Upload a photo, get a score in seconds — but what is the AI actually looking at, and where does it fall short of a real consultation?
✦ Try the Vastu PlannerAn AI vision model looks at your uploaded floor plan image the same way it would read any photo — identifying room labels, boundaries, and layout — then maps what it sees onto the 8 compass directions plus the Brahmasthan (center), using your confirmed entrance direction as the orientation reference.
Identify which rooms sit in which of the 9 classical zones, flag well-known problem placements (kitchen in the northeast, toilet in the center, main door facing a structurally awkward direction), and describe what it observes honestly — a good AI Vastu tool should say "unclear from this photo" rather than invent room contents it can't actually see.
Photo-based analysis can't measure exact proportions, can't see plot shape or road-facing direction, can't account for soil or construction material, and depends entirely on photo quality and a correctly-marked entrance direction — get the compass direction wrong and every zone reading shifts.
Be cautious of any tool that gives you a precise numeric score (like "73/100") without ever hedging — real floor-plan photos are frequently ambiguous, and an honest tool should show some uncertainty rather than false precision.
Upload a clear, well-lit photo with room labels visible if possible, confirm your entrance direction carefully using an actual compass rather than guessing, and treat the result as a strong starting point for a serious look — not a replacement for an in-person consultation before a major renovation or purchase decision.