Mantra.Tips
kuberawealthmoneyprosperity

Kubera Mantra

Kubera Mantra in English · English

🕉️ hindu·📿 108× repetitions·🕐 Dhanteras, Diwali, Thursdays, or during financial need·🎵 Audio included·📜 Vedic and Puranic tradition
Share:

Origin & Story

Vedic and Puranic tradition · Vedic Rishis · Ancient

Kubera was originally a mortal who performed intense tapas (austerities) to Lord Brahma. Pleased, Brahma made him the treasurer of the gods and lord of all wealth. He was given the flying vehicle Pushpaka Vimana and the golden city of Alkapuri near Kailash. He is the half-brother of Ravana — while Ravana chose military power, Kubera chose to guard divine wealth. His mantras tap into the cosmic source of all material abundance.

As told in scripture

In the Ramayana, after Ravana stole the Pushpaka Vimana from Kubera and was defeated by Ram, Lord Ram returned the Vimana to Kubera. Kubera, overwhelmed with gratitude, blessed Ram with eternal prosperity for his kingdom Ayodhya. The Vishnu Purana states that Kubera's wealth is inexhaustible — no matter how much is given away, it regenerates. Chanting his mantra connects the devotee to this inexhaustible cosmic treasury.

Listen & Chant Along

Complete Text with Meaning

Tap any line — or the ▶ button — to hear it recited

Verse 1

Om Yakshaya Kuberaya Vaishravanaya Dhanadhanyadhipataye Dhanadhanya Samriddhim Me Dehi Dapaya Svaha

Meaning:Om, I pray to the Yaksha king Kubera, son of Vishravana, lord of wealth and grain — grant me prosperity and abundance of wealth and grain. Svaha.

Verse 2

Om Shreem Hreem Kleem Shreem Kleem Vitteshvaraya Namah

Meaning:Om Shreem Hreem Kleem — salutations to the Lord of Wealth (Kubera).

Verse 3

Om Yaksharajaya Vidmahe Vaishravanaya Dhimahi Tanno Kuberah Prachodayat

Meaning:Om, we know the King of Yakshas. We meditate on Vaishravana (Kubera). May Kubera inspire and guide us.

Word-by-Word Meaning

Click any word to hear its pronunciation

Yakshaya🔊To the lord of Yakshas (celestial beings)
Kuberaya🔊To Kubera (god of wealth)
Vaishravanaya🔊Son of Vishravana (Kubera's father)
Dhanadhanyadhipataye🔊Lord of wealth and grain
Samriddhim🔊Prosperity, abundance
Dehi Dapaya🔊Give and cause to give
Svaha🔊Offering (conclusion of mantras)
Shreem🔊Bija mantra of Lakshmi/wealth
Hreem🔊Bija mantra of Maya/Shakti
Kleem🔊Bija mantra of attraction/desire
Vitteshvara🔊Lord of wealth/finance
Yaksharajaya🔊King of the Yakshas
Prachodayat🔊May he inspire/illuminate us

Benefits of Chanting Kubera Mantra

Kubera is the celestial treasurer — keeper of all divine wealth

Uses powerful bija mantras (Shreem, Hreem, Kleem) for wealth attraction

The Kubera Gayatri (third mantra) follows the sacred Gayatri pattern

Extremely effective for financial growth, business success, investments

Dhanteras and Diwali chanting brings special results

Attracts not just money but all forms of abundance — grain, property, assets

How to Chant Kubera Mantra

Repetitions108times
Best TimeDhanteras, Diwali, Thursdays, or during financial need

Face north (Kubera's direction). Light a ghee diya. Place a few coins before Kubera's image or a Kubera Yantra. Chant 108 times daily for 40 days for financial transformation. On Dhanteras, chant 1008 times for maximum effect. The bija mantra version (Om Shreem Hreem Kleem) is the most powerful for rapid results.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Kubera Mantra written in the English script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
Kubera is the celestial treasurer and god of wealth in Hindu mythology. He is the lord of the Yakshas (nature spirits) and guards the treasures of the gods. He lives in Alkapuri, a golden city near Mount Kailash.
Lakshmi is the goddess of fortune and prosperity — she represents the divine feminine energy of abundance. Kubera is the keeper/administrator of wealth — he represents the masculine principle of accumulating and managing riches. Both are invoked for wealth but through different energies.
North — Kubera is the guardian of the northern direction (Uttara Dikpala). Facing north while chanting his mantra directly connects to his energy.

You May Also Like

Found this helpful? Share it with loved ones 🙏

Share:

Read the full Kubera Mantra with verse-by-verse meaning, or explore more sacred texts