Growli

Plant diagnosis

Why does my herb garden have brown spots?

Mixed culinary herbs — Mediterranean herbs (rosemary, thyme, oregano, sage) and tender herbs (basil, parsley, cilantro) have opposite watering needs.

The 4 most likely causes

The cause of herb garden brown spotsusually narrows to one of the items below, ranked by how often we see each in Growli's diagnostic chats. Work down the list — most readers find their answer in the top two.

  1. Fungal or bacterial leaf spot (Possible)
    Brown spots with yellow halos appearing on herb garden, especially after water sat on the leaves overnight, are most often fungal or bacterial leaf spot. Remove affected leaves, water only at the soil line, improve airflow, and apply a copper fungicide if it spreads.
  2. Sunburn or intense direct sun (Possible)
    Bleached patches, papery brown spots, or crisped leaf surfaces on the south-facing side of herb garden are sunburn. Acclimatise it more gradually after a move, or filter midday sun with a sheer curtain. Sunburn damage doesn't heal — wait for new growth.
  3. Overwatering or poor drainage (Likely)
    In most homes overwatering is more often a drainage problem than a frequency problem. Herb garden needs a pot with a drainage hole, a chunky free-draining mix, and a watering rhythm of depends on the herb — Mediterranean herbs prefer dry, tender herbs prefer steady moisture. Soggy soil drowns the roots and the first symptom you see above ground is yellowing or wilting foliage.
  4. Pests sucking sap (Possible)
    Sap-sucking pests (aphids, spider mites, mealybugs, scale) all cause similar symptoms: yellow stippling, distorted new growth, sticky residue. Inspect leaf undersides and stem joints with strong light. Most are controlled with weekly insecticidal soap or a horticultural oil spray.

How to diagnose in 60 seconds

Run these quick checks before you change anything — the right fix depends on what you find.

The fix — step by step

This is the recovery sequence Growli walks users through for herb garden with brown spots. Work through the steps in order; skipping ahead is the most common reason a plant fails to bounce back.

  1. Quarantine if you suspect disease. If spots look wet, are spreading, or have a yellow halo, move herb garden away from your other plants until you have a diagnosis. Disinfect your tools between plants.
  2. Remove the worst-affected leaves. Snip off heavily spotted leaves at the base. Don't compost them — bag and bin to stop spore spread. Never remove more than 30% of foliage in one go.
  3. Switch to filtered or rain water. If you suspect tap-water damage, water with rainwater, distilled water, or tap water that has stood uncovered for 24 hours. Continue for 4-6 weeks before re-evaluating.
  4. Improve airflow and watering technique. Water at the soil line only — never on the leaves. Space herb garden so leaves are not touching neighbouring plants. A small fan in stagnant rooms makes a surprising difference.
  5. Apply a treatment if needed. For active fungal spread, a copper-based fungicide applied weekly per the label is the standard remedy. For sunburn or fluoride damage, no treatment helps — just remove damaged leaves and wait for new growth.

When this can't be saved

Most cases of herb garden brown spots are recoverable, but a few red flags point to a plant that has gone past the point of return. If you spot any of these, consider propagating a clean cutting and starting over.

Prevention

For herb garden, the single biggest preventative is matching its native rhythm: depends on the herb — Mediterranean herbs prefer dry, tender herbs prefer steady moisture, 6+ hours of direct sun for most culinary herbs, and a free-draining pot with a working drainage hole. Water at the soil line, not the leaves, especially in the evening when leaves can't dry before nightfall. Switch to filtered or collected rainwater for sensitive species — it pays for itself in fewer crispy edges. Improve airflow around densely planted shelves with a small clip-on fan.

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