Troubleshooting · Dropping leaves
A sudden rain of leaves after you moved the plant, changed its routine, or let the soil dry out once too many times.
A sudden wave of leaves hitting the floor is almost always stress, not disease. The plant is conserving energy by shedding leaves it can't support.
Care profile
Likely causes
Each cause below has a quick check you can do in about thirty seconds. Stop as soon as one matches. You’ve found your answer.
Most tropical plants drop leaves when they're moved to a new location, repotted, or exposed to a cold draft. It's a stress response, not death.
Quick check
Did you recently move the plant, repot it, or change its light exposure?
What to do
Leave the plant alone for two weeks. Don't fertilize, don't repot again, and don't move it. New growth will appear once it acclimates.
A plant near a drafty window in winter or a heating vent will drop leaves from localized temperature shock.
Quick check
Is the plant within a few feet of a door, window, or HVAC vent?
What to do
Relocate to a spot with stable air temperature, away from forced-air vents and leaky windows.
Dry soil followed by soggy soil, or vice versa, signals stress to the plant and triggers leaf drop as a water-conservation move.
Quick check
Have you been watering sporadically or by guesswork?
What to do
Pick a single check-in schedule, once every three to seven days depending on the species, and stick with it. Feel the soil before watering each time.
This page is beginner-friendly general guidance, not professional horticultural, medical, or veterinary advice. For pet-exposure questions, contact the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center at (888) 426-4435. For persistent plant-health issues, your local university cooperative extension office is the best free expert in the country. See our full disclaimer for details.