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Calathea is the houseplant most people fall in love with for the leaf patterns — peacock-feather stripes, pink veining, ribbed rounds — and that most people then struggle to keep alive because it’s fussier about humidity and water quality than the average tropical foliage plant. Two things to cover first: pet-safety (good news) and the genus name (the botanists have been busy).
✓ Pet-safe — ASPCA-listed non-toxic to dogs, cats, and horses.
Calathea (Calathea spp.) is non-toxic to dogs, cats, and horses, per the ASPCA (ASPCA, “Calathea”). That makes it one of the few showy, decorative-leaved houseplants safe for pet households. The usual caveat applies: “non-toxic” doesn’t mean unlimited grazing — a pet that eats large quantities of any plant can still have GI upset.
A note on the name (Calathea → Goeppertia)
Most plants sold under the name “Calathea” have been reclassified by botanists into the genus Goeppertia — so a 2024 garden centre tag may say “Calathea makoyana” while a 2026 scientific reference says “Goeppertia makoyana”. Same plant. The ASPCA entry still uses Calathea spp.; NC State Extension uses Goeppertia for the same plants. We use Calathea in this guide because that’s what people search for; everything applies to both names.
Light
NC State Extension: “bright, indirect sun or partial shade” with avoidance of direct sunlight — direct sun causes leaf burn (NC State Extension). Inadequate light fades the foliage colour, which is the main reason people grow this plant in the first place. The sweet spot is a few feet back from an east window, or a brighter room with no direct sun.
For the broader picture see houseplant light requirements.
Water — and the tap-water problem
NC State: keep soil “moist but not wet or soggy” and specifically use “distilled water or rain water” rather than tap water, because fluoride causes leaf browning (NC State Extension).
This is the single most common cause of brown leaf tips on Calathea. If your tap water is fluoridated/chlorinated, switching to rainwater, distilled water, or tap water left to sit overnight makes a real difference. See tap water and houseplants and brown leaf tips for the broader diagnostic.
Soil
NC State: “moist, well-drained potting mix with high organic matter and perlite to improve drainage” (NC State Extension). A standard quality houseplant mix with a handful of extra perlite mixed in works well. See the soil-mix guide.
Temperature
NC State: “temperatures between 65 and 75 degrees F” for optimal growth (NC State Extension). It dislikes cold drafts and the air right next to A/C vents.
Humidity — the deal-breaker
This is what kills most Calatheas. NC State specifies 60% humidity and notes the plant is intolerant of low humidity (NC State Extension). Average indoor air sits at 30–45% in heated or air-conditioned rooms — nowhere close.
Practical responses, ranked: a humidifier in the room, a grouped arrangement with other plants, a wet-pebble tray under the pot. Bathroom or kitchen placements often work well if light is adequate. Misting alone is not enough for low-humidity rooms — it’s a temporary spike, not a steady environment.
If your leaves are curling inward or developing crispy edges, humidity is almost always the first thing to fix.
Common problems
NC State flags aphids, scale, mealybugs, and spider mites as pests to monitor (NC State Extension). Beyond that: overwatering causes root rot; low humidity causes leaf rolling or browning; direct sun causes leaf burn; inadequate light fades foliage colour (NC State Extension).
Cross-references: mealybugs, spider mites, root rot, brown tips, troubleshooting hub.
Propagation
NC State: “division of its rhizomatous roots in the late spring is the preferred method”, with division every two years suggested to increase vigour (NC State Extension). Stem cuttings don’t work for Calathea — it doesn’t have the trailing stem structure. Combine the division with the regular repotting schedule.
Mature size
NC State: 1–2 feet tall, 8–12 inches wide (NC State Extension) — compact; works on a desk or a shelf, doesn’t need floor space.
Full pet-safe + toxic species hub: Popular Houseplants.