Indoor tree care profile
Dragon tree Care Guide
Dragon tree is a durable indoor tree with narrow leaves and sculptural canes. It tolerates average rooms but dislikes overwatering and mineral buildup.
Quick Care Table
Light
Dragon tree does best in medium to bright indirect light. Use leaf posture, new growth, and drying speed as your practical feedback. If growth becomes stretched, pale, or smaller than expected, move the plant closer to a brighter window gradually instead of making a sudden full-sun jump.
Watering
Water when the top half of the mix dries. Always check the actual potting mix before watering. Pot size, root mass, light, season, temperature, and soil texture can change the interval by several days, so a fixed calendar should only be a reminder to inspect.
Soil and Potting
Use well-draining indoor mix. The right mix should hold enough moisture for the roots but still let excess water leave the pot quickly. If the plant stays wet for many days, improve drainage, increase light, or check whether the pot is too large for the root ball.
Temperature and Humidity
Keep the plant away from cold drafts, heat vents, and sudden placement changes. Stable conditions are especially important after repotting, pruning, shipping, or moving the plant to a new room.
Common Problems
Most dragon tree problems come from a short list of stress points: moisture, light, root health, temperature swings, pests, or recent changes. Start by matching the visible symptom to the recent care history.
- Brown tips from salts or dryness
- Cane rot from wet soil
- Leaf drop after stress
- Leaning toward light
Problem Guides For This Plant
Use these troubleshooting guides when the symptom matches what you are seeing. Check root moisture, light, and recent changes before adjusting several parts of care at once.
Brown TipsBrown tips usually point to dry air, inconsistent watering, mineral buildup, fertilizer burn, or stress around sensitive leaf edges. The goal is to stabilize care and protect new growth.
Leaf DropLeaf drop often follows a change: lower light, cold drafts, watering swings, shipping, repotting, or pest pressure. Stabilize conditions and watch new growth before making repeated changes.
Scale InsectsScale insects often look like small brown, tan, or gray bumps stuck to stems and leaf veins. They can be easy to miss until leaves yellow, growth slows, or sticky honeydew appears.
Crispy LeavesCrispy leaves can come from dry air, underwatering, heat, harsh sun, mineral buildup, or damaged roots. The pattern matters: edges, tips, whole leaves, and new growth each point to different checks.
Collections Featuring This Plant
Compare this plant with nearby choices before buying another pot or moving it to a different room. Collections are organized by light, humidity, routine, safety, and growth habit.
Best Low-Light HouseplantsThese plants tolerate dimmer rooms better than most houseplants, but they still need usable daylight, careful watering, and patience. Use this collection for offices, north-facing rooms, shelves near windows, and spaces where direct sun is limited.
Beginner-Friendly HouseplantsThe best beginner plants are not only tough. They give clear feedback, recover from small mistakes, and help you learn watering, light, pruning, and repotting without making every mistake feel fatal.
Drought-Tolerant HouseplantsThese plants store water in leaves, stems, rhizomes, or sturdy roots. They are good choices for bright dry rooms, frequent travelers, and anyone who tends to water too little rather than too often.
Hard-To-Kill HouseplantsNo houseplant is unkillable, but some tolerate missed watering, imperfect light, dry air, and beginner mistakes better than others. These plants are strong candidates when you want confidence before building a larger collection.
Care Notes
- Use filtered water if tips brown.
- Let soil dry well.
- Prune canes to branch.
Before You Change Care
Check soil moisture, light exposure, pot drainage, recent moves, temperature swings, and pest signs before changing several variables at once. Most houseplants respond more clearly when you adjust one likely issue, then watch new growth.
Pet and Household Safety
Toxic if chewed by pets. Plant identity matters, because common names can overlap. If a pet or child chews the plant and symptoms appear, contact a veterinarian, poison control service, or local medical professional rather than waiting on a plant-care guide.