Feng Shui Experts Say This Prosperity Bowl Attracts Good Luck and Prosperity – Here’s Where to Put Yours

The Year of the Horse is less than a week away, and one of the most powerful additions to your prosperity bowl is likely already in your pantry

An airy living room space with large windows, sheer white curtains, pale blue couch with mismatched patterned cushions, a freestanding lamp, patterned upholstered stool, and a large coffee table in the foreground with green candle holders, three green bowls, and two green glasses.
(Image credit: Future / ONE REPRESENTS LTD)

With the Lunar New Year less than a week away, Feng Shui experts reveal there's one particular item you should be paying particular attention to ahead of the Year of the Horse.

Prosperity bowls are designed to attract wealth, abundance, and good fortune into your home, but curating yours with powerful items such as citrus fruits is only half the job – you'll also need to know exactly where to place it for the best results.

What Is a Feng Shui Prosperity Bowl?

As Suzanne Butler, a Feng Shui practitioner at Harmonizing Energies, explains, a prosperity or wealth bowl is a prominent reminder or intention to bring wealth into your life, and is used to create good Feng Shui in your home.

'It represents having resources in an abundant reserve, rather than living in a state of constant cash outflow,' she says. 'When styled thoughtfully, it can sit seamlessly within both contemporary and classic interiors, functioning as both an energetic anchor or refined design element.'

Katie Brindle, Feng Shui expert, Chinese medical practitioner, and cosmologist, adds that these are typically curated with items that symbolize wealth, abundance, luck, and positive energy, and that each element inside the bowl is chosen for its purpose and frequency, working together to enhance your home's financial qi, or energy.

'Simple yet powerful, this tool, when used correctly, can help draw in positive financial energy,' she assures.

Where to Put a Feng Shui Prosperity Bowl

A dining room with long wooden table and stools, decorative bowls and a patterned table runner, and two large rattan lightshades hanging above. Behind the table is an empty pink shabby chic style bookshelf with a blue vase on top, and behind are two panelled doors. The left door is open, and letting light into the room.

Knowing where to put your prosperity bowl is vital.

(Image credit: Future / Pearson Lyle Management Ltd)

'Placement is where Feng Shui becomes particularly important,' advises Suzanne Butler. The most supportive locations for your prosperity bowl include:

Ideally, continues Suzanne Butler, the bowl should be placed somewhere visible yet uncluttered, to reinforce the idea that abundance is acknowledged and respected, rather than hidden away.

However, adds Suzanne Roynon, Feng Shui consultant and interiors therapist, 'If you don’t feel comfortable having a bowl of money visible to guests, place them in rooms which the family uses, but visitors don’t see.'

Where to Never Put a Feng Shui Prosperity Bowl

A bathroom with patterned tile wall, wooden floor, and standalone white bath in a black frame, with a towel hanging over the edge. To the left of the wall is a small inset with a black shelf with a black jug and white vase on top, and in the foreground to the left is a black stool with a large orange bowl on top.

Your Feng Shui prosperity bowl should not be placed in the bathroom.

(Image credit: Future / ONE REPRESENTS LTD (JAKE CURTIS))

Knowing where to never put your prosperity bowl is also equally important.

For example, highlights Suzanne Butler, your prosperity bowl should not be placed in your bathroom ideas or near toilets, where energy is associated with loss and draining, in your kitchen ideas near sinks or stoves, where water and fire elements can clash and destabilize financial energy, or used for bedroom Feng Shui, where prosperity symbolism can interfere with rest, relationships, and emotional balance.

'Feng Shui is not just about what you add to a space, but where you place it,' she adds. 'Even the most beautifully styled bowl will struggle to work if positioned in an energetically unsuitable area.'

What Should Be Placed in a Feng Shui Prosperity Bowl?

A blue bowl filled with lemons on a yellow stool. Behind is a red and white patterned wallpapered wall, oversized baseboard, and blue and white patterned floor.

Citrus fruits are often used.

(Image credit: Future / SIMON BROWN PHOTOGRAPHY)

Emilia Guasconi, certified Feng Shui consultant and founder of Your Abundant Space, advises, 'Prosperity bowls are usually filled with meaningful items such as coins, citrus fruits, crystals like citrine or pyrite, red envelopes, and symbols of growth – each item chosen to represent prosperity, vitality, and opportunity,' and makes easy energy shifts for your home.

'For a modern approach, I recommend using a beautiful ceramic or glass bowl filled with fresh mandarins, gold-toned coins, and crystals like citrine or pyrite for both energetic and aesthetic impact.'

We'd recommend using one of your best bowls for this – the Vietri Incanto Large Serving Bowl, available at Anthropologie, is perfect.

Suzanne Butler adds that you may also want to add a solid written intention or affirmation, discreetly placed, to anchor personal meaning, and you can also place your bowl on a mirror, such as the Karrina Accent Wood Round Mirror, available at Wayfair, to multiply the riches you wish to receive.

Alternatively, Katie also shares that she adds Green Aventurine stones to hers, which are believed to attract financial abundance and bring great wealth (jade can also be used as an alternative), bay leaves, to offer protection against negative energy, and Pyrite, to protect against loss while drawing in wealth and abundance.

Most importantly, warns Suzanne Roynon, don't confuse a prosperity bowl (open top) with a 'wealth jar.'

She explains, 'Wealth jars have a lid to protect the contents, which might include seeds, rice, and other dried foodstuffs, and are tucked away in the backs of cupboards or wardrobes to denote hidden wealth.

'These are never reopened. Putting edible items into an open-topped bowl can attract vermin.'

All prices were correct at the time of publication.

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Meet the Experts

A headshot of Katie Brindle in a white long-sleeved top and black jeans against a cream background
Katie Brindle

Katie is a Chinese medicine practitioner, Feng Shui expert, and cosmologist. She has been working in Chinese medicine since 2002, and is also a bestselling author and founder of the Hayo’u Method and Hayo’u Fit.

A headshot of Suzanne Butler wearing a blue shirt and large brown glasses.
Suzanne Butler

Suzanne is a Feng Shui practitioner at Harmonizing Energies. Since embracing Feng Shui back in 2017, she's manifested over $500,000 in unexpected income, landed job, enjoyed travel experiences, attracted high-level business opportunities, and more.

A headshot of Emilia Guasconi wearing blue jeans and a black shirt, against a white background
Emilia Guasconi

Emilia is a certified Feng Shui consultant and founder of Your Abundant Space, where she helps individuals and businesses create intentional environments that support clarity, well-being, and success through modern Feng Shui principles.

Suzanne Roynon
Suzanne Roynon

Suzanne is a regular Homes & Gardens contributor, sharing her wisdom about all things Feng Shui with readers. She's also the best-selling author of Welcome Home: How Stuff Makes or Breaks Your Relationship, available at Amazon, and helps clients to create a space that supports their dreams.


Next, perfect your Feng Shui furniture placement for improved energy flow at home.

Ottilie Blackhall
Sleep Editor

Ottilie joined Homes & Gardens in 2024 as the News Writer on Solved, after finishing a Master's in Magazine Journalism at City, University of London. Now, as the Sleep Editor, she spends her days hunting deals and producing content on all things sleep – from mattresses and sheets to protectors and pillows, all of which she tests in her own home. She also has particular expertise in home fragrance, covering everything from candles to reed diffusers.

Previously, she has written for Livingetc and Motorsport Magazine, and also has a Master's degree in English Literature and History of Art from the University of Edinburgh, where she developed a love for inspiring interiors and architecture.