The effect of substitution of phenyl and naphthyl rings to benzene was examined to elucidate the cation-pi interactions involving alkali metal ions with 1,3,5-tri(phenyl)benzene (TPB) and 1,3,5-tri(naphthyl)benzene (TNB). Benzene, TPB, and four TNB isomers (with alpha alpha alpha, alpha alpha beta, alpha beta beta, and beta beta beta types of fusion) and their complexes with Li+, Na+, Rb+, and ce were optimized using DFT approach with B3LYP and M06-2X functionals in conjunction with the def2-QZVP basis set. Higher relative stability of beta,beta,beta-TNB over alpha,alpha,alpha-TNB can be attributed to peri repulsion, which is defined as the nonbonding repulsive interaction between substituents in the 1- and the 8-positions on the naphthalene core. Binding energies, distances between ring centroid and the metal ions, and the distance to metal ions from the center of other six-membered rings were compared for all complexes. Our computational study reveals that the binding affinity of alkali metal cations increases significantly with the 1,3,5-trisubstitution of phenyl and naphthyl rings to benzene. The detailed computational analyses of geometries, partial charges, binding energies, and ligand organization energies reveal the possibility of favorable C-H...M+ interactions when a a-naphthyl group exists in complexes of TNB structures. Like benzene-alkali metal ion complexes, the binding affinity of metal ions follows the order: Li+ > Na+ > K+ > Rb+ > Cs+ for any considered 1,3,5-trisubstituted benzene systems. In case of TNB, we found that the strength of interactions increases as the fusion point changes from alpha to beta position of naphthalene.