"Brown" covers a lot of ground on a houseplant, and the location matters as much as the color. A crispy brown tip on an otherwise green leaf is a completely different problem from a brown spot sitting in the middle of the leaf blade, and mixing up the two leads to the wrong fix — misting a plant with a fungal infection, for instance, spreads the fungus faster instead of solving the real problem. Here's how to tell the two apart and treat each correctly.
Brown tips: an edge problem
Brown tips start exactly where the name says — at the very point or margin of the leaf — and spread inward from there, leaving the rest of the leaf green and otherwise healthy. This pattern happens because the tip is the farthest point from the roots and the last place water reaches, so it's the first place to show stress when moisture or humidity falls short.
| What you see | Likely cause | How to confirm | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin, crispy brown line right at the tip, rest of leaf fine | Low humidity | Common in winter with heating running, or near a vent | Group plants together, add a pebble tray or humidifier |
| Tips brown despite regular watering, especially on plants like peace lily or spider plant | Tap-water mineral or fluoride buildup | Tips brown even though soil moisture looks fine | Switch to distilled or rain water, or let tap water sit out 24 hours first |
| Tips and edges crisp, soil dry between waterings for too long | Underwatering | Soil pulls away from the pot; leaf feels thin and papery | Water more consistently; check soil moisture weekly |
| Tips brown after a recent feeding | Fertilizer salt buildup | Crusty white residue visible on the soil surface | Flush the pot with plain water until it runs freely from the drainage holes |
Brown spots: a leaf-blade problem
A brown spot, by contrast, shows up somewhere in the middle of the leaf, away from the edges, and it usually has a shape and texture that tells you what caused it. This is where the diagnosis branches furthest from brown tips, because several very different problems — disease, sun damage, and physical injury — all produce a spot rather than an edge burn.
| What you see | Likely cause | How to confirm | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Round or irregular spot, often with a yellow halo, dry and papery | Fungal leaf spot | Multiple spots, often on lower or older leaves; may spread in humid conditions | Remove affected leaves, improve airflow, avoid wetting the foliage when watering |
| Spot is soft, water-soaked, and spreading quickly, sometimes with a foul smell | Bacterial leaf spot | Spot has a wet, greasy look rather than dry and papery | Isolate the plant, remove affected leaves, cut back on overhead watering |
| One pale, bleached-out brown patch, usually on the side facing the window | Sunburn / sun scorch | Spot lines up with recent exposure to stronger direct light | Move back from direct sun or filter it with a sheer curtain |
| Isolated brown mark with a clean edge, no spreading | Physical damage (bump, pressure, pet contact) | Single spot, shape doesn't match a disease pattern, nothing else affected | No treatment needed — it won't heal but it also won't spread |
The one detail that separates fungal from bacterial
If a spot on your plant is clearly disease and not sun or physical damage, texture is the fastest way to tell fungal from bacterial: fungal spots tend to be dry, papery, and often ringed in yellow, while bacterial spots look wet, soft, and sometimes greasy, spreading noticeably faster from day to day. Both call for the same first response — remove the affected leaves and stop wetting the foliage when you water — but a fast-spreading, water-soaked spot is worth acting on sooner, since bacterial infections can move through a plant in days rather than weeks.
Why watering habits matter for both
Consistency helps prevent both patterns — see the full peace lily brown-tips guide for a worked example of the tip pattern specifically. Splashing water onto leaves, rather than the soil, is one of the most common ways brown spots start and spread — wet foliage that stays damp for hours, especially in low light or still air, gives fungal spores and bacteria exactly the conditions they need. Watering at the soil line, spacing plants for airflow, and avoiding a communal watering can that's touched a diseased plant are the simplest ways to keep a spot from becoming an outbreak across a whole shelf.
Trimming brown leaf tissue correctly
Once you've addressed the cause, it's fine to tidy up existing brown tissue — it won't turn green again on its own. Use clean, sharp scissors and follow the natural shape of the leaf, cutting a thin sliver of brown away rather than lopping off the whole tip in a straight line, which looks more obviously cut and can stress the leaf further. Leave a hair of brown along the cut edge rather than cutting into green tissue; cutting too close can trigger a fresh brown line right where the scissors went in.
When to worry (and when not to)
A single dry brown tip or one isolated brown spot from a bump is cosmetic — trim it off if it bothers you and move on. Get concerned when brown tips appear on every leaf at once (a sign the whole plant's environment needs adjusting) or when spots are spreading, multiplying, or turning soft and wet, since that pattern points to an active infection that will keep moving to healthy tissue until you intervene.