The study was run online as preregistered, and after applying all exclusion criteria, the analysis was based on the data from 130 German, 112 Turkish, and 75 Iranian participants. Left-to-right preferences were strongest in German, intermediate in Turkish, and weakest in Iranian participants. In line with this, the left-to-right SNARC effect was strongest in German, intermediate in Turkish, and weakest (but still not reversed, i.e., right-to-left) in Iranian participants. This was the case both in parity judgment (dRT slopes with continuous magnitude predictor from 1 to 9: German: −6.03, Turkish: −3.43, Iranian: −1.69) and in magnitude classification (dRT slopes with categorical magnitude predictor contrast-coded with -0.5 for numbers 1 to 4 and +0.5 for numbers 6 to 9: German: −32.58, Turkish: −27.26, Iranian: −19.42). These findings suggest that, in addition to reading direction, also other cultural directional preferences shape the mental representation of number magnitude.