At a glance
- Fastest method: Division; separates established pups with roots already attached
- Easiest method: Leaf cuttings in water; just cut, place, and wait
- Preserves variegation: Division only; leaf cuttings from Laurentii produce all-green plants
- Best time: Spring or summer when the plant is actively growing
- Timeline: Roots in 3 to 6 weeks from cuttings; new shoots in 2 to 4 months
- Mark orientation: Always mark which end of a leaf section is the bottom before cutting
Method 1: Division (best for variegated varieties)
Division is the simplest and most reliable propagation method, and the only one that preserves the yellow-edged variegation of varieties like Laurentii and Futura Superba.
Step 1: Remove the plant from its pot. You will see pups (offsets) growing from the rhizome at the base of the plant. Each pup has its own root system developing from the shared rhizome.
Step 2: Use a clean knife or scissors to cut through the rhizome, separating the pup from the mother plant. Ensure the pup section has some roots attached. If pups are very small and rootless, allow them to grow larger before dividing.
Step 3: Allow the cut surfaces to dry for an hour. Pot the pup in well-draining potting mix in a pot sized for its current root ball. Water lightly and place in bright indirect light.
Step 4: The divided pup may look the same for a few weeks while its root system establishes. New leaf growth will follow once roots are settled, typically within 4 to 8 weeks.
Method 2: Leaf cuttings in water
This method is easy to monitor (you can see the roots developing) and works well for propagating plain green snake plants. It will not preserve variegation in yellow-edged varieties.
Step 1: Select a healthy leaf and cut it at the base with a clean blade. Before cutting, mark which end is the bottom (the end that was closer to the soil) with a small notch or pen mark. Orientation is critical: cuttings placed upside down will not root.
Step 2: Let the cut end callous for a few hours at room temperature.
Step 3: Place the bottom end of the leaf in a clean jar of water, submerged about 1 to 2 inches. Keep in a warm spot with indirect light. Change the water every week.
Step 4: Roots appear from the bottom of the cutting within 3 to 6 weeks. Tiny new leaf shoots emerge from just above the rooted base after 2 to 4 months. Once shoots are 2 to 3 inches tall, pot in well-draining mix.
For more cuttings from one leaf: cut a long leaf into 3 to 4 inch sections, marking each section's bottom end before cutting. Each section can be propagated independently. You can get 5 to 10 cuttings from a single long leaf.
Method 3: Leaf cuttings in soil
Soil cuttings are similar to water cuttings but skip the intermediate water rooting step. The timeline is similar, and the advantage is that the young plant roots directly into its eventual growing medium.
Step 1: Cut leaf sections as described above, marking orientation. Allow cut ends to callous for several hours.
Step 2: Insert the bottom end of each section into slightly moist well-draining potting mix, about 1 inch deep. The cutting should stand upright on its own.
Step 3: Place in warm conditions (70 to 80°F) with indirect light. Keep the soil just barely moist; do not overwater, as unrooted cuttings are prone to rot. Misting the top of the soil lightly every few days is enough moisture.
Step 4: Roots develop within 4 to 8 weeks. New shoots emerge from the base of the cutting after 2 to 4 months. Resist pulling on the cutting to check for roots; it will hold firm when rooted.
The variegation question
Variegated snake plants like Laurentii have yellow leaf margins that many owners want to preserve in their propagations. Division is the only method that does this. The yellow coloring is a chimeric trait carried in the outer cell layer of the rhizome; pups that grow from this rhizome inherit the full variegation pattern. Leaf cuttings, however, regenerate from inner cell layers that carry only the base green genetics. A leaf cutting from a Laurentii produces a plain green snake plant.