Yellow leaves: 5 causes, 5 fixes
Diagnose yellowing leaves in your terrarium by where and how they're yellowing. The most common plant-stress signal, decoded.
Yellow leaves are how plants tell you something is wrong. The trick is figuring out what — because yellowing can mean overwatering, underwatering, light issues, nutrient problems, or natural senescence. Here’s how to tell which.
Where are the yellow leaves?
Bottom of the plant
Most likely cause: Natural senescence (old age). The plant is shedding old leaves to focus energy on new growth. Totally normal.
Fix: None needed. Remove the yellow leaves to prevent mold, leave the plant alone.
New growth (top of plant)
Most likely cause: Overwatering OR nutrient deficiency.
Fix:
- Check soil moisture. If soggy, ease up on watering.
- If soil is appropriately moist but yellowing continues, your substrate may be nutrient-poor. Add a tiny pinch of worm castings or dilute fertilizer (1/4 strength).
All over the plant
Most likely cause: Major stress event — repotting shock, environmental change, or systemic issue.
Fix:
- Don’t make any more changes for 2 weeks
- Maintain stable conditions
- Wait to see if plant recovers
Just leaf tips
Most likely cause: Low humidity OR mineral buildup from hard water.
Fix:
- Increase humidity (mist, close the jar)
- Switch to distilled or rainwater
What color is the yellow?
- Pale yellow: Often light issues (too much or too little)
- Bright yellow with green veins: Often nutrient deficiency
- Yellow + brown edges: Underwatering or low humidity
- Yellow + mushy: Overwatering or rot
- Yellow + spotted: Possible disease
The 5-cause checklist
Walk through these in order:
- Overwatering — soil soggy, drainage issues, no air exchange
- Underwatering — soil bone dry, leaf edges crispy
- Light wrong — too much (bleached) or too little (leggy + yellowing)
- Nutrients — long-established terrarium may deplete substrate
- Pest or disease — inspect undersides of leaves for bugs
Quick fixes
Overwatering
- Stop watering (if you were)
- Open the lid to let moisture escape
- Add dry substrate to absorb
- Wait 1 week before re-evaluating
Underwatering
- Mist lightly (closed jar) or water thoroughly (open jar)
- Use distilled water
- Check again in 24 hours
Light wrong
- Move to indirect light
- Filter direct sun with curtain
- Add grow light if too dim
Nutrients
- Add a pinch of worm castings to the substrate
- Or 1/4 strength liquid fertilizer, once
- Don’t overdo it — too much fertilizer = leaf burn
Pests
- Inspect with magnifier
- Common: spider mites, mealybugs, fungus gnats
- Treat with insecticidal soap or neem oil (safe for terrariums in small amounts)
When yellowing is normal
Some yellowing is always normal. A plant dropping 1-2 old leaves per month is just housekeeping. Remove them and move on.
When yellowing is a red flag
- Multiple plants yellowing simultaneously
- Yellow + wilting + dropping
- Yellow + soft/mushy stems
- Yellow + bad smell
These indicate systemic issues — usually root rot from overwatering or anaerobic substrate. May need a full rebuild.
The cheat sheet
| Pattern | Likely cause | First action |
|---|---|---|
| Bottom leaves only | Natural | Remove, ignore |
| Top growth only | Overwater or nutrient | Check soil moisture |
| All over, suddenly | Major stress | Stabilize, wait |
| Tips only | Humidity or minerals | Distilled water, mist |
| With brown edges | Underwater | Water thoroughly |
Stuck? Post a photo in the Discord — we diagnose these all day.