Best Grow Lights For Houseplants
Shed some light on your best fronds!
Keep your houseplants healthy with a full-spectrum LED grow light. The Oslo 1-Tier Grow Light is compact enough to fit anywhere and attractive enough to display everywhere!
The best thing we can do for our houseplants? Mimic their native habitat — and for many them, that means more light. Our cacti, succulents, fiddle leaf figs, monstera, and even many of our herbs, all hail from warm, bright ecosystems; they are healthiest with loads of light. You may be blessed with rooms full of huge south-facing windows (lucky you!) — but for most of us houseplant parents out there, the extra oomph from a grow light is essential for happy houseplants.
In This Article
How Much Light Does Your Houseplant Need?
Bright, Direct Light | Bright, Indirect Light | Medium Light | Low Light |
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What To Look For When Choosing a Grow Light
Grow Light Style and Size
Ask yourself: What am I looking to grow indoors? Where in my home will I be setting up my grow light?
- If you are seeking a countertop herb garden or some , you may want a tray-style stand that you can slide on to your kitchen counter.
- If you need something for the sun-starved succulents in your home, consider a snazzy a lamp-style fixture that will look great in your living room or on your home office desk.
- Already have a fixture you'd like to retrofit? Simply swap out your standard indoor room lighting bulb and screw in an individual full-spectrum bulb.
Bulb Type: Fluorescent vs LED
These days, grow lights and grow light systems typically use either a fluorescent or LED (light emitting diode) bulb. What is the difference? Fluorescent bulbs are super affordable and have moderate lifespans (typically around 10,000 hours). They also come in an assortment of shapes from traditional “bulb-shaped” compact fluorescents (CFLs) to tubes. Remember — due to a small amount of mercury inside, fluorescent bulbs need to be disposed of properly. Contact your county waste program to learn how.
LED bulbs have exploded in popularity over the last several years. They typically cost a bit more upfront, but growers may find that their longevity and energy efficiency are well worth it. LEDs can have a lifespan 3-5 times as long as traditional fluorescent bulbs, and specific “high output” LEDs deliver even BRIGHTER light for each unit of energy they consume — they are perfect for light-loving succulents and flowering houseplants.
Light Duration
Get yourself a timer, because no houseplant requires 24 hours of direct light. In fact, some flowering houseplants have very specific light versus dark requirements (what botanists call "photoperiod"): Short day plants (Christmas cactus, kalanchoes, and poinsettia, for example) require long stretches of uninterrupted darkness; they will only flower when they regularly receive less than 12 hours of light per day.
Best Grow Lights For Houseplants
Adjustable 3-Arm Grow Lamp
This mid-century modern floor lamp provides full-spectrum light via 3 lamp heads that can be adjusted for targeted lighting.
Best for: With an adjustable frame that measures 5-6 feet in height, this lamp can accomodate your tallest monstera and fiddle leaf figs.
Why we love it: Tuck next to a chair for a fabulous all-in-one reading and plant lamp. No one will ever guess that it's actually a full-spectrum grow light.
Mobile LED Grow Light Cart
With it's sunny hue and modern metal design, this cart was made to roll away out of sight — but you won't want to. With a generous interior height (nearly 4 feet) and a high-output bulb, you can grow plenty of light-loving cacti, orchids, or amaryllis.
Perfect for: An all-in-one houseplant station; keep watering cans and potting tools on the upper shelf, and your houseplants tucked under the full-spectrum LED light bar below. OR — keep glasses and spirits on the upper shelf, and grow a mini-cocktail garden of mint, lavender, and lemon verbena under the lights.
Why we love it: It brings cheery vibes and it's MOBILE. High-grade casters let you roll your whole indoor garden out of the way when you need the space or want to rearrange your home.
Oslo 2-Tier LED Grow Light Garden, 2 Fixtures
Repositionable magnetic light fixtures to help you create optimal space and light for every size houseplant in your herd. Use just one high-output LED fixture per tier for lower-light plants, or use two if you have light-hungry ones! The clean, modern, white metal frame means your grow light setup will look sharp anywhere in your home, office, or business.
Perfect for: Your XL orchid or your collection of tiny aloe vera plants — the fold-up shelving units allow you to accomodate both short and taller plants.
Why we love it:The fold-up shelves give maximum headroom for your mix of tall and short houseplants, and entire frame folds flat for storage.
Bamboo LED Grow Light Garden
This stackable, tray-style grow light garden is equipped with 2 full-spectrum LED bulbs that are slightly recessed, eliminating glare. Set up on your kitchen countertop for an indoor herb garden, or place in your living room to showcase your gorgeous selection of kalanchoe and Christmas cactus.
Perfect for: The 2 high-output bulbs provides tons of powerful light — even enough for seedlings, cacti, and flowering houseplants.
Why we love it: The low tabletop-style means it can slide right on to your kitchen counter or a home office desk, and the galvanized steel tray means you won't spill water on your floor again.
Agrobrite Desktop Plant Lamp
With a flexible neck and energy efficient LED bulb, this versatile grow light is perfect for just about any tabletop or home office space.
Perfect for: The 6-7 inch tray is just the right size for a potted jade, African violet, or small terrarium.
Why we love it: No space? No problem. Measuring just 14 inches tall, this light is perfect for the small-space gardener or new gardener looking to venture into houseplants.
Signs Your Houseplant Wants More Light
Not enought light doesn't spell a total death sentence for your houseplants; simply move them to a sunnier window or under a grow light, and then give them time to acclimate to their brighter surroundings. Here are a few hints that your houseplants aren't happy:
- Weak, thin, "leggy" stems
- No new growth, or leaves are smaller than normal
- Plants may start dropping their leaves
- Variegated leaves revert to a single pale color, typically pale yellow or white
- The whole plant is leaning towards the window or grow light
- Flowering plants fail to produce buds
Last updated: 01/11/2024
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