Houseplants

Fiddle Leaf Fig Ficus lyrata

Reviewed June 2026 · how we check this

The interior-design darling — a West African fig grown indoors for its huge, violin-shaped leaves with bold pale veins. Striking but famously particular: it craves steady bright light and hates being moved, overwatered, or chilled, rewarding consistency with dramatic vertical growth.

Light

The Fiddle Leaf Fig is a light-hungry tree that does best in the brightest spot you can offer — directly in front of an east window for gentle morning sun, or a few feet back from a south or west window where it gets bright indirect light most of the day. It can take some direct sun once acclimated, but move it into harsh, unfiltered afternoon light too fast and the leaves scorch with brown, bleached patches. In dim corners it grows slowly, drops lower leaves, and leans hard toward the window. Rotate the pot a quarter turn weekly so it grows straight, and wipe the big leaves so dust doesn't block light.

Watering

Water thoroughly when the top 2 inches of soil are dry, soaking until water runs from the drainage holes, then empty the saucer completely. In a bright, warm room that's usually every 7–10 days in spring and summer and less in winter — but check the soil rather than the calendar. The Fiddle Leaf Fig is touchy about extremes: chronic overwatering rots the roots and triggers the dark-brown leaf spots it's infamous for, while letting it bone-dry causes crispy edges and dropped leaves. Aim for consistency — the same amount of water on roughly the same rhythm is what keeps it happy.

Soil & potting

Plant in a rich but fast-draining mix: a quality indoor potting soil loosened with perlite and a few handfuls of orchid bark or coco coir to keep it airy. Good drainage is non-negotiable, so always use a pot with drainage holes — this fig sulks and spots when its roots stay wet. Repot every 1–2 years in spring, moving up just one pot size, since an oversized pot holds too much moisture. A large, established tree that's hard to repot can instead be top-dressed: scrape off the top couple of inches of old soil and replace with fresh mix.

Humidity & temperature

Coming from the tropics, the Fiddle Leaf Fig prefers humidity around 40–60% and stays lusher above 50%. Run a small humidifier in dry winter rooms or group it with other plants; misting does little. Keep it warm and steady at 65–75°F and protect it from anything cold — drafty doorways, frosty windows, and air-conditioning vents all cause leaf drop. This plant is exceptionally sensitive to sudden change, so a stable temperature in a draft-free spot matters more than chasing a perfect number.

Fertilizing

Feed with a balanced liquid houseplant fertilizer at half strength every 2–4 weeks through spring and summer to fuel its fast vertical growth and big leaves; many growers like a slightly nitrogen-forward formula for lush foliage. Stop feeding in fall and winter while growth slows, then resume in spring. Over-feeding shows as brown leaf tips and a crusty white crust on the soil surface — if that happens, flush the pot with plain water and ease off the fertilizer.

Pruning & maintenance

Prune in spring or summer to shape the tree and encourage branching. Snip the top growing tip just above a node with clean shears and the plant usually pushes out two or more new branches below the cut — the trick to turning a bare single stalk into a full, tree-like canopy. Remove damaged or spotted leaves at the base. Cut stems ooze a sticky white latex that can irritate skin, so wear gloves and wipe the blade. Staking a young, floppy trunk helps it grow straight and strong.

Propagation

Propagate from stem-tip cuttings taken in the growing season. Cut a 6–10 inch piece with a few leaves, let the cut latex stop weeping, then root it in water (change it weekly) or in moist, chunky soil; roots typically appear in 4–8 weeks. Single large leaves will root in water but a leaf without a node won't grow into a new plant — it just sits there. Pot rooted cuttings into a small container once roots reach a couple of inches, and keep them warm and bright.

Common problems

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Through the year

Spring

Growth resumes — return to regular watering and feeding, repot or top-dress if needed, and prune or pinch the tip to encourage branching.

Summer

Peak growth. Water when the top 2 inches dry, feed every couple of weeks, and watch new leaves unfurl from the top; rotate the pot for even, straight growth.

Fall

Growth slows — stretch the time between waterings and stop fertilizing as light levels drop.

Winter

Near-dormant. Water sparingly, skip fertilizer, run a humidifier, and keep it well away from cold glass, drafts, and heat vents.

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