Plant SOS · Symptoms
Why are my leaf tips browning?
Brown tips on leaves are one of the most frequent — and most often misinterpreted — symptoms. The good news: in almost all cases, the plant is not in danger. Tips rarely brown because the plant is sick. The cause is almost always environmental: air too dry, hard water, irregular watering, or unsuitable exposure.
Another good piece of news: existing brown tips will not turn green again, but once the cause is corrected, new leaves will grow perfectly healthy. In this guide, we explain how to precisely identify your case and remedy it.

What brown tips reveal
Leaf tips are the farthest extremities from the roots. They are therefore the first to suffer when the plant lacks water, nutrients, or humidity. They act as an early indicator — an alarm signal before the problem spreads to the entire leaf.
The location of the browning is a valuable clue: if only the tips are affected, the environment is the cause. If the entire edges brown, the problem is often more severe. If brown spots appear in the center of the leaf, that's something else — disease or burn.
"Brown tips never disappear.
But new leaves, they can grow perfectly."
1. Air too dry — lack of ambient humidity
Insufficient humidity around the plant
This is the number one cause of brown tips, especially in winter with heating. Tropical plants — calathea, ferns, fittonia, dracaena — need high ambient humidity (between 50% and 70%). In a heated apartment, humidity often drops below 30%, which dries out the leaf tips.
2. Hard or fluoridated water
Sensitivity to tap water minerals
Some plants are particularly sensitive to the lime and fluoride contained in tap water. Calathea, dracaena, spider plants, and carnivorous plants are prime examples. Minerals accumulate in the substrate and gradually burn the leaf tips.
3. Irregular watering
Too long dry cycles between waterings
When a plant experiences overly irregular watering cycles — long dry periods followed by abundant watering — the leaf tips are the first to show signs of water stress. The dried-out substrate can no longer efficiently conduct water to the ends of the foliage.
4. Excessive sun exposure
Sunburn on the tips
Direct and intense sun — especially in summer between 11 am and 4 pm — can burn the leaf tips, which are the most exposed and least protected areas. The browning is then very localized, dry, and often accompanied by discolored spots on the leaf blade.
5. Excess fertilizer
Over-fertilization — chemical root burn
Too much fertilizer is as harmful as too little. An excess of mineral salts in the substrate burns the roots, which can no longer absorb water properly. The result: leaf tips turn brown due to lack of hydration, despite regular watering.
⚠ Essential to remember
Brown tips never turn green again. No need to wait. Once the cause is corrected, neatly trim the damaged areas following the natural shape of the leaf — and watch new leaves grow healthily.
Should you cut off brown tips?
Yes, you can cut them — but with caution. Use clean and sharp scissors, disinfected with alcohol. Cut following the natural shape of the leaf, leaving a very thin brown border so as not to cut into the living green, which could cause new browning at the cut point.
Do not cut more than a third of the leaf surface at once. And most importantly: address the cause first, not the symptoms. If you cut without solving the problem, the new tips will brown in turn.
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Launch diagnostic🌿 Guide written by the Douceur Maison Plant SOS team.
We write practical guides to help enthusiasts care for their indoor plants. · sosplantes@douceurmaison.fr
