Cold hardiness & minimum temperature
Is Hoya Bilobata (Hoya bilobata)cold hardy? Hardiness zone & min temp
Also called Bilobata wax plant, Wax plant, Porcelain flower, Miniature wax plant.
More about hoya bilobata
About Hoya Bilobata
Hoya bilobata · also called Bilobata wax plant, Wax plant · houseplant
Hoya bilobata is a compact, trailing wax plant from the Philippines, prized for tiny rounded leaves and umbels of small star-shaped pink-red flowers. Give it bright, indirect light, let the airy epiphyte mix dry between waterings, and keep it warm at 16-29C. The Hoya genus is ASPCA non-toxic, so it is pet-safe.
Cold limit: USDA 10-12 (outdoors); grown as a houseplant elsewhere (16-29C)
Watch for — Blackened leaves or grey mould (Botrytis): Brought on by cold, damp conditions or persistently wet foliage; keep the plant warm, improve airflow, and avoid misting this species.
What hoya bilobata's hardiness rating actually means
Hoya Bilobata is not cold hardy. It is a tropical houseplant that dies if it is left out through frost — there is no zone where it overwinters outdoors in a UK or cold-US climate. Its RHS rating of H1c means: Warm-temperate — can summer outdoors but must come in well before the first frost. On the US scale that maps to USDA 10-12 (outdoors); grown as a houseplant elsewhere — the zones where it can be left outdoors year-round.
New to these scales? The USDA hardiness zone map explained covers how the zone numbers work, and you can find your own zone with the zone finder.
Minimum temperature — and what happens below it
Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about 5 °C (and never frost). Hoya Bilobata has no frost tolerance at all — it is an indoor plant in any climate with a real winter.
Concretely, for hoya bilobata as it gets too cold:
- Below about about 5 °C, growth stalls and the leaves start to show cold stress — dark, water-soaked, or yellowing patches.
- A single light frost blackens the foliage; a hard freeze kills the whole plant, roots included, and it does not recover.
- Even a cold, draughty windowsill or an unheated porch in winter can be enough to damage it permanently.
Can hoya bilobata go outside or overwinter — and where?
- It can holiday outdoors in summer once nights are reliably above 5 °C, in shade or dappled light, hardened off gradually.
- Bring it back indoors well before the first autumn frost — do not wait for a frost warning, move it when nights drop toward 10-12 °C.
- It will never overwinter outside in a temperate climate; the indoors is its winter home, full stop.
Work back from your local frost dates with the frost-date calculator: the last spring frost and first autumn frost are what really decide when hoya bilobata can be outside. US growers can check USDA zones; UK growers should use the RHS hardiness ratings, which match the H1c figure above.
Hoya Bilobata hardiness — frequently asked questions
Is hoya bilobata cold hardy?
Hoya Bilobata is not cold hardy. It is a tropical houseplant that dies if it is left out through frost — there is no zone where it overwinters outdoors in a UK or cold-US climate. Indoor-only in almost every home. Hoya Bilobata can only live outside year-round in genuinely frost-free climates (roughly USDA 10-12 (outdoors); grown as a houseplant elsewhere); everywhere else it is a houseplant that summers out at most.
What is the minimum temperature hoya bilobata can survive?
Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about 5 °C (and never frost). Hoya Bilobata has no frost tolerance at all — it is an indoor plant in any climate with a real winter.
What hardiness zone is hoya bilobata?
Hoya Bilobata is rated USDA 10-12 (outdoors); grown as a houseplant elsewhere and RHS H1c — Warm-temperate — can summer outdoors but must come in well before the first frost.
Can hoya bilobata survive winter outside?
It can holiday outdoors in summer once nights are reliably above 5 °C, in shade or dappled light, hardened off gradually. Bring it back indoors well before the first autumn frost — do not wait for a frost warning, move it when nights drop toward 10-12 °C. It will never overwinter outside in a temperate climate; the indoors is its winter home, full stop.
What happens to hoya bilobata below its minimum temperature?
Below about about 5 °C, growth stalls and the leaves start to show cold stress — dark, water-soaked, or yellowing patches. A single light frost blackens the foliage; a hard freeze kills the whole plant, roots included, and it does not recover. Even a cold, draughty windowsill or an unheated porch in winter can be enough to damage it permanently.
Keep reading
- Hoya Bilobata care — the full brief (light, water, soil, problems, pet safety)
- USDA hardiness zones — find yours and what grows there
- Is hoya bilobata hardy in the UK? — the RHS-rating version
- RHS hardiness ratings — the UK system explained
- Frost-date calculator — your real outdoor window
- The USDA hardiness zone map, explained
- Is snake plant cold hardy?
- Is dracaena cold hardy?
- Is peperomia cold hardy?
- All 609plant hardiness & min-temp guides