Lively and full of movement
A lively, busy home, full of comings and goings — well-suited to sociable people, frequent travellers, or a home that doubles as a workplace. It thrives on change and activity. Restless by nature, it is not the most calming, so build in some quiet.
Number 6 — Love and harmony
A warm, beautiful and harmonious home — one of the most favoured numbers for a family house. It nurtures relationships, welcomes guests and supports raising a family. It may simply tempt you to spend a little extra on comfort and beauty.
Number 7 — Quiet and reflective
A quiet, peaceful home, suited to reflection, study or spiritual practice — a true retreat for introverts, thinkers or those wanting calm. It favours depth over noise. Its caution is feeling a little isolating, so it suits solitude more than a big, lively household.
Number 8 — Ambition and material success
A solid, serious home, good for ambitious, career-focused people building wealth and standing over time. It rewards discipline and patience. Its energy can feel heavy or bring expenses, so soften it with comfort and warmth.
Number 9 — Energetic and active
An energetic, active home, well-suited to driven, busy households with plenty going on. It carries courage and momentum. Because its nature runs hot, it can stir tension, so keep things calm — it is more spirited than restful.
How your house number is calculated
- 1 Turn any letter in your house or flat number into a number using the Chaldean table, add it to the digits, and reduce the total to a single number from 1 to 9.
- 2 That number's ruling planet is compared with the planet of your radical number, taken from the day you were born.
- 3 It is also compared with the planet of your Life Path number, taken from your full date of birth.
- 4 For each, friendly planets make the number favourable, clashing planets best avoided, and the rest neutral.
In short
A house number is read by reducing the whole number — including any letter, the Chaldean way — to a single number and weighing its planet against your radical and Life Path numbers. A friendly number is a small, supportive plus, and a clashing one is no cause for alarm — this is traditional guidance for one part of a big decision, not a prediction about your home life.
Want a deeper, personalised reading?
Chat with KundliGPT to explore how your numbers work together with your birth chart.
Chat with KundliGPTFrequently asked questions
- Can a house number really be lucky or unlucky?
- Numerology is a traditional system of interpretation, not a scientific fact. It offers a way to reflect on whether a home's number sits well with your own, based on the planet linked to each number. The result here is guidance, not a guarantee.
- Should I use my flat number, the building number, or both?
- Use the number people would use to find your front door — usually your flat or house number. If it includes a letter, like 12A, include the letter; in the Chaldean tradition every letter has a value, so it counts towards the total.
- Why does my date of birth matter for a house number?
- Your home's number is judged against the planets behind your radical number (from your birth day) and your Life Path number (from your full date of birth). Both are needed to compare the number with your two birth numbers, not just to reduce it.
- Is this calculator free to use?
- Yes — it is completely free, needs no sign-up, and you can use it as often as you like.
References
- Cheiro, Cheiro's Book of Numbers — the Chaldean letter values
- L. D. Balliett & Dr. Juno Jordan — the Pythagorean number system
- Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra — the planetary friendships used for number compatibility
Numerology is a traditional system of interpretation offered for guidance and reflection. It is not scientific fact or a prediction of certain outcomes.