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Sticky Leaves, Webbing & Gnats: A Houseplant Pest Identification Table

Sticky residue, fine webbing, and small flying insects each point to a different pest — and each one needs a different treatment. Here's how to tell them apart fast.

Sticky leaves without webbing usually mean mealybugs, aphids, or scale, all of which excrete sticky honeydew. Fine webbing between leaves and stems, with no honeydew, means spider mites. Small flies hovering around the soil (not the leaves) are fungus gnats, drawn to damp soil rather than the plant itself. Each needs a different treatment.

Houseplant pests sort into a small number of recognizable groups once you know what to look for, and the symptom that first catches your eye — sticky residue, fine webbing, or tiny flies — usually narrows it down before you even spot the insect itself. Getting the identification right matters because the treatments aren't interchangeable: what knocks back spider mites won't touch a fungus gnat problem, and vice versa.

What you seeLikely pestWhere to lookFirst treatment
Sticky film on leaves and the surface below the plant, no webbingMealybugs, aphids, or soft scaleUndersides of leaves, stem joints, new growth tipsWipe down with insecticidal soap or a diluted neem oil solution; repeat weekly
White, cottony fuzz clustered in leaf joints and stem crevicesMealybugs specificallyLeaf axils, undersides, around the crownDab visible clusters with rubbing alcohol on a cotton swab, then treat with insecticidal soap
Small bumps, often brown or tan, that don't move and are hard to scrape offScale insectsAlong stems and the midrib of leavesScrape off by hand where possible, then treat with horticultural oil
Fine, silk-like webbing between leaves or in leaf joints, tiny moving specksSpider mitesUndersides of leaves, especially in dry, warm conditionsRinse the plant thoroughly under running water, then treat with insecticidal soap; raise humidity
Small dark flies hovering near the soil surface, not on the leavesFungus gnatsTop inch of soil, especially if kept consistently dampLet the soil dry out more between waterings; use sticky traps for the adults

Sticky without webbing: the honeydew group

Mealybugs, aphids, and scale are all sap-suckers that excrete a sugary waste product called honeydew, which is what leaves that sticky, faintly tacky film on the leaf surface and anything sitting below the plant. They differ mainly in what they look like once you spot them: mealybugs form small white, cottony masses, aphids are tiny soft-bodied insects often clustered on new growth, and scale look like small, immobile bumps that barely resemble an insect at all. All three respond to the same core treatment — insecticidal soap or diluted neem oil applied directly to the pest, repeated on a weekly cycle since a single treatment rarely catches eggs that hatch afterward.

Webbing without honeydew: spider mites

Spider mites are barely visible to the naked eye, but their fine, silky webbing between leaves and along stems is unmistakable once an infestation is established, and leaves often develop a stippled, dusty-looking discoloration before the webbing becomes obvious. They thrive in warm, dry conditions — a heated room in winter is prime territory — which is why raising humidity is part of both treatment and prevention, alongside a thorough rinse under the shower or sink to physically knock down their numbers before following up with insecticidal soap.

Gnats: a soil problem, not a leaf problem

Fungus gnats are the odd one out on this list because they aren't actually feeding on the plant's leaves at all — the adults are a nuisance, but the real issue is their larvae living in damp soil, which is why gnats show up almost exclusively on plants that are watered more often than they need. Letting the top inch or two of soil dry out fully between waterings removes the damp conditions the larvae depend on, and it's usually more effective long-term than any spray, since new adults will keep emerging as long as the soil stays consistently wet.

English ivy and the spider-mite connection

English ivy is one of the houseplants most prone to spider mites, especially in the dry, warm air of a heated room — see the full English ivy spider-mites guide for a worked example of catching an infestation early. Because ivy's leaves are small and densely packed, webbing can establish between them before it's obvious from across the room, which is why a close weekly check of a plant like this is worth the extra minute.

Why isolation matters while you treat

Every pest on this list can spread to neighboring plants, either by direct contact between touching leaves or by adults flying or crawling from pot to pot. Moving an infested plant away from the rest of the collection while you treat it — even just a few feet, or to a separate room — meaningfully cuts down on how far a problem spreads before you get it under control, and it's a habit worth forming any time you spot something suspicious on a new plant coming into the house.

New plants are the most common source

Most pest problems don't start on a plant that's been sitting in your home for months — they arrive on a new purchase, often before symptoms are visible enough to catch at the store. Giving any new plant a two-week quarantine away from the rest of your collection, and checking it closely under good light a few days in, catches most infestations before they've had a chance to spread, and it costs nothing but a little patience.

When to worry (and when not to)

A few aphids on one new growth tip, caught early, is a minor nuisance that a single wipe-down usually resolves. Webbing that's already spread across multiple leaves, or honeydew heavy enough to drip onto furniture below, means the infestation has had time to establish and will likely need several rounds of treatment spaced a week apart to catch each new generation as it hatches.

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