Growli

Plant diagnosis

Why is my rubber plant turning yellow?

Glossy-leaved tropical tree — easier than its fiddle-leaf cousin but every bit as dramatic about being moved.

The 4 most likely causes

The cause of rubber plant yellow leavesusually 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. Overwatering or poor drainage (Most likely)
    In most homes overwatering is more often a drainage problem than a frequency problem. Rubber plant needs a pot with a drainage hole, a chunky free-draining mix, and a watering rhythm of when the top 3cm of soil is dry, every 7-10 days. Soggy soil drowns the roots and the first symptom you see above ground is yellowing or wilting foliage.
  2. Wrong light level (Likely)
    Rubber plant is a high-light plant and quickly turns leggy, pale, or stalled in low light. Move it within a metre of a south or east-facing window, or supplement with a grow light. It wants bright indirect light.
  3. Nutrient deficiency (nitrogen or iron) (Possible)
    If rubber plant has not been repotted or fed in a year or more, the older leaves can yellow uniformly while the newest growth stays green — a classic sign of nitrogen depletion. Yellow leaves with green veins on new growth point to iron or manganese deficiency. A balanced liquid feed during the growing season usually resolves both.
  4. Underwatering or letting it dry too long (Possible)
    Underwatering looks similar to overwatering at first — both produce limp, dull leaves — but the soil tells the truth. If the soil is dust-dry several centimetres down, water deeply. Rubber plant prefers when the top 3cm of soil is dry, every 7-10 days.

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 rubber plant with yellow leaves. Work through the steps in order; skipping ahead is the most common reason a plant fails to bounce back.

  1. Stop watering and check the roots. Don't add more water yet. Unpot rubber plant and look at the rootball — firm white roots mean you have time; brown mushy roots mean you need to act today.
  2. Trim damaged roots and yellow leaves. Cut off any soft brown roots with clean scissors. Remove fully yellow leaves at the base — they won't green back up. Leave half-yellow leaves alone for now; the plant is still pulling nutrients out of them.
  3. Repot into fresh dry mix. Repot into fresh, well-draining mix in a pot one size up. For rubber plant, pick a spot with bright indirect light.
  4. Reset the watering rhythm. Water deeply once, then wait. For rubber plant, that means when the top 3cm of soil is dry, every 7-10 days. Use a finger or a moisture meter — never a calendar.
  5. Resume feeding only after recovery. A stressed plant cannot use fertiliser and the salts will worsen the damage. Wait for at least one round of healthy new growth (4-6 weeks) before resuming a half-strength liquid feed during the growing season.

When this can't be saved

Most cases of rubber plant yellow leaves 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 rubber plant, the single biggest preventative is matching its native rhythm: when the top 3cm of soil is dry, every 7-10 days, bright indirect light, and a free-draining pot with a working drainage hole. Group rubber plant with plants of similar needs so you can water them as a batch rather than guessing per-pot. Set a calendar reminder to feed during the growing season but never feed a sick or freshly-repotted plant — wait for healthy new growth first.

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