Houseplant rescue checklist
When a plant looks wrong, slow down and work this list in order. Most rescue mistakes happen when people guess too fast, water too soon, or treat the wrong problem first.
Before you do anything, avoid these 4 rescue mistakes
- Do not water just because the leaves look sad. Check the root zone first.
- Do not repot and fertilize on the same day while the plant is stressed.
- Do not move the plant into harsh direct sun as a panic fix.
- Do not treat for pests, dryness, and nutrient issues all at once unless you have actual evidence.
60-second rescue triage
- Touch the soil deeper than the surface.
- Look for one dominant symptom, yellowing, browning, drooping, or gnats.
- Check the light and airflow around the plant.
- Remove the biggest stressor first.
- Wait and observe before stacking more fixes.
1. Start with the root zone
- Feel the soil deeper than the top inch.
- If it is still wet, do not keep watering.
- If it is bone dry and pulling from the pot edge, rehydrate fully and let excess water drain.
- Empty any outer pot or saucer holding runoff water.
2. Match the symptom before treating
Yellow leaves
Check overwatering, low light, and drainage first. Older bottom leaves can be normal, but wide yellowing is usually a care issue.
Brown tips or crispy leaves
Check humidity, watering consistency, mineral buildup, and hot dry air from vents or strong sun.
Drooping
Figure out whether the soil is dry or soggy before you do anything else. The same symptom can come from opposite causes.
Tiny flies
Assume fungus gnats until proven otherwise and break the wet-soil cycle before buying more random pest sprays.
3. Remove the obvious stressors
- Move the plant out of harsh direct sun if leaves are scorching.
- Move it away from heating or AC vents if humidity is low.
- Give it steady bright indirect light during recovery.
- Pause fertilizer while the plant is actively stressed.
4. Use the right next tool
- A soil moisture meter helps separate dry-soil issues from wet-soil issues.
- Fungus gnat tools and traps help when bugs are part of the problem.
- A humidifier helps more than occasional misting for crispy foliage.
- Fresh potting mix helps if the soil has compacted or stays soggy too long.
What improvement should look like
- Drooping often improves fastest, sometimes within hours after the correct watering fix.
- New yellowing should slow down before older damaged leaves look better.
- Crispy edges usually do not reverse, but new growth should come in cleaner.
- Fungus gnat pressure should noticeably drop within 1 to 2 weeks if the wet-soil cycle is broken.
5. Use the focused kits when you need them
- Fungus Gnat Solution Kit
- Yellow Leaves Solution Kit
- Brown Tips and Crispy Leaves Solution Kit
- Drooping Houseplant Solution Kit
Need a second opinion?
If your symptoms overlap, the soil history is unclear, or the plant keeps declining, ask Plant Bot and describe the soil, light, and what changed recently.