Calathea leaves close up showing vibrant green pattern
Chive Studio · Plant Care

Calathea Plant Care: Beautiful, Difficult, Worth It

Calathea plant care is specific and unforgiving. We murdered six before getting it right. Now we're in a committed relationship. Here's what actually works.

Calathea plant care requires humidity above 50 percent, consistent indirect light, filtered water, and a complete willingness to abandon any watering schedule you arrived with. This is not negotiable. The calathea did not ask for your schedule and will not accommodate it.

We have a complicated history with calathea.

The history begins, as many complicated histories do, with overconfidence. We had kept a great many things alive. We understood drainage. We understood light requirements. We had opinions about soil composition that we were prepared to defend. And then we bought a calathea and it died. We bought another one and it died. We bought six calatheas in succession and they died with such consistency and commitment that we began to suspect the problem was not the calathea's care requirements but the calathea's awareness of who was caring for it. They knew it was us. They had talked.

This is not a rational conclusion. We are aware of this. We are sharing it anyway because over twenty-five years in the plant business teaches you that the line between a rational conclusion and an accurate one is thinner than most plant care guides are prepared to acknowledge.

The calathea curse — and it is a curse, ask anyone who has loved one — is that beauty and difficulty correlate with perfect consistency across the entire genus. The prettier the calathea, the harder it is to keep alive. This is not a coincidence. This is the plant communicating something about its values, which are high, and its expectations, which are specific, and its willingness to tolerate anything less than both, which is zero.

Calathea plant care summary: Humidity consistently above 50 percent — a humidifier near the plant, not misting. Medium to bright indirect light; an east-facing window is ideal. Filtered or distilled water when the top inch of soil has dried, draining completely. Temperatures between 65 and 85°F. Monthly fertilizer at half strength in spring and summer, nothing in fall and winter. A pot with genuine drainage, proportioned for a plant that grows outward as much as upward.

Calathea plant with vibrant patterned leaves
Calathea in the right humidity, in the right light. The leaf patterns are the entire point of owning one.

How to Care for Your Calathea

Humidity first, because humidity is where most calathea relationships end before they have properly begun. The calathea wants ambient humidity above 50 percent consistently — not misting, which provides a brief and largely theatrical humidity event that the plant tolerates without benefit, but genuine sustained atmospheric moisture. A humidifier near the plant is the correct solution. A pebble tray with water beneath the pot is the secondary solution. What does not work is misting it twice a week and hoping.

Light should be medium to bright indirect — no direct sun, which bleaches the patterns that are the entire point of owning a calathea, and no deep shade. An east-facing window is ideal. The rule is: enough light to read comfortably by, no direct beam hitting the leaves at any point during the day.

Water with filtered or distilled water, or tap water left out overnight. The calathea has opinions about tap water that it communicates through brown leaf tips, which is the most passive-aggressive form of plant feedback available. Water when the top inch of soil has dried, thoroughly, draining completely. — Chive Studio

The calathea folds its leaves upward in darkness — a movement called nyctinasty that we found unsettling the first time we witnessed it at eleven o'clock on a Wednesday and now find quietly wonderful. This is normal. If the leaves are folded during the day, something is wrong.

Fertilize monthly through spring and summer with a diluted balanced fertilizer — half strength, because the calathea is sensitive to salt buildup. Stop entirely in fall and winter.

Calathea plant in dojo ceramic pot by Chive Studio
The Dojo — 7 inch porcelain with drainage. Proportions that suit a plant growing outward as much as upward.

The Right Pot for a Calathea

We use the Dojo in the 7 inch for calatheas specifically. It has drainage that functions, proportions that suit a plant that grows outward as much as upward, and a stability that the calathea seems to find acceptable, which is as close to enthusiasm as the calathea gets about its physical circumstances.

We are currently in what we would describe as a committed relationship with a 12 inch specimen that has produced offsets — new growth emerging at the base with the quiet confidence of something that has decided the situation meets its standards. The offsets can be separated when they have two or three leaves of their own. They will immediately begin evaluating whether their new situation is acceptable. Give them everything the parent plant receives. They have been briefed.

Repotting your calathea without incident

  • Repot only when the plant has clearly outgrown its current container — the calathea does not enjoy the process
  • Go up one pot size only; excess soil retains moisture the roots cannot reach, which invites root rot
  • Use the 7 inch Dojo — right proportions, genuine drainage, sized for a plant that grows wide rather than tall
  • After repotting, return the plant to its exact original position — same window, same humidity zone, same distance from any air source
  • The Dojo ships with a drainage hole. Every Chive pot with drainage does. We have never made it otherwise.

What to Put on the Wall Above It

A calathea in the right humidity, in the right light, in the right pot produces a leaf display that most rooms do not know what to do with. Our ceramic wall flowers work above a calathea in the same register — the deep greens and warm whites of the Japan collection, the blush pinks of the France collection, colors that acknowledge what the calathea is doing without attempting to compete with it.

If you are unsure where to start, the Japan collection has the deepest greens and the most restraint. It works with the calathea's palette precisely because it does not try to improve on it.

We have been running a plant shop on Queen Street West for years and have had more conversations about calathea care than we are entirely comfortable admitting, most of them following a period of personal loss. Our ceramic pots are stocked in the Getty Museum, the Art Institute of Chicago, SFMOMA, the Royal Ontario Museum, the New York Botanical Garden, Longwood Gardens, the Andy Warhol Museum, and more than 200 institutions worldwide. The Dojo pot is what we use for calatheas. It has drainage, it has the right proportions, and it has never once died on us, which puts it ahead of six calatheas we could name.


Dojo Porcelain Modern Indoor Plant Pot With Saucer - Chive Ceramics Studio - Pots - Chive Ceramics Studio

Meet the pots your calathea has been waiting for.

The calathea arrives with leaf patterns that look hand-painted — dark green and cream and deep burgundy, sometimes all three on a single leaf — and expectations it will communicate through every available surface of its foliage the moment something is wrong. Brown tips mean the water. Curling leaves mean the humidity. The calathea is always telling you something. The question is whether you have created conditions stable enough for that information to be useful.

The pot is where most of that stability begins and ends.

A calathea needs drainage. Not as a preference — as a requirement. Watered into standing water, it develops root rot with a quiet efficiency that will surprise you, and the leaf response that follows will not. Chive's drainage collection includes pots sized for a calathea's lateral growth, proportioned so the soil volume matches the root system, and draining properly — which sounds like a low bar until you have owned a pot that wasn't.


Frequently Asked Questions

What does calathea plant care involve?

Calathea plant care requires humidity consistently above 50 percent, medium to bright indirect light, filtered or distilled water, temperatures between 65 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit, and a willingness to pay close attention to what the leaves are telling you, which is considerable and specific. The calathea is not a difficult plant in the sense that its requirements are unusual. It is difficult in the sense that it tolerates almost no deviation from those conditions and communicates dissatisfaction immediately and at length. We murdered six before we got it right. We are sharing this so you understand that failure is not evidence of incompetence. It is evidence that you are dealing with a calathea.

Why are my calathea leaves curling?

Calathea leaves curl when the plant is not getting enough humidity, when it is underwatered, or when it is in a draft of dry air from a heating vent or air conditioner. In practice it is usually humidity. Check that ambient humidity is above 50 percent — a cheap hygrometer will tell you what your bathroom is actually doing versus what you are hoping it is doing. Water thoroughly if the top inch of soil has dried. Move the plant away from any direct air source. The leaves will uncurl when conditions improve, which the calathea will not acknowledge directly but which you will notice because the leaves will be flat.

Why does my calathea have brown tips?

Brown tips on a calathea are almost always caused by tap water fluoride and chlorine, low humidity, or inconsistent watering — and frequently all three operating simultaneously. Switch to filtered or distilled water, or leave tap water out overnight before using it. Increase humidity. Check your watering consistency. Trim the brown tips with clean scissors at a slight angle if they are bothering you — the plant will not notice and you will feel that you have done something. New growth will come in clean if conditions improve. Old growth will not recover, which is the calathea's way of ensuring you remember this lesson.

What is the best pot for a calathea?

The best pot for a calathea has genuine drainage, proportions that suit a plant growing outward as much as upward, and a size that matches where the plant actually is rather than where you hope it will be in two years. We use the Dojo in the 7 inch for calatheas specifically — it has the right dimensions, the drainage works, and it sits with the kind of stability that the calathea finds acceptable, which is the highest praise the calathea gives to its physical circumstances. Do not oversize the pot. Excess soil retains moisture the roots cannot reach.

How often should I water a calathea?

Water your calathea when the top inch of soil has dried out — thoroughly, with filtered or distilled water, draining completely — and then stop until the top inch dries again. There is no schedule based on days of the week that works for calathea care because the plant dries at different rates depending on season, humidity, light, and temperature, and it has no interest in your calendar. Check the soil. Use filtered water. Drain completely. Do not mist as a substitute for genuine humidity management. We spent considerable time and six plants learning this distinction and we are passing it on at no additional cost.

Why is my calathea dying?

A calathea that is declining is almost always dealing with one of three things: low humidity, tap water mineral buildup, or root rot from inconsistent drainage. Check humidity first — below 50 percent will produce a slow decline that looks like several different problems simultaneously. Check the roots if the plant has been in wet soil — healthy roots are white and firm, rotting roots are brown and soft. Repot into fresh well-draining mix if rot is present, removing affected roots cleanly. Increase humidity. Switch to filtered water. The calathea is recoverable in most cases. It will not thank you for the effort but it will produce new leaves.

Is calathea a good indoor plant?

Calathea is an extraordinary indoor plant for someone prepared to meet its specific requirements, which are real and non-negotiable. It is not a good plant for someone who travels frequently without arranging care, or someone whose home has very low humidity and no interest in a humidifier. It is an excellent plant for someone who finds the care process genuinely engaging, who wants leaf patterns that no other genus produces, and who is prepared to treat the plant's feedback as useful information rather than personal criticism. We fall into this category now. It took six attempts and an undetermined period of mutual suspicion to get here. We have no regrets.

I have murdered four calatheas. Should I try a fifth?

Yes. Four is not enough to draw conclusions. We lost six before the relationship stabilized and we are now in what we would describe as a committed and largely functional arrangement with a specimen that has produced offspring, which we interpret as forgiveness. The calathea does not hold the previous losses against you — it has no memory of them and no particular interest in your history. What it has is specific requirements and a complete willingness to communicate when they are not being met. The fifth one will tell you immediately what the previous four were trying to say. Listen this time. Use filtered water. Get a humidifier. Do not move it.