At a glance
- Low humidity: Dry, crispy tips; worst in winter; a humidifier is the real fix
- Inconsistent watering: Tips brown after drought episodes; keep soil consistently moist
- Tap water minerals: Slow progressive tip browning over months; switch to filtered water
- Fertilizer burn: Tip browning after fertilizing; flush soil and reduce dose
- Root rot: Brown tips with yellow leaves; wet soil; check and treat roots
- Brown tips: Permanent; trim for appearance and fix the cause for healthy new growth
Why pothos gets brown tips despite being so tough
Pothos (Epipremnum aureum) is one of the most forgiving houseplants, surviving low light, irregular watering, and neglect that would kill more sensitive plants. Yet brown tips are among the most common pothos complaints. The reason is that tip browning is a mild stress response that does not threaten the plant's survival; pothos tolerates the conditions that cause it rather than dying from them, which means the stress can persist for months without the plant "complaining" more loudly.
Cause 1: Low humidity (most common)
Signs: Brown, dry, crispy tips affecting multiple leaves. Worsens in winter when central heating runs. The rest of the leaves look healthy. Humidity in the room is below 40%.
Why it happens: Pothos originates from humid tropical environments. In dry indoor air, leaf tips lose moisture to evaporation faster than the vascular system can replenish it. The tips, being the furthest point from the stem, are affected first. Heating vents directly above or near the plant concentrate this effect dramatically.
What to do: Move the plant away from heating and air conditioning vents. Place a humidifier nearby during winter months. Grouping plants together raises the local microclimate humidity modestly. Target 40% or higher relative humidity. Misting has minimal effect; a humidifier is the practical solution.
Cause 2: Inconsistent watering
Signs: Brown tips that appeared or worsened after a period when the plant visibly wilted from drought before being watered. The soil dried out completely and stayed dry for an extended period. The plant may have a history of being left dry for weeks at a time.
Why it happens: Pothos tolerates drought but is not immune to it. When the plant experiences severe water stress, leaf tips are the first tissue to desiccate. Even after watering resumes, tips that dried out during the drought do not recover. Repeated drought cycles accumulate progressive tip damage.
What to do: Water when the top inch of soil is dry rather than waiting for the plant to wilt. Pothos prefers consistent moisture, not wet-dry extremes. Establishing a reliable checking routine eliminates the drought cycles that cause tip damage.
Cause 3: Tap water minerals and fluoride
Signs: Brown tips that progress slowly over months. The browning is dry and advances inward very gradually. The plant is otherwise healthy. May be accompanied by white crusty deposits on the soil surface.
Why it happens: Fluoride, chlorine, and mineral salts in municipal tap water accumulate in leaf tissue over time, causing gradual tip die-back. This is a slower and more diffuse process than drought or humidity-related browning.
What to do: Switch to filtered water, distilled water, or collected rainwater. Flush the soil thoroughly every 2 to 3 months by watering heavily and letting water run freely from the drainage hole to leach accumulated salts. Repot in fresh soil every 2 years to reset mineral accumulation.
Cause 4: Fertilizer burn
Signs: Brown tips that appeared or worsened after recent fertilizing. May also have a salt crust on the soil surface. The plant may have been fertilized at full strength or more frequently than monthly.
Why it happens: Excess fertilizer salts draw moisture from root cells through osmosis, damaging roots that then cannot deliver water to leaf tips. Tip browning from fertilizer burn is similar in appearance to drought browning but is triggered by fertilizing rather than water shortage.
What to do: Flush the soil immediately with several thorough waterings in succession. Stop fertilizing for at least 2 months. Resume at half the recommended dose, once a month during spring and summer only. Pothos is not a heavy feeder and does well with minimal fertilizing.
Cause 5: Root problems
Signs: Brown tips combined with yellowing leaves. The soil is wet. The pot is heavy. The plant looks generally unwell rather than just having isolated tip damage.
Why it happens: Root rot from overwatering prevents efficient water delivery, causing tip browning from effective dehydration even though the soil is wet. The combination of yellow leaves and wet soil distinguishes this from the other causes.
What to do: Stop watering and allow the soil to dry. If the plant is not improving, remove from the pot and inspect roots. Trim any rotted (dark, mushy) roots and repot in fresh mix. See the root rot guide for detailed steps.