Hosta Leaves Curling

Why the leaves curl and how to keep the foliage looking its best

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At a glance

  • Leaves curl upward with bleached or scorched patches: Too much direct sun; move to filtered shade or morning sun only
  • Leaves curl and wilt in dry summer heat: Drought stress; water deeply and apply thick mulch
  • Leaves mottled or ink-bleed patterned with distortion and curl: Hosta virus X; remove and destroy the plant, sterilize tools
  • Leaves with brown streaks following veins, crinkled and curled: Foliar nematodes; remove affected leaves, avoid overhead watering
  • New leaves distorted, silver-streaked, and curled: Thrips; apply systemic insecticide in spring

Why hosta leaves curl

Hostas are among the most popular shade perennials in temperate gardens, prized for their large, bold foliage in a vast range of colors and textures. Despite their reputation as tough, low-maintenance plants, hostas are sensitive to sun exposure and have distinctive vulnerabilities to certain pests and viruses. When hosta leaves curl, the cause is usually apparent from the conditions the plant is growing in, the pattern of the curl, and any associated discoloration or damage pattern.

Cause 1: Sun scorch and heat stress

Signs: The leaves are curling upward or cupping from the edges and have bleached, pale, tan, or crispy patches on the upper surface. The damage is concentrated on leaves that receive direct sunlight, particularly from the west or south in afternoon. The scorched patches are papery and dry, not soft or water-soaked. The symptoms appear or worsen rapidly during hot, sunny weather and are worst on blue or glaucous-leaved hostas, which have waxy coatings that reduce heat tolerance rather than enhance it.

Why it happens: Hostas evolved in the understory of forests in Japan, Korea, and China and are adapted to filtered or full shade. The large, thin leaves are not equipped to handle direct afternoon sun, which can raise leaf temperatures far above the air temperature, disrupt photosynthesis, and cause cells to die rapidly. The wax coating on blue-leaved hostas melts in heat, causing them to change color and become more susceptible to sun damage.

Fix: Move container hostas to a position with morning sun only and shade from noon onward, or to full filtered shade. For garden hostas, add shade cloth (30 to 50 percent) during the hottest weeks or plant taller shade-casting plants to the south or west. Gold-leaved and sun-tolerant cultivars ('Sum and Substance', 'August Moon', 'Guacamole') tolerate considerably more sun than blue- or white-variegated ones. Already-damaged leaves will not recover their color; they can be removed if unsightly, and new leaves emerging in shade will be undamaged.

Cause 2: Drought stress

Signs: The leaves are curling, wilting, and losing their normally firm, upright posture. The soil is very dry. The symptoms are worst during hot spells and improve temporarily after rain or watering. Hostas under large trees where roots compete for moisture, or those in dry, sandy, or south-facing garden beds are most affected. The whole plant may flop dramatically in afternoon heat and partially recover by morning.

Why it happens: Hostas have large leaf areas that lose moisture rapidly through transpiration, particularly in warm or breezy conditions. Their roots are relatively shallow and concentrated near the surface. When soil moisture is insufficient to keep up with transpiration demand, the leaves lose turgor and curl and droop. Hostas growing under large deciduous trees are often dry because the tree roots intercept most available moisture and because the canopy acts as an umbrella, reducing how much rain reaches the soil.

Fix: Water deeply once or twice per week during dry periods, soaking the root zone thoroughly. Apply a 3-inch layer of organic mulch (shredded bark, composted leaves, wood chips) around the plants, keeping it from touching the crown, to retain soil moisture and moderate soil temperature. If hostas are competing with large tree roots, consider supplemental watering via a soaker hose or drip system. Container hostas may need daily watering in hot weather as they dry out rapidly.

Cause 3: Hosta virus X (HVX)

Signs: The leaves have a mottled, blotchy, or ink-bleed discoloration pattern in which darker pigment appears to streak or bleed into the lighter areas of the leaf, often following or crossing the veins. The affected leaves may be puckered, twisted, or distorted, and may curl. The pattern is irregular and does not follow any consistent geometric shape. Symptoms vary enormously by cultivar: on some varieties the pattern looks like an unusual variegation and may be initially attractive; on others it produces disfiguring mottling. Symptoms may be suppressed in cool weather and more visible in summer.

Why it happens: Hosta virus X is a potexvirus that infects hostas systemically. It does not kill the plant quickly but causes permanent, incurable damage to the foliage and reduces plant vigor over time. The virus spreads primarily by mechanical transmission: using the same knife or spade to divide an infected hosta and then dividing a healthy one is sufficient to transmit it. It was widespread in commercial production before it was identified and named, so purchased plants from unverified sources may be infected.

Fix: There is no treatment. Infected plants must be dug up and destroyed (placed in trash, not composted). Sterilize all tools used on hostas with 10 percent bleach or 70 percent isopropyl alcohol and allow them to dry before use on the next plant. Buy hostas only from reputable nurseries that test for HVX or that propagate by tissue culture (which eliminates the virus). If you are unsure whether a plant is infected, a test kit specifically for HVX is available from plant diagnostic labs and some online retailers.

Cause 4: Foliar nematodes

Signs: Brown, water-soaked streaks appear on the leaves running parallel between the veins, following the pattern set by the veins. The streaks start yellowish and turn brown as the tissue dies. Affected leaves crinkle, pucker, and curl as the dead tissue contracts. The lower leaves are typically affected first, and the symptoms progress upward. The symptoms appear most readily after wet periods or overhead watering, as foliar nematodes move through the film of water on the leaf surface and enter through the stomata. The vein-bounded stripe pattern is diagnostic: few other problems produce symptoms that are so precisely bounded by the leaf veins.

Why it happens: Foliar nematodes (primarily Aphelenchoides fragariae) are microscopic roundworms that live in moist soil and on plant debris and move into the leaf tissue through water films. They feed and reproduce inside the leaf, and the infected cells collapse and die. The leaf veins act as physical barriers the nematodes cannot cross, which creates the characteristic vein-bounded stripe pattern. The nematodes spread via overhead watering, rain splash, soil movement, and division of infected clumps.

Fix: There is no chemical treatment available for home gardeners. Remove and dispose of all affected leaves as soon as symptoms appear; do not compost them. Avoid overhead watering; use soaker hoses or drip irrigation at the base of the plant. Clear away all leaf debris from around infected plants in autumn. In severe cases, dig the clump, wash the roots thoroughly, and replant in a different location. Some hosta breeders are selecting for nematode resistance; thick-leaved, heavily textured hostas are less susceptible than thin-leaved types.

Cause 5: Thrips

Signs: The new, unfurling leaves are distorted, have silvery or bronze streaking on the surface, and do not open properly. Older leaves may have stippling and silvery patches. The curling and distortion is concentrated on new growth and very young leaves rather than established fully expanded leaves. Small, slender insects (about 1 mm long, straw-colored or dark) may be visible in the folds of curled new leaves when examined closely. Black fecal dots may be visible on the leaf surface.

Why it happens: Thrips (primarily Western flower thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis) feed by rasping the surface of young, unfurling hosta leaves and drinking the cell contents. Because the damage occurs as the leaf is still developing, it causes distortion, incomplete unrolling, and stunted growth in the new tissue. Older, fully expanded leaves are less affected because the cells are already mature. Thrips are worst in hot, dry conditions and in areas with high pest pressure from neighboring ornamentals.

Fix: Apply insecticidal soap or spinosad as a foliar spray to young leaves and around the crown of the plant where thrips shelter. For heavy infestations, apply a systemic insecticide containing imidacloprid as a soil drench in spring; the plant takes it up and thrips feeding on new growth are controlled. Avoid over-fertilizing with nitrogen, which promotes the soft new growth that thrips prefer. Blue sticky traps placed near the plants monitor adult populations.