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This page is about constructing a home. For tips on defending one, please see the House Defense page. For the home page, see Terraria Wiki.

A Home is a safe place for players and NPCs where they can spend their nights without fear of attack. A home is typically also used as a player spawn point once a Bed has been acquired, and it may also be used as a place to store extra items for use at a later time. Each NPC requires their own room within a home, with a total of 23 rooms needed to house all of the NPCs as of patch 1.3.0.3 (one will only be occupied from December 15th to December 31st). Homes can be built almost anywhere in the world, though some locations are safer than others.

 	Terraria_-_NPC_House 	 			  

For starters a simple home built on the surface near a forest is a good choice. Typically, the first home that a player will build is nothing more complex than a single room with walls made of Wood, a Wooden Door for an entrance, and Wood Walls for the background. A Wooden Table, Wooden Chair and a Torch is enough to make the room suitable for the first NPC, the Guide, to live in. More rooms can be added to a home at any time, and Wood Platforms offer a good way to move between floors within a home. Once a player has explored the world and acquired more resources, far more elaborate and decorative homes can be constructed.

Inn

An inn suiting a Nurse, a Merchant, a Guide, and a Demolitionist. Try building one like this, mining the elevator roof (left side) and then making a new room if you want an NPC.

Housing Menu[]

The housing menu is a feature first introduced in patch 1.1. It allows players to assign their NPCs to live in specific rooms and also to use the "housing query" option to check if a room meets the various requirements for an NPC to live there.

The housing menu is accessed by clicking on the house icon towards the upper-right corner of the screen in the player's inventory. Selecting housing query and then clicking on a room will return a message indicating the room's status. Selecting an NPC's portrait and then clicking on a room will hang that NPC's flag somewhere in the room, thereby assigning the NPC to live in that room. NPCs can be unassigned from a room by right-clicking on their flag within the room.

If an NPC's portrait does not show up on the right side of the screen when the housing menu is open, then either that world has not yet acquired that particular NPC yet, or the NPC is currently dead and will eventually

respawn if there is suitable housing available.

Housing Query Messages[]

The following table describes all housing query messages that the player may see, and provides a link to the related requirement(s). Note that some of these messages can be combined when multiple requirements are not met. For example, one may see a message such as "This housing is missing a table and a chair." The table below does not cover all of these combinations explicitly, so keywords are indicated instead.

Message What It Means
"This is not valid housing." The room does not meet one or more of the following requirements: Walls, Minimum Size, Background Walls, Corruption Limit. If the corruption is at fault, usually it is only a small amount and it may be too far away to be seen on the same screen as the room.
"This housing is missing a light source."
(keywords "missing" and "light source")
The room does not meet the Light Source requirement.
"This housing is missing a door."
(keywords "missing" and "door")
The room does not meet the Entrance requirement.
"This housing is missing a table."
(keywords "missing" and "table")
The room does not meet the Flat Surface Item requirement.
"This housing is missing a chair."
(keywords "missing" and "chair")
The room does not meet the Comfort Item requirement.
"This housing is corrupted." The room does not meet the Corruption Limit requirement. The amount of corruption is usually quite high, and it is typically visible on the same screen as the room.
"This housing is not suitable." The room does not meet the NPC Block requirement, or it does not meet the Corruption Limit requirement. If the corruption is at fault, usually it is only a small amount and it may be too far away to be seen on the same screen as the room.
"This housing is suitable." The room meets all of the requirements for an NPC to live in it, and it is currently unoccupied.


"This housing is already occupied."

An NPC is currently assigned to live in this room. When the housing menu is open, the NPC's flag should be visible somewhere in the room to indicate this. Note: the NPC will teleport back to the room at night as long as no players are nearby to see them teleport.

"This housing does not meet the requirements for a Truffle"

The room is not in an ABOVEGROUND Glowing Mushroom Biome.

Requirements[]

These requirements are currently up to date for patch 1.1.2. For interested readers, the testing performed on NPC housing can be found in this blog post. See also: Bugs

This section lists all requirements that a room must meet for an NPC to be able to live in it. Note that for a player to set their spawn point with a Bed, only the Walls, Minimum Size and Background Walls requirements need be met. See also: Housing Query Messages

Walls[]

Barwall

An NPC room must have walls defining its boundaries, without any gaps. Solid blocks (Dirt Block, Wood, Stone Block, etc.) are generally required for these walls. Wooden Doors may be used to form parts of the side walls. Wood Platforms can be used for the side walls, ceiling and floor, so as long as the NPC Block requirement is also met. NPC rooms are permitted to share common walls. If, however, you make both walls with doors in them, and the doors are open, you have to close the doors before the room is livable. Metal bars can be stacked to make interior walls. These are seen by the game as solid walls, even though players, NPCs, and monsters can simply walk through them. They do NOT count as doors though.

Minimum Size[]

An NPC home/room must meet certain minimum size requirements. It must be at least 35 blocks large (excluding the bounding blocks that make up the ceiling, floor and walls) to be considered valid housing.

Some examples of rectangular shaped valid housing:

Excluding ceiling, floor and walls(inside blocks) Including ceiling, floor and walls(outside blocks)
6 blocks wide x 6 blocks high 8 blocks wide x 8 blocks high
7 blocks wide x 5 blocks high 9 blocks wide x 7 blocks high
8 blocks wide x 4 blocks high 10 blocks wide x 6 blocks high
10 blocks wide x 3 blocks high 12 blocks wide x 5 blocks high

Maximum Size[]

An NPC home/room cannot exceed 750 blocks in area. Exceeding this limit will render the room invalid, even if it has accomplished the other requirements.

Background Walls[]

The interior of an NPC room must have background walls in the background. These background walls must be placed by the player, and cannot be background walls that were already there (generated at world creation time). Three known exceptions to this rule are the world-generated background walls within 1) the treasure room of a Floating Island, 2) an Underground House and 3) The room found in Living Wood shafts.

An NPC room doesn't need to be perfectly filled with background walls. Small, window-like portions of the room are permitted to not have background walls, though players should be advised that the lack of background walls will allow monsters to spawn within the room. Player-placed dungeon background walls can be used, though they may allow dungeon monsters to spawn.

Light Source[]

An NPC room requires at least one placed light source in its interior. Note that many items give off Light, but do not count as light sources. Most light sources can be turned on/off using wires.

Valid Light Sources for an NPC Room
Terraria Candelabra Candelabra Candle Candle Chain Lantern Chain Lantern Chandelier ItemPage Chandelier Star in a Bottle Star in a Bottle Terraria Chinese Lantern1 Chinese Lantern
Terraria Skull Lantern 1 Skull Lantern Terraria Tiki Torch Tiki Torch Torch1 Torch (any kind) Water Candle Water Candle Oil Rag Sconse Oil Rag Sconse

Flat Surface Item[]

An NPC room requires at least one placed flat surface item (which the game refers to as a "table") in its interior. The following are valid flat surface items for an NPC room:

Comfort Item[]

An NPC room requires at least one placed comfort item in its interior. The following are valid comfort items for an NPC room:

Entrance[]

An NPC room requires at least one entrance. This entrance can be either a Wooden Door or a Wood Platform forming part of the walls. This requirement can still be met even if the player cannot physically enter the room through this entrance. Two NPC rooms are permitted to share a single entrance.

Corruption Limit[]

This is one of the more complex NPC housing requirements. All players are advised to pay special attention to this particular requirement.

An NPC room cannot have too much Corruption too close to it. A reasonable estimate is that no more than 49 corruption-type-blocks (Ebonstone Block, Ebonsand Block, Demonite Brick, corrupted grass, purple thorns, etc.) are permitted to be within a 42 block distance of the outer walls of the NPC room. This estimate may be slightly inaccurate, but it gives a rough idea of how much corruption is tolerable. It is technically possible to construct a small, suitable NPC house using walls of Ebonstone.

Note that the minimal distance required between an NPC room and the corruption is quite large, so players are strongly encouraged to be very aware of the surroundings near their house. Housing can easily fail to meet this requirement when corruption begins to spread in Hard Mode. This is especially true when it comes to underground housing, as it may be difficult or impossible to see the corruption underground.

Presence of The Crimson will also prevent housing from being habitable, though the message displayed will still read "This housing is corrupted."

NPC Block[]

Most rooms meet this requirement naturally. However, players who wish to build an NPC room using wood platforms for the floor must be careful to meet this requirement.

The floor of an NPC room must have at least one solid block (i.e. not a wood platform), known as an NPC block, for the NPC to stand on at night. There must be at least 3 blocks of empty space above this NPC block (the ceiling must be 4+ blocks away). There must also be 2 blocks of horizontal distance between the NPC block and the side walls of the house (the left/right walls must both be 3+ blocks away)

Additionally, at least one Comfort Item or Flat Surface Item must be within 2 blocks of the NPC block. Furniture items cannot be placed on top of the NPC block itself though, as they prevent the NPC from standing there. Note: In an occupied house, the NPC block is the block over which the NPC's flag appears when the housing menu is open.

Update Info[]

v1.1

  • Housing menu introduced.

v1.0.6

  • NPC houses now require at least one Household item.

PC release

  • Added to the game.

Bugs[]

As of patch 1.1.2, these bugs have not yet been fixed.
  • In some cases, assigning an NPC to a room will fail, yet the message "This housing is suitable." will appear. This bug is almost always due to a room that does not meet the NPC Block requirement.
  • Sometimes a structure made of Spooky Wood will be unsuitable housing. It is not known if this is intentional or not, as this happens as often as not.
  • Doors that open into a room take up space in the interior, potentially causing the room to not meet the Minimum Size requirement.
  • There is a case where a Dryad, Wizard, and Goblin Tinkerer were living in the same house. All their housing banners were stacked over each other. Another instance was the Dryad and the Merchant sharing a room, their banners stacked as well.

Gallery[]

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