Feng Shui Report Example

See what a feng shui report example includes, what the free Assessment shows first, and what the full Remedy Report adds.

What this page is for

This feng shui report example page shows how to read a NineFengShui report before you run your own layout.

Use it to answer four questions quickly:

  • what the free Assessment Report shows first
  • what only appears after you unlock the Remedy Report
  • how to interpret possible vs certain notes
  • which report sections matter most when you are making decisions

If you want to understand the logic behind the report itself, see How NineFengShui Works.

What this report example helps you answer

Use this page when the real question is not only "What does the report look like?" but also:

  • what a home feng shui floor plan report actually includes before you pay
  • whether the free Assessment is enough or the full Remedy Report is the right next step
  • how issues like bagua placement, the center of the home, or room placement show up in the final output
  • where to go next if your question is really about the floor plan, the bagua map, or layout fixes

If your question is still mostly about how to place the grid, start with the Bagua Map on Floor Plan guide or the Feng Shui Floor Plan Checker. If the issue is the middle of the plan, open the Center of Home Feng Shui guide.

What the free Assessment Report shows first

The free Assessment Report is the first-pass read of your floor plan.

It is designed to help you judge whether the layout needs deeper work, not to dump every issue at once.

You usually see:

  • the home type summary and the overall first impression
  • the single most critical issue shown first
  • a lighter preview of Day Master linkage, yearly Flying Stars, and key risks
  • enough context to decide whether the full Remedy Report is worth unlocking

What the full Remedy Report adds

The Remedy Report is the execution layer.

It keeps the assessment summary, then adds the sections that help you act instead of only skim.

You unlock:

  • the full prioritized issue list instead of only the top issue
  • room-level and palace-level remedy guidance
  • a fuller Day Master linkage and hidden-risk layer when relevant
  • more detailed yearly sector cautions and remedy direction
  • PDF export and follow-up AI questions on the same report

How to read possible vs certain

NineFengShui does not treat every note the same.

Certain

A certain note means the mapped input already supports the conclusion directly.

Examples:

  • a toilet is clearly placed in a sensitive palace
  • the center cell is visibly occupied
  • a member's sleeping palace is clearly identified

Possible

A possible note means the pattern looks plausible from the mapped layout, but the final judgment still depends on real-world details.

Examples:

  • a bedroom wall may share a side with a bathroom or kitchen
  • a circulation conflict may depend on the exact door swing or furniture depth
  • a room split across zones may need on-site judgment about which side dominates

Use possible notes as a verification checklist, not as an instruction to move things immediately.

Report fields that matter most

When you open a report, read the sections in this order:

1. Home type

This is the fast read of what the layout naturally supports. It summarizes the strongest structural tendencies before the report moves into risks and timing.

2. Most critical issue

This is the issue that deserves attention before smaller adjustments. If you only act on one thing first, start here.

3. Day Master linkage

This shows whether the home's structure is helping or draining a household member's Day Master tendencies. It matters more once the core layout issue is already clear.

4. Annual Flying Stars

This is the timing layer. It tells you which sectors are easier to activate and which sectors need more caution this year and next year.

5. Full remedy guidance

This only becomes available in the full report. It turns the diagnosis into a sequence of actions instead of a list of observations.

When the free report is enough

The free Assessment Report is often enough when:

  • you only want a first opinion on whether the layout has a serious problem
  • you want to confirm whether one suspected issue is real
  • you are still deciding whether the home needs deeper adjustment work

When to unlock the full report

Unlock the Remedy Report when:

  • the most critical issue is clearly important and you need next steps
  • several rooms or palaces may be involved together
  • you want room-by-room or palace-by-palace remedy guidance
  • you want to connect structure, yearly timing, and family members in one plan

Read the sample like a checklist

Do not ask only whether the report looks good. Use the sample to check whether the output answers the questions you actually care about:

  • Does it show the first issue clearly enough?
  • Does it distinguish likely vs confirmed problems?
  • Does it tell you what needs verification on the real layout?
  • Does it give you a reason to unlock the full execution layer?