Light requirements
How much light does Winged Kacip Fatimah (Labisia pumila var. alata) need?
Also called Winged Kacip Fatimah, Kacip Fatimah Alata.
More about winged kacip fatimah
About Winged Kacip Fatimah
Labisia pumila var. alata · also called Winged Kacip Fatimah, Kacip Fatimah Alata · tropical
Winged Kacip Fatimah is a rainforest understory herb from Peninsular Malaysia, distinguished from the type species by winged or slightly undulating leaf margins and petioles. Used similarly to Labisia pumila in traditional Malay herbal medicine. A collector's rarity requiring very high humidity, warm temperatures, and deep shade to thrive outside its native habitat.
Comfort temperature: 22–30°C
Watch for — Leaf scorch and crisp margins: Exposure to any direct light or dry air causes leaf margin scorching in this shade-adapted variety. Ensure placement away from windows that receive direct sun and maintain humidity above 70%. Once scorched, affected leaves will not recover — prune them and address the cause.
The exact light winged kacip fatimah needs
Winged Kacip Fatimah is famous as a "low light" plant — but that means it tolerates dim rooms, not that it prefers them. It survives a north corner; it grows better with more light.
Put a number on it — this is what a meter (or a free phone light-meter app) should read where winged kacip fatimah sits:
- Footcandles: Survives down to ~50–75 fc; grows well at 150–400 fc. The low end is its tolerance floor, not its happy place.
- Lux: Tolerates ~500–800 lux; does noticeably better at 1,500–4,000 lux.
- Duration: Copes with low ambient light all day; no direct sun needed or wanted.
In plain terms, Honestly, bright indirect light if you have it — winged kacip fatimah grows fastest there. But it is one of the very few that genuinely cope in a north room, an interior wall, or a few metres from any window. Direct hot sun (it is adapted to shade and scorches), and total darkness — even a tough plant needs some daylight; a windowless room with the light off all day will eventually kill it.
Not sure how to read the light in your home? Our light meter guide walks through measuring footcandles and lux with a free phone app and turning the reading into a placement decision for winged kacip fatimah.
Signs winged kacip fatimah is getting too much light
The most exposed leaves show it first. For winged kacip fatimah specifically, watch for:
- Yellowing, bleached or scorched leaves if winged kacip fatimah is moved into direct sun — it is a shade-adapted survivor, and harsh light burns it surprisingly fast.
- Pale, washed-out colour where the sun hits, while shaded leaves stay rich and dark.
- Crispy brown patches after a move from a dim shop straight into a hot window.
Light damage does not heal — a scorched leaf stays scorched — so the fix is to move winged kacip fatimah out of the harsh light rather than wait for it to recover.
Signs winged kacip fatimah is not getting enough light
Too little light is slower and sneakier than too much. The classic tell is etiolation: the plant stretches and pales as it reaches for a window. For winged kacip fatimah, look for:
- Very slow or completely stalled growth — the honest sign winged kacip fatimah is at its light limit (it will not dramatically die, it just stops).
- New leaves come in small, spaced far apart and leaning hard toward the nearest window — etiolation, even in a "low light" plant.
- Soil stays soggy for weeks after watering because the plant is barely drinking — the real danger here is overwatering a low-light plant, not the light itself.
If winged kacip fatimah is stretched, leggy and pale, our guide to leggy, stretched plants covers how to fix it and whether it can be pruned back into shape. Believing "low light" means "no light", then overwatering it. In a dim spot winged kacip fatimah barely grows and barely drinks — so the usual watering schedule drowns it. Far more low-light plants die from rot than from darkness. Treat the dim spot as the cap on watering, not just on growth.
Where to put winged kacip fatimah: the best window and room
Winged Kacip Fatimah is the plant for the spots nothing else survives: a north-facing room, an interior hallway, a desk away from the window, a dim bathroom. It will live there. But if you want it to actually grow and look its best, give it bright indirect light — it is tolerant of low light, not fond of it. Keep it out of direct sun, which it has no defence against.
- Place it where nothing else copes. Winged Kacip Fatimah is ideal for a north room, interior wall or dim corner — spots that would slowly kill most houseplants.
- Still give it some daylight. "Low light" is not "no light": keep winged kacip fatimah within sight of a window or under regular room lighting, never in a permanently dark room.
- Cut watering to match the dimness. In low light winged kacip fatimah barely drinks — let the soil dry much more than usual, because rot, not darkness, is what kills it here.
- Add a small grow light to thrive. To move winged kacip fatimah from surviving to thriving in a dark room, a modest LED grow light 10–12 hours a day is enough — it does not need a powerful fixture.
Does winged kacip fatimah need a grow light?
A grow light transforms winged kacip fatimah in a dark room — and because it is not a high-light plant, even a modest full-spectrum LED on a timer for 10–12 hours a day takes it from "just surviving" to genuinely thriving. It is one of the most rewarding species to add a small light to in a windowless space.
The seasonal light shift (why winter changes everything)
The trap with a low-light plant in winter is water, not light. Winged Kacip Fatimah already grows slowly; from November to February it nearly stops, so cut watering right back — the soil will stay wet for weeks. Move it as close to a window as you can for the dim months, hold off all feeding, and resume normal care only when spring growth restarts.
Light and watering are linked: a plant in weaker winter light photosynthesises and drinks far less, so the same routine that worked in summer can rot it. See how often to water winged kacip fatimah for the season-by-season schedule that pairs with this light plan.
Winged Kacip Fatimah light requirements — frequently asked questions
How much light does winged kacip fatimah need?
Winged Kacip Fatimah needs Survives down to ~50–75 fc; grows well at 150–400 fc. The low end is its tolerance floor, not its happy place. Tolerates ~500–800 lux; does noticeably better at 1,500–4,000 lux. Honestly, bright indirect light if you have it — winged kacip fatimah grows fastest there. But it is one of the very few that genuinely cope in a north room, an interior wall, or a few metres from any window.
Can winged kacip fatimah survive in low light?
Yes — winged kacip fatimah is one of the genuinely low-light-tolerant plants: it survives a north room or dim corner. But "tolerates" is not "prefers" — it grows faster and looks better in bright indirect light, and the real danger in a dim spot is overwatering, not the darkness itself.
What are the signs winged kacip fatimah is getting too much light?
Yellowing, bleached or scorched leaves if winged kacip fatimah is moved into direct sun — it is a shade-adapted survivor, and harsh light burns it surprisingly fast. Pale, washed-out colour where the sun hits, while shaded leaves stay rich and dark. Crispy brown patches after a move from a dim shop straight into a hot window. Believing "low light" means "no light", then overwatering it. In a dim spot winged kacip fatimah barely grows and barely drinks — so the usual watering schedule drowns it. Far more low-light plants die from rot than from darkness. Treat the dim spot as the cap on watering, not just on growth.
What are the signs winged kacip fatimah is not getting enough light?
Very slow or completely stalled growth — the honest sign winged kacip fatimah is at its light limit (it will not dramatically die, it just stops). New leaves come in small, spaced far apart and leaning hard toward the nearest window — etiolation, even in a "low light" plant. Soil stays soggy for weeks after watering because the plant is barely drinking — the real danger here is overwatering a low-light plant, not the light itself. If you see this, move winged kacip fatimah closer to the light or add a grow light — and check our guide on leggy, stretched plants.
Does winged kacip fatimah need a grow light?
A grow light transforms winged kacip fatimah in a dark room — and because it is not a high-light plant, even a modest full-spectrum LED on a timer for 10–12 hours a day takes it from "just surviving" to genuinely thriving. It is one of the most rewarding species to add a small light to in a windowless space.
Keep reading
- Winged Kacip Fatimah care — the full brief (light, water, soil, problems, pet safety)
- How often to water winged kacip fatimah — the watering schedule
- Light meter guide — measure footcandles and lux with a free phone app
- Best low-light plants — what actually survives a dim room
- Plants for north-facing windows — what thrives with no direct sun
- Leggy, stretched plants — why it happens and how to fix it
- How much light does alocasia reginae need?
- How much light does alocasia princeps need?
- How much light does colocasia crown of tonga need?
- Light requirements for all 8452 species in the Growli library