Monstera problems and how to fix them
6 common issues for Monstera deliciosa. Click any problem below to jump to its diagnosis and treatment.
Most Monstera problems trace back to one of three things: light, water, or humidity. Before assuming the worst, double-check the basics in our Monstera care guide. If conditions look right and the symptoms persist, work through the matching problem section below.
Yellow leaves
Symptoms
- Older lower leaves turn yellow first, sometimes one at a time
- Yellowing spreads from the leaf base outward, or appears as patches
- Soil feels persistently wet, or has been bone-dry for several weeks
- Yellow leaves may feel soft (overwatering) or papery (underwatering)
Most likely causes
- Overwatering. The most common cause. Roots sit in waterlogged soil, lose oxygen, and start to rot. The plant cannot move water and nutrients up to the leaves, so they yellow and drop.
- Underwatering. If the soil is severely dry and pulled away from the pot edges, the plant is shedding leaves it can no longer support. Yellowing under drought is usually accompanied by crispy edges.
- Natural leaf drop. Older lower leaves yellow and fall as the plant matures. One yellow leaf every few months on an otherwise healthy plant is normal — not a problem.
How to fix
- Check the soil 5cm deep with your finger. Wet → underwater diagnosis. Dry past the second knuckle → underwater diagnosis.
- If overwatered, hold off watering and move to a brighter spot to speed soil drying. Tip the pot to drain any pooled water.
- If underwatered, soak the pot in a basin of room-temperature water for 20 minutes, then let drain.
- Remove yellow leaves only after the rest of the plant stabilises — they will not turn green again, but cutting them off too early stresses the plant further.
- If many leaves yellow within a week and stems feel mushy, unpot and inspect the roots for rot.
How to prevent next time
- Water by checking the soil, not by the calendar
- Use a pot with drainage holes — decorative pots without drainage are root rot waiting to happen
- Cut watering by 30–50% in winter when growth slows
Brown tips
Symptoms
- Leaf tips turn crispy brown, sometimes with a yellow halo where green meets brown
- Browning starts at the very tip and spreads inward over weeks
- Mostly affects the oldest leaves first, but new growth can be affected if conditions stay poor
- Brown areas feel papery and snap when bent, not soft
Most likely causes
- Low humidity. Heating and air conditioning can drop indoor humidity below 30%, well under what most tropicals need (40–60%). Tips are the furthest point from the roots and dry out first.
- Inconsistent watering. Long dry spells followed by heavy watering shock the root tips. The damaged tissue shows up as browned leaf tips a week or two later.
- Mineral build-up from tap water. Fluoride and chlorine in city water accumulate at leaf tips. Some plants — Spider Plant, Calathea, Peace Lily — are especially sensitive.
How to fix
- Group plants together to raise local humidity, or place on a tray of pebbles with water below the pot base.
- For sensitive plants, switch to filtered, distilled, or rainwater. Or fill a jug from the tap and let it sit uncovered for 24 hours so chlorine evaporates.
- Trim brown tips with clean scissors at an angle, leaving a thin brown line — cutting into green tissue causes more browning.
- Establish a more consistent watering rhythm: check soil moisture once a week and water when the top 2–3cm are dry.
How to prevent next time
- Maintain humidity above 40% with a small humidifier in winter
- Stick to one water source — tap, filtered, or rain
- Avoid placing plants directly above heating vents or radiators
Drooping leaves
Symptoms
- Leaves and stems lose stiffness, sagging downward or sideways
- Soil is either bone-dry or has been wet for many days
- Plant perks up after watering (underwatering) or stays droopy (overwatering)
Most likely causes
- Underwatering. Most common cause when drooping is sudden. The plant has used up its water reserves and cells lose pressure (turgor). A thorough watering usually revives it within hours.
- Overwatering / root rot. Roots damaged by sitting in water cannot deliver moisture to the leaves, even though the soil is wet. The plant droops and watering more makes it worse.
- Sudden temperature change or draft. Cold drafts from windows or AC vents in summer, or heat from a radiator in winter, can cause temporary drooping. Move the plant.
How to fix
- Check the soil moisture first. Dry → water thoroughly until water runs out the drainage holes. Wet → diagnosis is overwatering, not underwatering.
- For dry soil, water in the sink. The plant should perk up within 4–24 hours. If it does not after a thorough watering, root damage is likely.
- For wet soil, hold off watering. Move to a brighter spot to speed drying. Inspect roots if drooping continues.
- Move away from drafts, vents, and radiators.
How to prevent next time
- Establish a check-then-water habit — touch the soil weekly
- Keep at least 30cm from heating vents and AC outlets
- Use heavier pots for top-heavy plants prone to leaning
No fenestration
Symptoms
- Monstera leaves stay solid without the iconic splits or holes
- Mature-sized leaves remain whole
- Plant otherwise looks healthy
Most likely causes
- Insufficient light. Fenestration is the plant's adaptation to high light — splits let lower leaves catch light too. In low light, the plant has no need to fenestrate.
- Plant too young or too small. Juvenile Monsteras produce solid heart-shaped leaves. Fenestration usually starts after the plant has 5–10 mature leaves.
- No support to climb. In nature, Monsteras climb. Climbing triggers more mature, fenestrated leaves. Plants left bushy on the floor stay juvenile longer.
How to fix
- Move to brighter indirect light — within a metre of an east-facing window is ideal.
- Add a moss pole or trellis. Tie new growth to it loosely so the plant climbs.
- Be patient. New leaves may still come in solid for a few months before fenestrating.
How to prevent next time
- Provide bright indirect light from purchase
- Stake or pole the plant early
Root rot
Symptoms
- Stems feel soft or mushy at the soil line
- Sour or rotten smell from the soil
- Multiple leaves yellow and drop within a week
- Soil stays wet for more than 7–10 days even in warm conditions
- Black or brown roots that fall apart when touched (visible only after unpotting)
Most likely causes
- Chronic overwatering. The single biggest killer of houseplants. Soil that never fully dries deprives roots of oxygen, killing them and inviting fungal pathogens.
- Pot without drainage. Decorative ceramic pots without drainage holes trap water at the bottom. Even with careful watering, salt and excess water build up over months.
- Compacted or peat-heavy soil. Old soil compresses and holds water. Soil mixes that are too peat-heavy stay wet for a long time. Tropicals especially need a chunky, airy mix.
How to fix
- Unpot the plant immediately. Gently shake off as much soil as possible.
- Inspect the roots. Healthy roots are firm and white or tan. Rotted roots are black, brown, or grey, and slip apart between your fingers.
- Cut off all rotted roots with clean, sharp scissors. Leave only the firm, healthy ones — even if you remove 80%.
- Dust the cut roots with cinnamon (a mild antifungal) or let them air-dry for an hour.
- Repot in fresh, dry, well-draining mix in a clean pot with drainage holes. Use a pot only one size larger than the remaining root mass — too much soil holds too much water.
- Hold off watering for 5–7 days after repotting, then water lightly. Move to bright indirect light.
How to prevent next time
- Always use pots with drainage holes
- Let the top 2–5cm of soil dry between waterings, depending on the plant
- Repot every 2–3 years in fresh, chunky, airy mix
Spider mites
Symptoms
- Fine webbing on the underside of leaves, especially where leaves meet stems
- Tiny pale or yellow stippling dots all over the leaves
- Leaves turn dusty-looking, then dry and drop
- Worsens fast in warm, dry conditions
Most likely causes
- Low humidity. Spider mites thrive in dry indoor air. Heated rooms in winter are their favourite environment.
- Hitchhiking on a new plant. A new plant from the nursery often brings mites home with it. They spread to other plants within days.
How to fix
- Isolate the affected plant immediately so mites do not spread.
- Take it to the shower or sink. Spray the entire plant — especially leaf undersides — with strong, lukewarm water for 2–3 minutes. This dislodges most mites.
- After drying, spray with insecticidal soap or a 1:10 mix of mild dish soap and water, covering both sides of every leaf. Repeat every 5–7 days for 3–4 weeks.
- Wipe down the pot and the area where the plant was kept — mites can hide there.
- Raise humidity around the plant. Mites cannot reproduce well above 50% humidity.
How to prevent next time
- Inspect new plants for two weeks before placing them near others
- Mist or use a humidifier in dry winter months
- Wipe leaves monthly with a damp cloth — disturbance prevents establishment