Orchid Care Guide for Indoor Blooms

Orchid Care Guide for Indoor Blooms

Orchid care is not complicated. It is just different from everything else you have grown. You brought home an orchid in full bloom, watered it because you were trying to be helpful, then watched the last flower drop. Now you are staring at curling leaves, yellow edges, or a bare green stem and wondering if it is alive, dying, or just being an orchid. If the plant is otherwise healthy and the bloom cycle just ended, the orchid after-flowering guide gives the immediate spike, light, and rebloom steps. ...

 · 17 min · 
Best Plant Identifier Apps in 2026 Compared

Best Plant Identifier Apps in 2026 Compared

You’re standing in front of a plant — maybe at a thrift store, maybe in your living room after the tag went missing, maybe at a friend’s house — and you have two questions: what is it, and can you actually keep it happy? Now you hold up your phone, take a photo, and get an answer in seconds. Disclosure: KnowYourPlant published this comparison and is one of the apps reviewed below. To keep that conflict visible, the methodology section names the third-party sources used for this update, and the article avoids claiming an independent lab benchmark where none exists. ...

 · 25 min · 
Bird of Paradise Plant Care Indoors

Bird of Paradise Plant Care Indoors

You spotted it in a hotel lobby or someone’s living room — a plant with paddle-shaped leaves the size of your arm, fanning out like it owns the whole corner. And now you have one, or you’re about to. Bird of paradise is worth the space if you can give it two things most indoor plants never ask for quite this loudly: bright window light and restraint with the watering can. If you love that big-leaf look, it also belongs on any shortlist of the best tropical plants to grow indoors. ...

 · 20 min · 
30 Cat-Safe Indoor Plants

30 Cat-Safe Indoor Plants for Cat Owners

Non-toxic indoor plants, quick care cues, and what to avoid when your cat treats leaves like snacks. Reviewed by the KnowYourPlant editorial team. Safety references in this guide were source-checked on 2026-05-17 against ASPCA plant toxicity entries, the FDA warning on true lilies, and PetMD guidance on stomach upset after heavy chewing. You’ve probably noticed: cats are drawn to plants. Something about the texture, the movement, the rustling. And if you’ve ever watched your cat take a deliberate bite out of a leaf and felt that familiar spike of panic (is this one okay?), you know the research spiral that follows. ...

 · 22 min · 
Peace Lily Care Guide for Indoor Blooms

Peace Lily Care Guide for Indoor Blooms

If your peace lily is drooping, yellowing, curling, or getting brown tips, you do not need a botany lecture. You need to know whether to water, wait, move it, or check the roots. This peace lily care guide gives you a plain-English routine for indoors: where to put it, how often to water, what overwatering looks like, and what to do when the leaves start looking wrong. If you want a shorter signal-first overview before the deep routine, start with the updated peace lily care guide. ...

 · 22 min · 
Air-purifying indoor plants grouped near a bright window

Best Air-Purifying Indoor Plants: What Works and How to Keep Them Alive

What Most Plant Roundups Miss Most roundups about air-Purifying Indoor Plants list attractive options. The better question is which choice will still make sense in your actual room three months from now. Use this filter before choosing: Light reality: what the plant receives on a normal cloudy day, not the brightest hour of the week. Care rhythm: whether you prefer weekly attention or a plant that can be ignored longer. Space: mature height, spread, trailing habit, and whether leaves will touch walls or pets. Failure signal: what the plant does first when the match is wrong: yellowing, stretching, crisping, or dropping leaves. A good recommendation is not just beautiful. It fits the room, the owner, and the first problem you are likely to notice. ...

 · 23 min · 
Terracotta Pots Guide for Houseplants

Terracotta Pots Guide for Houseplants

If your plant keeps yellowing in a pretty ceramic pot, or drying out too fast in a tiny clay one, the pot may be changing your watering routine more than you realize. Terracotta is not automatically “better.” It is simply porous clay, which means soil dries faster and roots get more air. That is great for succulents, snake plants, pothos, monsteras, herbs, and anyone who tends to overwater. It is frustrating for ferns, calatheas, and other plants that hate drying out. ...

 · 20 min · 
Best Low Light Indoor Plants That Live

Best Low Light Indoor Plants That Live

If your plant corner is a north-facing bedroom, office shelf, hallway, or a spot several feet from the window, you do not need a complicated routine. You need a plant that grows slowly, uses water slowly, and gives you clear warning signs before it collapses. Low light does not mean no light. A good low-light spot is bright enough to read in during the day but does not get direct sun. If you need a lamp to read there at noon, plan on adding an LED lamp or choosing a different spot. If you are starting from scratch, our easy houseplants for beginners guide helps narrow this list to the most forgiving picks. ...

 · 22 min · 
Succulent Care Guide for Beginners

Succulent Care Guide for Beginners

Succulent care usually goes wrong in one of two ways: the plant gets watered while the soil is still damp, or it sits in a room that is too dim for the soil to dry quickly. If you are new to plants, start here: most indoor succulents want a deep drink every 7-14 days in spring and summer, every 3-5 weeks in autumn and winter, and no water until the soil is dry 2 inches down. ...

 · 19 min · 
Monstera Deliciosa Care Guide Indoors

Monstera Deliciosa Care Guide Indoors

If you bought a Monstera deliciosa and are now wondering how often to water it, start here: water when the top 2 inches of soil feel dry, not on a strict calendar. For many homes, that means every 7–10 days in spring and summer and every 14–21 days in winter. The two biggest things to watch are light and wet soil. A monstera wants bright indirect light, a pot with drainage, and soil that dries partway between waterings. Yellow lower leaves with soggy soil usually mean you are overdoing the water. Curling leaves, crispy brown tips, or soil pulling away from the pot usually mean the plant is too dry, too hot, or sitting in air that is too dry. ...

 · 20 min ·