Here are eight of the best indoor palm plants to add a breezy tropical feel to your home.
Best indoor palms for low light.
Pest problems include scale palm aphids sooty mold and caterpillars although non of these pose serious problems to the health of the plant.
It s often found growing in homes offices and commercial.
In a pot it will stay at about 5 6 feet tall usually making it a great indoor palm and like the kentia palm it s sold in a grouping of up to 20 plants in a pot.
The areca palm likes bright indirect light but can tolerate low light quite well.
This feathery leafed palm is among the easiest palms to grow indoors.
This plant is another very popular choice for indoor palms likely due to the beautiful feathery fronds it produces from its thin bamboo like trunks.
Kentia palm howea forsteriana this australian palm is very popular as an indoor palm throughout the world.
The large lady palm is the best for low light.
The pygmy date palms are genuinely one of the most beautiful types of indoor palm trees available.
Unless the palm is going to be in direct sunlight every day indirect lighting is best sky lights are ideal or windows facing in such a way no direct sunlight or only early morning sunlight hits the fronds.
It may be divided into separate plants.
Parlor palm also known as neanthe bella is one of the best low light indoor plants because it can thrive indoors where other palm plants may struggle.
Warm temperatures average humidity and moderate light.
The areca palm makes an wonderful low light indoor tree.
They look like a miniature version of standard sized palm trees with rough brown trunks and green arching long leaves each with a central stem and a lot of narrow side.
Some will tolerate low light situations and that s why they make good indoor palms but most would still rather be in bright light.
The lady palm needs partial to deep shade and fertile organic soil to look its best but will tolerate the poor light dust and drought usual of indoor container culture.
A single stemmed palm it s a favorite for close planting in clumps of three or more.
Most palms survive in the same conditions that we find comfortable.
3 dragon tree.
It will tolerate low light and dry conditions and is a native to southern china and taiwan.
It can grow up to 6 or 7 feet at a rate of about 6 to 10 inches of growth per year.
Parlor palm chamaedorea elegans the parlor palm shown in top photo can tolerate low levels of light though it would prefer indirect sunlight while indoors.
Dragon tree thrives in low light.
This is a lovely clumping fan palm and is possibly the best indoor palm.
Dracaena marginata commonly known as dragon tree or madagascar dragon tree is an excellent choice for low light areas.
It tolerates crowded roots and low light.
Plus many of these slow growing palm specimens need only occasional tending to reward you with their elegant dark green fronds.