Large Plants

Big plants that purify your air faster, hold more moisture, and turn any empty corner into something worth looking at. Low effort options for beginners, statement pieces for everyone else, and built to last in spaces where smaller plants just get lost.

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Free Local GTA Delivery on Eligible Orders
Free Local GTA Delivery on Eligible Orders

How to Care and Maintain Your Large Indoor Plants?

Large pots hold moisture longer than small ones. Use a moisture meter to check deep before you water again especially in tall containers where water pools at the base.

How to Choose the Right Large Indoor Plants for Your Space?

  • Living room centerpiece

    The Pachira Money Tree gives you that full canopy look without taking over the room. The braided trunk keeps it structured and vertical, which works well next to sofas and reading corners.

  • Narrow hallway or entryway

    Sansevieria Zeylanica and Dracaena have slim vertical profiles that fit tight spaces without brushing against walls. They are low maintenance too which helps since hallway plants tend to get ignored.

  • Want bold color?

    The Petra Croton has red, orange and yellow leaves that hold their vibrancy as long as it gets enough light. Needs a spot within a couple meters of a bright window though, or the colors fade to green over time.

  • 30-Day Happy Plant Guarantee

    If a plant arrives damaged or fails to settle, you can easily replace it within 30 days of your purchase.

What Are the Benefits of Growing Large Indoor Plants?

How to Fix Common Large Indoor Plant Problems?

Almost always mineral buildup from tap water. Areca Palms and Dracaena are especially sensitive to this. Flush the soil with distilled or rainwater every few weeks and it should clear up.

Big plants hate being moved. If you just brought one home or shifted it to a new spot, give it a couple weeks to adjust. Keep the light consistent and stay away from cold drafts and it usually settles down on its own.

Spider mites love large plants with dense foliage, especially Petra Croton and Areca Palm. Wipe the leaves down with neem oil or a cloth soaked in 70% isopropyl alcohol. Most people catch these late so check your leaves every week or so.

That means its not getting enough light. Those red and orange tones need bright conditions to hold. Move it closer to a south or west facing window and the color comes back over a few weeks.

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Can I use regular potting soil? 

That's acclimatization stress. Large plants are dramatic about environmental changes. Stabilize the spot, keep the light steady, avoid moving it around. It stops on its own once the plant adjusts.

You probably can't completely, that's just how large containers work. Use a moisture meter to check the bottom third before watering. If it still reads wet down there, hold off even if the surface looks dry.

No. The reds and oranges come from high light exposure. In low light the plant shifts to producing more chlorophyll and the leaves turn solid green. Needs a bright spot to keep that color.

Every Mygreenscape plant comes with Lifetime Plant Support. Reach out and we'll be ready to help.