Plant care
London Pride (None-so-Pretty) care
Saxifraga urbium
Also called London Pride, None-so-Pretty, St Patrick's Cabbage hybrid.
Watering rhythm
Medium indirect light (a couple of metres from a window)
Weekly during dry spells; little additional watering needed in temperate climates
Light
Medium indirect light (a couple of metres from a window)
Soil
Moist, humus-rich, well-drained soil; tolerant of a wide range
Humidity
Moderate (40–70%)
Temp
-15 to 25°C
Pet safety
Pet-safe
Mature size
25–30 cm tall in flower
Care at a glance
Light
London Pride wants the spot a few feet back from a sunny window — bright enough to read a paperback at noon, but the sun never falls directly on the leaves. Thrives in partial to full shade, making it ideal for north-facing beds, walls, and shaded city gardens. Tolerates some morning sun but direct afternoon sun in warm climates causes leaf scorch and wilting. A faint hand shadow at midday is the right amount; a sharp dark shadow means it's getting direct sun and probably too much.
Watering
Water london pride weekly during dry spells; little additional watering needed in temperate climates. The actual day count varies with pot size, light, and season — the finger test (or lifting the pot to feel its weight) is more reliable than a fixed calendar. Empty any drainage saucer afterwards so the pot isn't sitting in water. Prefers evenly moist, humus-rich soil. Allow the top centimetre to dry slightly between waterings. Established plants in shaded beds can tolerate short dry spells but do not cope with prolonged drought.
Soil and pot
London Pride grows best in moist, humus-rich, well-drained soil; tolerant of a wide range. Adaptable to most soils including chalk and clay as long as drainage is adequate. Prefers slightly acid to neutral pH (5.5–7.0). Incorporating leaf mould or garden compost at planting improves moisture retention. A pot with a working drainage hole is non-negotiable for this species — even free-draining mix will turn soggy in a closed planter. If you love the look of a decorative pot without a hole, use it as a cachepot around an inner nursery pot you can lift out to water.
Humidity and temperature
London Pride sits happiest at around Moderate (40–70%) humidity and -15 to 25°C (5 to 77°F). Well-suited to the naturally moist conditions of UK and north-western US gardens. No additional humidity management required outdoors. In dry climates, mulch to maintain soil moisture. If you keep the room above year-round and avoid placing the plant near a cold draught, a hot radiator, or an air-conditioning vent, you have already handled the two biggest indoor stressors.
Fertilising
Feed london pride sparingly. Apply a light balanced fertiliser or well-rotted compost in early spring. Plants are not heavy feeders; over-fertilising promotes leggy foliage at the expense of flowers. Skip fertiliser entirely on a stressed, recently-repotted, or actively wilting plant — fertiliser salts make damage worse, not better. Wait for a round of healthy new growth before resuming a feeding rhythm.
Common problems
Below are the issues we see most often on london pride in the Growli community. Each is annotated with the most common cause so you know where to start.
- Vine weevil grub damage — Creamy-white grubs feed on roots through winter, causing plants to suddenly wilt and collapse. Apply nematode biological controls (Steinernema kraussei) to moist soil in autumn when soil temperature is above 5°C.
- Botrytis (grey mould) — Poor air circulation in dense plantings encourages grey mould on rosettes, especially in damp winters. Thin plantings, remove dead leaves promptly, and avoid overhead watering.
- Aphid infestation on flower stems — Colonies of greenfly gather on emerging flower stems in spring. Squash by hand, blast with water, or apply insecticidal soap. Usually temporary and does not threaten plant health.
Propagation
Detach rooted stolons (runners) from around the parent plant in spring or autumn and pot individually or plant direct. Rosettes can be carefully removed with a short stem attached, rooted in gritty compost in a cold frame. Seed is also viable; sow in autumn and leave outdoors to stratify. Propagation is the cheapest, most satisfying way to expand a collection — and it doubles as insurance against losing a mature plant to an accident. Take a backup cutting once the parent is established and healthy.
Toxicity to pets
London Pride is pet-safe. Saxifraga species, including S. urbium, are not listed as toxic by the ASPCA. The closely related S. stolonifera is confirmed non-toxic to cats and dogs by the ASPCA. No toxic principles have been reported for this genus. Considered safe around pets and children. If you keep cats, dogs, or curious children in the house, weigh placement carefully — a high shelf or a hanging planter is enough for casual safety. For severe ingestion incidents, call your local vet and the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (in the US, 888-426-4435).
Pet-safety status is sourced from the ASPCA Toxic and Non-Toxic Plant List, which catalogues the most-asked-about plants for cats, dogs, and horses.
London Pride care — frequently asked questions
What is the common name for Saxifraga urbium?
Saxifraga urbium is most commonly called London Pride, but it is also known as London Pride, None-so-Pretty, St Patrick's Cabbage hybrid. The names refer to the same species, so care instructions for London Pride apply identically to anything sold as None-so-Pretty.
How much light does london pride need?
London Pride grows best in medium indirect light (a couple of metres from a window). Thrives in partial to full shade, making it ideal for north-facing beds, walls, and shaded city gardens. Tolerates some morning sun but direct afternoon sun in warm climates causes leaf scorch and wilting.
How often should I water london pride?
Water london pride weekly during dry spells; little additional watering needed in temperate climates. Prefers evenly moist, humus-rich soil. Allow the top centimetre to dry slightly between waterings. Established plants in shaded beds can tolerate short dry spells but do not cope with prolonged drought. The finger-test (or lifting the pot to feel its weight) beats a fixed weekly calendar because pot size, light, and season all change how fast the soil dries.
Is london pride toxic to cats and dogs?
London Pride is pet-safe. Saxifraga species, including S. urbium, are not listed as toxic by the ASPCA. The closely related S. stolonifera is confirmed non-toxic to cats and dogs by the ASPCA. No toxic principles have been reported for this genus. Considered safe around pets and children.
What USDA hardiness zone does london pride grow in?
London Pride is rated for USDA zone 5-8 and RHS hardiness H5. Outside that range, grow it as a container plant that overwinters indoors before the first hard frost.
London Pride deep-dive guides
Every aspect of london pride care, each with its own calibrated guide:
- Common london pride problems & fixes
- London Pride watering schedule
- London Pride light requirements
- Best soil mix for london pride
- London Pride fertilizing guide
- When to repot london pride
- How to propagate london pride
- How to prune london pride
- What's eating my london pride?
- London Pride growth rate & size
- London Pride cold hardiness
- London Pride temperature & humidity
- Is london pride toxic to cats & dogs?
- Is london pride toxic to cats?
- Is london pride toxic to dogs?
- All 11 Saxifraga varieties
- Getting london pride to bloom
Featured in these plant shortlists
London Pride qualifies for 13 curated Growli shortlists — each one filtered objectively from our structured plant-care library, so the selection is consistent and checkable:
- Best pet-safe houseplants — Houseplants the ASPCA lists as non-toxic to cats and dogs — every one verified against the ASPCA toxic and non-toxic plant list.
- Best low-light houseplants — Houseplants that need no direct sun and cope with a north-facing room or a spot well back from a window.
- Best plants for a north-facing window — Houseplants for a north-facing window: bright, even, indirect light and no scorching direct sun. Each pick verified against its documented light needs.
- Best pet-safe low-light plants — Non-toxic to cats and dogs AND happy with no direct sun — the two hardest constraints to satisfy at once.
- Best drought-tolerant houseplants — Houseplants that prefer to dry out — forgiving of forgotten watering and ideal for travel or busy weeks.
- Best houseplants for beginners — Forgiving of irregular light and watering — the houseplants least likely to die in a new plant parent’s first season.
- Best flowering houseplants — Indoor plants grown for their blooms — selected from the flowering species in Growli’s plant-care library.
- Best pet-safe low-maintenance plants — Non-toxic to cats and dogs and forgiving of forgotten watering — the easiest safe choices for a busy pet household.
- Best pet-safe flowering plants — Flowering houseplants the ASPCA lists as non-toxic to cats and dogs — colour and blooms in a pet home, without the worry.
- Best houseplants for a cool room — Houseplants that tolerate cool conditions down to about 10°C — for an unheated spare room, hallway, porch or a home kept cool.
- Best pet-safe bedroom plants — Non-toxic to cats and dogs and happy in lower light — calming greenery for a bedroom where a pet often sleeps too.
- Best cat-safe plants — Houseplants the ASPCA lists as non-toxic to cats (and dogs) — safe greenery for a home with a curious cat.
- Best dog-safe plants — Houseplants the ASPCA lists as non-toxic to dogs (and cats) — safe greenery for a home with a curious dog.
- Browse all 29 plant shortlists — pet-safe, low-light, drought-tolerant and more
Related guides
London Pride is also known as London Pride, None-so-Pretty, and St Patrick's Cabbage hybrid.