Natural decline after blooming
An air plant that fades and tires out after producing a flower is following its natural life cycle, not failing your care.
Diagnosis
Natural decline after blooming
What's happening
Tillandsia blooms only once in its life. After that single flower the mother plant slowly declines over many months — color dulls, leaves soften, and growth stops — while it channels its remaining energy into producing pups (offsets) at its base. This is the plant reproducing, not dying of neglect.
How to fix it
Leave the mother attached and keep up normal soaking and bright light; let the pups grow on her until each reaches about a third of her size, then gently twist them free to grow as independent plants. Feed lightly during this stage to fuel the pups: add a bromeliad or orchid fertilizer at quarter strength to the soak water once a month. The mother will eventually wither, but you'll be left with a new generation of plants.
What fixes it
- A balanced liquid fertilizer — A diluted liquid feed added to the soak water once a month helps pups grow on strong.
If that doesn't fix it
This is general guidance based on common symptoms; individual plants vary.
Read the full Air Plant care guide →
Reviewed June 2026 · how we check this