Yellow leaves are the most common houseplant distress signal — and the most misread. The fix isn’t a list of every possible cause; it’s matching which pattern you see to which cause. Extension horticulture guidance is clear that yellowing and leaf drop usually come from environmental factors — over- or under-watering, low humidity, light that’s too low or too high, and under-fertilising — rather than one single cause (Iowa State Extension).
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First: is it actually a problem?
Plants naturally shed their oldest, lowest leaves over time. One old bottom leaf yellowing slowly while the rest of the plant looks healthy is usually not an alarm — remove it and move on. Treat it as a problem when yellowing is spreading, fast, or hitting newer leaves.
Match the pattern → the cause
- Many leaves yellowing, soil stays wet/slow to dry → overwatering / early root rot (the most common, and most lethal).
- Yellow and crispy, soil bone-dry, pot very light → underwatering / low humidity.
- Whole plant pale and leggy, leaning to the window → not enough light (light far too high can also stress leaves).
- Yellowing between the veins on a long-unfed plant → a nutrient issue.
These categories — over/under-water, humidity, light, fertility — are the ones extension guidance points to for houseplant yellowing and drop (Iowa State Extension).
The exact fix for each
- Overwatering / root rot: stop watering, let the soil dry, check the roots — mushy and brown means act now. Fix the habit with How Often to Water Houseplants.
- Underwatering / low humidity: soak thoroughly until water runs from the drainage holes; for humidity-sensitive plants, group them or raise ambient humidity (brief misting does not fix it).
- Too little light: move to brighter indirect light gradually.
- Nutrient issue: only if unfed a long time or in exhausted soil — feed lightly in the growing season or refresh the mix.
The honest part most guides skip
A leaf that has turned yellow generally won’t return to green — that tissue is spent. “Fixed” means the cause is corrected, no new leaves yellow, and healthy new growth appears. Remove fully yellow or dead leaves so the plant can redirect energy.
Prevent it
The two biggest preventable causes are watering by calendar and too little light. Master the soak-and-dry check and match the plant to the right light.
Still unsure which is yours? Work through the Troubleshooting hub, or settle the most common confusion with Overwatering vs Underwatering: How to Tell.