Growli

UK hardiness

Is Hall's Living Stones hardy in the UK?

Lithops hallii

RHS H1bUSDA 10-11Pet-safe

More about hall's living stones in the UK

Hall's Living Stones and the RHS hardiness rating

Hall's Living Stones is rated RHS H1b — heated glasshouse — subtropical, meaning it withstands winter minimums of about 10 to 15°C. In practice that means it indoors over winter; can summer outdoors once nights are reliably mild. The RHS rating describes an absolute minimum temperature, not an average: a single hard frost below its band is what does the damage, so the question is always "what is the coldest night my garden gets?", not "what is a typical winter here?".

This follows the RHS plant hardiness rating system (H1a–H7), the UK standard. For the US growing-zone view, see the hall's living stones USDA hardiness guide.

Does UK region change it?

Because hall's living stones is frost-tender, UK region matters less than the simple rule: it does not stay outdoors over winter anywhere in the UK. Treat any time outside as a summer holiday — bring it back indoors once nights drop toward 10°C, well before the first frost, and acclimatise it over a week each way so the leaves do not shock.

Overwintering hall's living stones in the UK

Overwintering hall's living stones in the UK means bringing it in: a bright, frost-free room or a heated glasshouse, watered sparingly while growth slows. Do not leave it against cold glass or near an unheated porch. Move it back out only after the last spring frost has passed for your area.

Hall's Living Stones UK hardiness — frequently asked questions

Is hall's living stones hardy in the UK?

Hall's Living Stones is rated RHS H1b (heated glasshouse — subtropical, hardy to about 10 to 15°C). It is not winter-hardy anywhere in the UK and must be overwintered under cover.

Can hall's living stones stay outside over winter in the UK?

No. Hall's Living Stones is frost-tender — a UK frost will kill it. Bring it indoors or into a frost-free greenhouse before the first autumn frost and return it outside only after the last spring frost.

What does RHS H1b mean?

RHS hardiness ratings run H1a (needs a heated glasshouse) to H7 (survives below -20°C). Hall's Living Stones's rating, H1b, means heated glasshouse — subtropical — it tolerates winter minimums of about 10 to 15°C. The rating is an absolute minimum, not an average.

How do I overwinter hall's living stones in the UK?

Overwintering hall's living stones in the UK means bringing it in: a bright, frost-free room or a heated glasshouse, watered sparingly while growth slows. Do not leave it against cold glass or near an unheated porch. Move it back out only after the last spring frost has passed for your area.

Does UK region change whether hall's living stones survives?

Because hall's living stones is frost-tender, UK region matters less than the simple rule: it does not stay outdoors over winter anywhere in the UK. Treat any time outside as a summer holiday — bring it back indoors once nights drop toward 10°C, well before the first frost, and acclimatise it over a week each way so the leaves do not shock.

More hall's living stones care

See the full hall's living stones care guide, its temperature & humidity needs, and the US (USDA) hardiness version of this page.