At a glance
- Most common cause: Overwatering; mushy or swollen dropped leaves + wet soil
- Underwatering: Shriveled, wrinkled dropped leaves + bone-dry soil
- Temperature stress: Sudden drop after cold draft or temperatures below 50°F
- Low light: Slow gradual drop of lower leaves; pale stems reaching toward light
- Seasonal: Minor leaf drop in winter during dormancy is normal
- Recovery: New leaves grow from branch tips once the cause is fixed
Reading dropped jade leaves
Jade plant (Crassula ovata) is a long-lived succulent that can survive for decades with minimal care. When it drops leaves, the texture of the dropped leaves is the most useful diagnostic: mushy or swollen leaves point to overwatering; shriveled, flat, or wrinkled leaves point to underwatering or dehydration. This distinction immediately narrows the cause and points to the correct fix.
Cause 1: Overwatering (most common)
Signs: Dropped leaves that feel mushy or translucent when you pick them up. Leaves may drop with no yellow warning, especially from lower branches. The soil is wet or has been wet for an extended period. The pot is heavy. Remaining leaves may look swollen or slightly pale.
Why it happens: Jade stores water in its thick leaves and stems. When the soil stays wet, roots begin to rot and simultaneously the leaves absorb excess water until their cells burst. The plant then sheds these damaged leaves. Root rot progresses until the plant cannot support any leaves at all if the wet conditions continue.
What to do: Stop watering immediately. Allow the soil to dry completely. If the soil has been wet for more than a week or two, remove the plant from its pot. Healthy jade roots are firm and pale; rotted roots are dark brown or black and mushy. Trim all rotted material, allow cut ends to dry for an hour, and repot in fresh dry succulent or cactus mix. Do not water for 2 weeks after repotting. Going forward, water only when the soil is completely dry throughout.
Cause 2: Underwatering
Signs: Dropped leaves that are shriveled, flat, or wrinkled. Remaining leaves may also look thinner than usual or slightly wrinkled. The soil is very dry and has been for a long time. The pot is extremely light.
Why it happens: Jade's drought tolerance is exceptional but has limits. After extended neglect, the plant depletes its leaf and stem water reserves and begins shedding leaves to reduce the water demand it can no longer meet.
What to do: Water thoroughly, letting water run from the drainage hole. The plant will usually stabilize within a week. Resume regular watering based on soil dryness. Some of the dropped leaves signal cells that are too damaged to regenerate; accept some loss and focus on healthy new growth going forward.
Cause 3: Temperature stress and cold damage
Signs: Sudden or rapid leaf drop, sometimes of many leaves at once, following a cold event. The plant was near a door left open in cold weather, near a cold window in winter, or was moved outdoors and exposed to temperatures below 50°F. Dropped leaves may be soft or show dark spots.
Why it happens: Jade plant is frost-sensitive. Cold temperatures damage the water-filled leaf cells, causing them to collapse and drop. The damage can be rapid and dramatic. Cold moving air from air conditioning vents can also trigger drop even in warm weather.
What to do: Move the plant to a warm location with consistent temperatures above 55°F. Remove any leaves showing cold damage signs. The plant will recover once it is in appropriate conditions, though severely damaged branches may die back.
Cause 4: Low light
Signs: Gradual loss of lower and inner leaves over weeks to months. The plant looks leggy, with long bare stems reaching toward the light source. Leaves on the bare sections fall off rather than growing. The plant is in a dim location.
Why it happens: Jade is a high-light plant that needs bright light to maintain its compact, dense growth. In low light it cannot photosynthesize enough to support all its leaves and sheds the shaded inner and lower ones first. Stems elongate as the plant reaches for more light.
What to do: Move to the brightest location available, ideally a south or west-facing window with direct sun for a few hours a day. Jade is one of the few houseplants that genuinely thrives in direct indoor sun. Prune leggy stems to encourage compact regrowth.
Cause 5: Normal winter dormancy
Signs: A small number of leaves drop in autumn or early winter. The rate is slow. The plant is otherwise healthy. Watering frequency has been appropriate.
Why it happens: Jade plant has a mild dormancy period in winter during which growth slows and a few older leaves may naturally shed. This is more pronounced if the plant experiences cooler temperatures (55 to 65°F) and reduced watering in winter, which mimics its natural seasonal cycle.
What to do: Reduce watering in winter to every 3 to 4 weeks and ensure the plant is not in a cold draft. A small amount of winter leaf drop is normal and not cause for concern.