Feng Shui for your new HDB apartment - Where do You start ?
- Ken Koh

- 26 minutes ago
- 5 min read
Congratulations.
You’ve just gotten the keys to your first HDB flat. After years of waiting, saving, and planning, the home is finally yours.
Now comes the renovation decisions, the furniture shopping, the interior design choices.
And for many Singaporean families, one more question quietly surfaces:
“Should I get the feng shui checked?”
If you’ve never done this before, you may feel unsure where to begin, or even whether it
matters. In my 28 years of practice, I’ve worked with hundreds of first-time HDB owners
— and I’ll tell you honestly: getting the basics right early saves you from costly changes
later.

Here's where to start.
First, understand what Feng Shui actually does.
Feng shui is not about placing lucky figurines on shelves or hanging a Ba-Gua mirror on
your door. At its core, classical feng shui is the study of how the energy (or qi) of a space interacts with the people living in it — influencing health, relationships, career, and finances over time.
For a new HDB flat, this means examining three things before you renovate:
1. The orientation of your unit — which direction it faces, and how energy enters
2. The internal layout — how rooms, doors, and furniture are arranged relative to each
other
3. Your personal chart — because what works for one occupant may differ for another
Getting these three aligned is the foundation of good residential feng shui.
Step 1: Know Your Facing Direction
Every HDB unit has a facing direction — the compass direction your main door or primary window faces outward.
This is not simply “which direction your door opens,” but the direction from which your home receives the most energy and light.
It usually is the direction that your living room windows form a straight line with the windows of the secondary rooms, including the master bedroom.
To affirm this, look at the facade of the building from an architectural angle and you will find that most times, the facing of the building is formed by the side on which the most windows are located.

Why does this matter?
In Flying Star feng shui, a system I use extensively, different compass sectors of your home carry different energy qualities — some favorable for wealth, others for health or relationships, and some that need to be managed carefully.
Knowing your facing direction is the starting point for everything else.
What you can do now: Use a reliable compass (your phone’s compass app works) and
stand at your main door facing outward. Note the degrees. This is your facing direction,
and it will guide many of the decisions that follow.
Step 2: Do not renovate the Kitchen or Master Bedroom first.
I know — the kitchen and master bedroom are usually the first rooms people want to gut
and redo. But from a feng shui perspective, these two rooms carry the heaviest energetic weight in any home.
The kitchen governs health and nourishment. The master bedroom governs rest,
relationships, and the primary occupant’s overall wellbeing. Making structural changes
to these rooms — moving walls, relocating stoves, repositioning the bed wall — without
understanding the energy map of your unit can inadvertently activate unfavorable
sectors.
What you can do now: Hold off on major structural decisions for these two rooms until you have a proper energy map done. Focus first on living areas and secondary bedrooms while you gather more information.
Step 3: Manage your main door (entrance) right.
In classical feng shui, the main door is called the “Qi Mouth” of the home — it is the
primary point through which energy enters your living space. Getting it right matters
more than almost any other single factor. Besides the preference of having it well lit and ventilated (something not in your total control), do not be overly concerned if your main entrance faces your neighbor.
'You can choose your home ... but you cannot choose your neighbor.'
There are two things to check:
Facing direction alignment: Your main facade should ideally face a direction that is auspicious for the current period (we are in Period 9, which began in 2024 and runs until 2043). In Period 9, certain facing directions carry exceptionally strong prosperity energy.
What lies directly in front of it: The view directly outside your main door — whether it
is an open corridor, a wall, a pillar, a lift, or a staircase — affects the quality of energy
that enters.
A long, open corridor with good air flow is ideal. A wall or structural column
directly facing your door is what we call a sha (inauspicious form) and can be addressed
with placement and design choices.
Play the good neighbor, encourage harmonious living, respect each others' spaces and always reciprocate courtesy. This will make your main entrance a welcoming and positive space each time you come home and a fresh start when you start the day.
Step 4: Bedroom placement and the bed position.
After the main door, the bedroom — and specifically where you place your bed — is the
next most important decision.
A few key principles for your HDB bedroom:
Avoid placing your bed with your head pointing toward the toilet wall. Water energy from bathrooms is disruptive to rest and health over time.
The bed should have a solid wall behind the headboard, never a window.
Windows behind the head create instability in sleep and, metaphorically, a lack of backing and support in life.
Avoid sleeping directly in line with the bedroom door. This creates what is called a “coffin position” in classical feng shui — the sleeper’s feet point directly at the door, which disrupts qi flow across the body during rest.

These are principles that hold true regardless of unit orientation or facing direction.
They are a good baseline while you work through the fuller picture.
One last note, do not hang your wedding pictures or family photo over your headboard and do not have symmetrical lights by both side tables. Use different lightings for each.
Step 5: Consider a full audit before you commit to the Interior Design.
I recommend this to every first-time homeowner: do the feng shui audit before you finalize your renovation plans, not after.
Once tiles are laid, walls are built, and the kitchen is fixed in position, your options become limited and expensive.
But if you know the energy map of your unit before renovation — which sectors are favorable, which need to be kept quiet, where water features help, where they hurt — your interior designer can incorporate these considerations. It costs far less to position a feature wall correctly the first time than to redo it.
What makes HDB Feng Shui unique.
HDB flats come with structural constraints that private properties don’t — you cannot move wet areas, certain walls are load-bearing, and corridor layouts are fixed by the building design. This means the feng shui work is often about smart activation and management rather than structural change.
The good news: I’ve seen remarkable transformations in HDB homes through thoughtful
placement, color choices, lighting, and the positioning of key furniture. You don’t need a landed property for good feng shui. You need the right approach for the space you have.
Ready to get started ?
If you’ve just collected your keys and want to ensure your new home starts on the right foot, I’d be happy to help. A residential feng shui consultation covers a full energy audit of your unit, personalized recommendations for your family’s Ba Zi charts, and guidance you can bring directly to your interior designer.
Contact Master Ken direct for a Residential Consultation →
WhatsApp, call 90181908 or email ken@hofs.sg
Read user experiences here and find rates here https://www.hofs.sg/residential#anchors-lojavvse
Or explore our free tools to get a head start:
Ba Zi Calculator — discover your personal energy profile https://www.hofs.sg/bazi-calculator
Flying Star Compass — understand the energy map of your home https://www.hofs.sg/flying-star-compass
Master Ken Koh has been practicing Feng Shui, Ba Zi Analysis and Date Selection since 1997. He is the founder of House of Feng Shui (HOFS.sg) and has conducted consultations across Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Australia, New Zealand, Vietnam and the UK.




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