The term low light can be very misleading.
Plants that need low light.
But all is not lost.
Find the most tolerant indoor and outdoor.
Up to 12 inches tall.
Low light or indirect light.
About low light indoor plants.
There are tons of low light plants that can survive in the darkest shadiest spots of your home office space or anywhere else in need of greenery.
When you purchase a plant and the label includes it as a low light plant it does not necessarily mean that these are indoor plants that need low light.
Rounding out our list of the best low light indoor plants is the arrowhead plant also known as the american evergreen.
Medium light would be in an east or west facing room.
When the soil is dry to the touch.
Spider plants native to tropics around the globe and the first houseplant for innumerable people probably owes its popularity to its unique growth habit and for its ease of growth as a low light houseplant the mother plant a clump of curving leaves that resemble long broad grass blades sends out long stems with baby plants at their ends.
It means that these are indoor plants that tolerate low light.
Since this plant is one of the most durable indoor plants it does quite well in low light and only needs to be fertilized once or twice a year it s ideal for beginner gardeners.
You can pot it hang it or even grow it along a trellis or pole.
Available in dark green and variegated forms spider plant chlorophytum comosum makes a great tabletop or basket plant in low light conditions.
Plants like bok choy spinach and arugula all need around three hours of sunlight to thrive.
There are some house plant species that positively thrive on little or no light.
North facing rooms or rooms with no windows are considered low light rooms.
Even plants that do well in outdoor shade tend to need more light when grown indoors and this can be hard to come by unless you provide auxiliary lighting.
If your room has no windows you should leave lights on 12 hours a day or rotate low light plants into the room for a few weeks at a time before moving them back to a naturally lit room.