Your first philodendron survived everything. Missed waterings. Low light. Zero fertilizer.
That’s the thing. These plants want to live.
Over 400 species exist. Trailing types. Climbing types. Rare variegated ones worth hundreds.
They all share one trait. Forgiving. Check out the full philodendron plant collection to find yours.
Philodendron Varieties That Every Plant Parent Should Know
Not all philodendrons are the same. Some trail. Some climb. Some grow massive leaves. And some have insane variegation that collectors pay top dollar for.
Here’s what matters for care: climbing vs. self-heading types need slightly different approaches.
Climbing and Trailing Varieties
|
Variety |
Leaf Type |
Growth Habit |
Difficulty |
Special Feature |
|
Heartleaf (hederaceum) |
Small, heart-shaped |
Trailing/climbing |
Very easy |
Classic beginner plant |
|
Brasil |
Green + yellow stripe |
Trailing |
Easy |
Bright variegation |
|
Micans |
Velvet, iridescent |
Trailing/climbing |
Easy |
Velvet texture |
|
Pink Princess |
Dark + pink variegation |
Climbing |
Moderate |
Rare, highly sought |
|
White Princess |
Green + white variegation |
Climbing |
Moderate |
Stunning contrast |
Heartleaf philodendron is the gateway plant. Millions of plant parents started here. Almost impossible to kill.
And then there’s the Pink Princess Philodendron. The one that broke the internet. Dark leaves splashed with bubblegum pink.
Self-Heading Varieties
Self-heading types don’t climb or trail. They grow upright from a central stem. Bigger leaves. More dramatic.
- Birkin: dark green with creamy white pinstripes, compact grower
- Prince of Orange: new leaves emerge bright orange, fading to green
- Selloum (Hope): massive split leaves, grows wide, statement plant
- Congo Rojo: deep burgundy new growth, sturdy and structural
Self-headers need more room. They grow out, not up. Plan for that.

Philodendron Light Requirements (Why It’s Not “Low Light”)
"Philodendrons are low light plants." You’ve heard that. It’s misleading.
They survive low light. They thrive in bright indirect. Big difference.
The Ideal Light Setup
Bright indirect light. That means near a window but not in the direct sun path.
Placement guide:
- 2 to 5 feet from a south or west-facing window
- Directly beside an east-facing window (morning sun is gentle)
- Behind a sheer curtain on bright windows
Need help figuring out your light? The plant light requirements guide breaks it down room by room.
Light for Variegated Varieties
This is where it gets critical. Pink Princess. White Princess. Birkin.
Variegated leaves have less chlorophyll. Less chlorophyll means less energy from light. So they need more light to compensate.
Variegation light rules:
- More light than solid green varieties
- Some morning direct sun is fine (east window)
- Low light causes colour loss (reversion to solid green)
- Once a leaf reverts, it won’t change back
Your White Princess Philodendron needs the brightest spot you can give it. Without that light, those white sections shrink with each new leaf.
Signs Your Light Is Wrong
|
Symptom |
Problem |
Solution |
|
Long gaps between leaves |
Too little light (etiolation) |
Move closer to window |
|
Leaves smaller than usual |
Insufficient light |
Brighter location or grow light |
|
Brown crispy patches |
Direct sun burn |
Move back 2 to 3 feet |
|
Variegation fading |
Not enough light for variegated type |
Brightest indirect spot available |
|
Leaning hard toward window |
Uneven light distribution |
Rotate pot 1/4 turn weekly |
How to Water Philodendrons (The #1 Care Rule)
Overwatering. That’s how most philodendrons die.
Not underwatering. Not pests. Not wrong light. Overwatering.
The Finger Test Method
Stick your finger 1 to 2 inches into the soil. Dry? Water. Damp? Wait.
That’s the entire strategy. No complicated schedules. No apps needed. Just your finger.
Seasonal Watering for Canadian Homes
|
Season |
Frequency |
Check Method |
Canadian Notes |
|
Spring |
Every 7 to 10 days |
Top 1 to 2" dry |
Growth resumes, watch for new leaves |
|
Summer |
Every 5 to 7 days |
Top 1" dry |
Peak growth, AC can dry air |
|
Fall |
Every 10 to 14 days |
Top 1 to 2" dry |
Reduce as light decreases |
|
Winter |
Every 14 to 21 days |
Top 2"+ dry |
Heaters dry air but growth slows |
Winter trips people up every year. The dry heated air makes you think the plant is thirsty. But growth is slow. Roots aren’t drinking fast. Too much water sits and rots.
Master your watering with the complete indoor watering guide.
Signs of Watering Problems
Overwatering:
- Yellow leaves (especially lower ones first)
- Soft, mushy stems near soil line
- Soil smells sour or rotten
- Fungus gnats buzzing around soil
Underwatering:
- Leaves curling inward
- Drooping that perks up after watering
- Crispy brown leaf edges
- Slow growth even in growing season
Yellow from overwatering vs. crispy from underwatering. Learn the difference. It saves plants.

The Best Soil Mix for Philodendrons
Standard potting soil? Too dense. Holds too much water. Suffocates roots.
Philodendrons are aroids. In nature, they grow in loose, airy forest debris. Your soil needs to mimic that.
The Aroid Soil Recipe
Equal parts:
- Peat moss or coco coir (moisture retention)
- Perlite (drainage and aeration)
- Orchid bark (air pockets, mimics natural growing conditions)
Optional add-in: handful of horticultural charcoal. Absorbs impurities and prevents odour. Not required but helpful.
Pot Selection
- Drainage holes are mandatory (non-negotiable)
- Terracotta dries faster (good for overwaterers)
- Plastic retains moisture longer (good for forgetful waterers)
- Size up only 1 to 2 inches when repotting
- Repot in spring when roots fill the pot
Find soil components and pots in the plant care products collection.
Humidity and Temperature for Philodendrons
Tropical plants in Canadian homes. Sounds tricky. It’s not.
Temperature
18°C to 29°C (65°F to 85°F). Your home probably already hits this.
Avoid:
- Cold drafts from winter windows (move plants a few inches back)
- Direct heat from radiators and vents
- Temperatures below 13°C (55°F) cause damage
Humidity
50% to 70% is ideal. Most Canadian homes sit around 30% to 40% in winter. That’s lower than philodendrons prefer.
Simple fixes:
- Group plants together (shared transpiration boosts humidity)
- Pebble tray with water under pots
- Small humidifier (best winter solution)
- Keep away from heating vents
Don’t mist philodendrons constantly. It doesn’t raise humidity effectively and can cause leaf spot. A humidifier does the job properly.
Humidity matters more for:
- Velvet types like Micans (dry air damages the texture)
- Large-leaf varieties like Selloum (brown edges in dry air)
- Variegated types (white sections are more sensitive)
How to Keep Pink Princess and White Princess Variegation
You paid a premium for those pink or white splashes. Here’s how to keep them.
Light Is Everything for Variegation
Bright indirect light. More than your solid green philodendrons get.
Variegated sections lack chlorophyll. They can’t produce energy from light. The plant compensates by reverting to green if it’s not getting enough light overall.
Pink Princess light needs:
- Bright indirect light (3 to 5 hours minimum)
- East window with some direct morning sun works great
- Grow light supplement in Canadian winters
- Rotate 1/4 turn weekly for even growth
White Princess needs even more light than Pink Princess. Those white sections produce zero energy. Every leaf that’s mostly white relies entirely on the green sections.
Managing Reversion
See all-green leaves appearing? That’s reversion. Act fast.
What to do:
- Move to brighter location immediately
- Prune reverted (all-green) growth just above a variegated leaf
- This signals the plant to produce variegated growth again
- No guarantee it works every time, but improves the odds significantly
Grab a Pink Princess Philodendron while they’re available. They sell out quickly.
|
Feature |
Pink Princess |
White Princess |
Birkin |
Brasil |
|
Variegation colour |
Pink/black |
White/green |
White pinstripes |
Yellow/green |
|
Light needs |
High (bright indirect) |
Very high |
Medium-high |
Medium |
|
Reversion risk |
Moderate |
High |
Low |
Low |
|
Growth speed |
Moderate |
Slow |
Moderate |
Fast |
|
Price range |
$40 to $100+ |
$30 to $80+ |
$15 to $30 |
$10 to $20 |
|
Difficulty |
Intermediate |
Intermediate |
Easy-medium |
Easy |

How to Propagate Philodendrons (Works for All Varieties)
Propagation is easy with philodendrons. Ridiculously easy. One of the best genus for beginners to practice with.
Stem Cutting Method
Steps:
- Find a node (small bump where leaf meets stem, often has aerial root)
- Cut 1 inch below the node with clean scissors
- Remove the bottom leaf (keep 1 to 2 leaves on cutting)
- Place in water or moist sphagnum moss
- Keep in bright indirect light, warm spot
- Roots appear in 1 to 3 weeks (heartleaf is fastest)
Transfer to aroid soil when roots are 2 to 3 inches
Water propagation is the easiest method. Use a clear glass so you can watch the roots grow. Change water every 3 to 4 days.
Tips for Variegated Cuttings
Propagating Pink Princess or White Princess? Choose wisely.
- Pick cuttings with good variegation (some pink/white showing)
- All-green cuttings will produce all-green plants
- Variegated cuttings root slower (less chlorophyll)
- Give extra light during rooting phase
- Spring is the best time (active growth)
Patience matters with rare varieties. They’re worth the wait.
Are Philodendrons Toxic to Cats and Dogs?
Yes. All philodendrons are toxic to pets.
They contain calcium oxalate crystals. If a cat or dog chews the leaves, those crystals cause immediate irritation.
Symptoms of ingestion:
- Drooling and pawing at mouth
- Swelling of lips, tongue, and throat
- Vomiting
- Difficulty swallowing
It’s not usually fatal. But it’s painful and scary. Keep philodendrons out of reach.
Pet-safe solutions:
- Hang trailing types high (heartleaf, Brasil, Micans look amazing in hanging baskets)
- Place on high shelves pets can’t access
- Use a moss pole and keep on a tall plant stand
- Consider a dedicated plant room if you have many toxic species
Want to mix and match easy plants for a pet-safe and pet-aware collection? Bundle options help.
Fertilizing Philodendrons for Faster Growth
Philodendrons aren’t heavy feeders. But they do respond well to consistent nutrition during the growing season.
Feeding Schedule
|
Season |
Frequency |
Strength |
Notes |
|
Spring |
Monthly |
Half-strength |
Growth resuming |
|
Summer |
Every 2 to 3 weeks |
Half-strength |
Peak growth period |
|
Fall |
Monthly, stop by November |
Quarter-strength |
Growth slowing down |
|
Winter |
None |
N/A |
Dormancy, roots resting |
Use a balanced liquid fertilizer (20-20-20 or similar). Always dilute to half the recommended strength. Over-fertilizing burns roots and causes salt buildup.
See brown tips on leaves? Could be fertilizer burn. Flush the soil with plain water. Then reduce your feeding.

Troubleshooting Common Philodendron Problems
Even forgiving plants have bad days. Quick diagnosis saves them.
Yellow Leaves
Overwatering. 80% of the time. Check soil moisture. If wet and yellow, you’re drowning it.
Other causes: old age (lower leaves naturally yellow and drop), nutrient deficiency after months without feeding, or cold stress from drafty windows.
Brown Leaf Tips
Low humidity. Especially common in Canadian winters when heaters blast dry air.
Fix: increase humidity with a humidifier or pebble tray. The brown tips won’t recover, but new growth will be healthy.
Pests to Watch For
- Spider mites: tiny dots and fine webbing on leaf undersides. Spray with neem oil, increase humidity
- Mealybugs: white cottony clusters in leaf joints. Dab with rubbing alcohol on cotton swab
- Thrips: tiny black insects causing silvery patches. Treat with insecticidal soap
- Fungus gnats: small flies near soil. Let soil dry out more between waterings
Inspect new plants before adding them to your collection. Two-week quarantine prevents infestations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What’s the easiest philodendron for beginners?
Heartleaf philodendron. Without question. It tolerates low light, irregular watering, and basically any indoor condition. Brasil is a close second with more visual interest. Both cost under $20 and grow fast.
Q: How do I keep my Pink Princess pink?
Light. More than you think. Bright indirect light for at least 3 to 5 hours daily. Grow light in Canadian winter. If all-green leaves appear, prune them back to the last variegated leaf. This encourages the plant to produce coloured growth again.
Q: How often should I report my philodendron?
Every 1 to 2 years. Or when roots circle the bottom and poke through drainage holes. Spring is best. Go up only 1 to 2 inches in pot size. Too big and the soil stays wet too long.
Q: Are philodendrons safe for cats?
No. All philodendrons contain calcium oxalate crystals. Toxic to cats and dogs if chewed. Causes mouth irritation, drooling, vomiting. Not usually fatal but painful. Keep them out of reach. Hanging baskets work perfectly.
Q: Philodendron vs. monstera. What’s the difference?
Related but different genus. Monsteras get much bigger. Philodendrons are generally easier and faster growing. Both are aroids with similar care needs. Philodendrons have more variety in shapes, sizes, and colours. Start with philodendrons if you’re new. Check out the philodendron care page for the full breakdown.
Conclusion
Philodendrons are the perfect houseplant family. From the bulletproof heartleaf to the show-stopping Pink Princess, there’s one for every skill level.
The basics? Bright indirect light. Let soil dry between waterings. Well-draining aroid mix. That’s 90% of the job.
For variegated types, just add extra light and patience.
Start with one. You’ll end up with five.
Browse the full philodendron collection to find your next favourite plant.