How to Grow and Care for Yucca Plants
Yucca is a genus of over 40 perennial plants, shrubs, and trees. A few are grown as houseplants, including Yucca gigantea (also known as Y. guatemalensis and Y. elephantipes) and the Yucca aloifolia.
Some are fast-growing, growing up to 2 feet per year, while others grow slowly, about 5 inches a year. All are extremely drought tolerant. Most can grow outdoors, withstanding cold snaps down to 10°F. Some varieties can survive subzero temperatures. Pet owners should take caution if adding yucca plants—all parts of the plant are toxic to dogs and cats (as well as horses).
| Common Name | Yucca plant |
| Botanical Name | Yucca spp. |
| Family | Agavaceae |
| Plant Type | Herbaceous, perennial |
| Mature Size | 1-30 ft. tall, 3-15 ft. wide |
| Sun Exposure | Partial |
| Soil Type | Sandy, well-draining |
| Soil pH | Neutral, acidic |
| Bloom Time | Summer, fall |
| Flower Color | White, pink |
| Hardiness Zones | 4 -11 (USDA) |
| Native Area | North America, Caribbean |
| Toxicity | Toxic to pets |
Growing Outdoor Yucca Plants
Yucca plants are hardy and can tolerate harsh conditions: poor, sandy, well-drained soil and full sun, even drought and salt spray. Outdoor plants have a higher chance of blooming regularly than their indoor counterparts. Plant outdoors in the sun, where it can receive just a few hours of shade during the day.
In order to relocate an indoor yucca outside, acclimate the plant by hardening it off several hours each day outside. This slow integration will reduce chances of leaf burn or systemic shock. If your yucca species isn't cold hardy, it should be brought back inside as the weather turns cold. In the same way, hard off the plant so it becomes accustomed to indoor life.
Outdoor Placement
These tough plants should be kept away from paths and sidewalks as their leaf tips grow sharp and could injure passersby; their roots can also disrupt sidewalks.
Indoor Yucca Plant Care
Under the right conditions, yucca plants are not difficult to grow. In the right conditions, they live about five years as houseplants and up to 20 to 50 years if grown outdoors.
A bright corner with relatively low humidity is the best indoor condition for a yucca plant. Additionally, yucca plants are not prone to many pests, although scale insects can occasionally be an issue.
Over time, yucca plants will typically lose their lower leaves (in nature, they droop, forming a skirt around the trunk), giving the plant a pleasant "tree-like" appearance.


Light
Yucca plants thrive in bright, indirect light indoors. Growing yucca in too little light can result in thinner and slower growth, while intense, direct sunlight can cause white spots on leaves or crispy, brown tips.
Yucca Getting Too Tall
If your yucca plant is growing too tall for your space, cut it down to a more desirable size. Putting yucca plants in low light areas can also slow growth—just be sure you're providing ample care so the plant doesn't die.
Soil
Yucca plants naturally grow in sandy terrain. Inside, plant your yucca in a loose, well-drained potting mix. Low-maintenance yuccas do not need specially formulated or rich fancy soil. Instead, get an inexpensive potting mix and blend in coarse sand and perlite to promote drainage.
Water
Yuccas are highly sensitive to overwatering. Water your plant once a week during the spring and summer growing seasons, but ensure it has excellent drainage and dries out between waterings. In winter, decrease to watering once every few weeks (or even less).
Stagnant Water
Never let a yucca plant sit in a tray of water as this can lead to root rot and fungal disease.
Temperature and Humidity
Yucca plants are adapted to the desert, where temperatures can soar above 90°F during the day and down to 30°F at night. Therefore, yuccas are relatively adaptable to most indoor temperature conditions and fluctuations. They will grow best with moderate humidity, but as desert plants, they are perfectly content in dry conditions, and there is never any need to mist this plant.
Fertilizer
Fertilize your indoor yucca plant during the growing season with liquid or controlled-release fertilizer according to label instructions. A once-a-month feeding is usually sufficient.
Yucca Plant Tips for Beginners
- Where to Put It: Place your yucca plant near a window that receives bright, indirect light like an east-facing window.
- How to Water It: Water only once a week during peak growing season in spring and summer. During fall and winter, water once every couple weeks.
- Soil Type: Standard potting mix will do, but mix in soil and perlite to ensure proper drainage.
How to Remove Yucca When the Roots Are Overgrown
Some species are voracious growers with invasive root systems that can affect nearby foundations and structures.
To remove a yucca plant, cut down the plant aboveground. Dig under it and remove every last bit of the root system. If you leave even the smallest piece of root behind, you can expect a plant to sprout in its place.
Remove any young sprouts that come up, dig up their root systems, and as a last resort, douse the area, or drill holes around the area and inject the soil with stump remover or herbicide to reach any remaining roots.
Types of Yucca Plants
In desert areas (such as the southeastern United States), yuccas are common outdoor plants where they reach their full size. Indoors, however, people tend to stick with two species:
- Yucca gigantea (also known as Y. guatemalensis and Y. elephantipes): Sometimes called the spineless yucca or yucca cane, this plant grows from a bulbous base with long, sword-like leaves that lack the typical leaf-tip spine. They are relatively slow growers and will live indoors for years before outgrowing their space.
- Yucca aloifolia: Sometimes called the Spanish bayonet, this yucca plant features stiff leaves that end in sharp points. The leaves are up to 20 inches long and can be dangerously sharp. Generally, this is not a plant recommended for homes with small children.
Common outdoor varieties include:
- Banana yucca (Y. baccata): Thiscactus-like succulenthas fleshy, sweet seedpods that range from green to dark purple that is the size and shape of a banana (although they taste more like sweet potatoes).
- Joshua tree (Y. brevifolia): This iconic, slow-growing evergreen is commonly grown in the Mojave Desert in the southwestern United States. It is the largest Yucca species, growing over 30 feet.
- Adam's needle (Y. filamentosa): A slow-growing broadleaf evergreen shrub, a stemless plant with long blade-like leaves.
Is This the Right Plant for You?
A yucca is a good plant choice for you if...
- you don't have pets—or you have a good place to keep plants away from your pets.
- you want a plant that can survive frigid temperatures.
- you're not great with plants and want something that survives even when neglected.
Pruning Yucca Plant
Indoors, yucca plants occasionally need to be pruned when they grow too tall for your space. However, doing so is a bit unconventional, especially if you're used to pruning traditional landscape plants. Cut back in early spring.
To prune, remove the plant gently from its pot and use a saw or sharp pair of loppers (Long-handled Gardening Shears) to cut the trunk in half. Repot the rooted end of the trunk and water it well, continuing to care for the plant as you traditionally would.
In just a few weeks, the plant should start producing new leaves, eventually appearing much as it did before, just shorter. You can also plant the top portion of the yucca to try to propagate a second plant.
Pruning Tip
Looking for the best pruners to keep your yucca in tip-top shape? We've tested plenty of pruners so you don't have to and picked the top 12 best ones for you to choose from.
Propagating Yucca Plant
There are a few ways to propagate a yucca plant. If your yucca has outgrown its space, cutting the plant's stem in half and repotting the pruned top portion may lead to a second plant. However, propagating from divisions or pups (offshoots) is a more successful method of creating new plants. Here's how:
- Propagation is best done in the fall. The plant's growth slows in the fall, causing less damage to the plant. Remove a mature yucca plant from the pot.
- Separate the plant's rhizomes and plant in new pots to propagate by division.
- To propagate by pups, wait until pups are green. When pups are green, they have enough chlorophyll manufacturing capacity to survive independently. Pale, whitish pups are too young to remove, as they rely on the parent plant for survival.
- Using a sharp knife, slice off the pup from the parent plant, including a portion of the parent's root with the pup attached.
- Replant the pup in a new pot with fresh soil.
- Water well and keep the soil moist (but not soggy). Pups should quickly root in a few weeks and produce new growth shortly thereafter.
Tips for Buying In-Store
- Check for pests. Look underneath leaves and along the stem to make sure no critters follow you home. It can even help to hold a flashlight near the plant to check for fungus gnats.
- Avoid plants with brown spots on leaves as this can be a sign of a plant disease.
- Read the plant label. Make sure this plant's care requirements work for you, your lifestyle, and your space.
How to Grow Yucca From Seed
Gather seed pods as they begin to dry, but before they split. Once dry, crush them to remove the seeds. Yucca plants need a chilling period before germinating. Keep seeds in moist sand in the refrigerator for 90 days. They can keep longer if in a tightly sealed container. Start the germination process indoors in March. Germination will begin at 60°F to 70°F.
You will have greater germination success if you soak the seeds in water for 24 hours at room temperature or remove the hard seed coat. It can take four to five weeks for seeds to germinate. Here's how to sow the seeds:
- Use a sterile, soilless mix or seed starter mix.
- Tamp down the soil in the pot, leaving about an inch of room at the top of the pot.
- Place the seed on the soil and cover it lightly with about 1/8 inch of soil.
- Keep the soil moist at about 55 degrees. Once the plant sprouts, put it in the bright window or under a grow light until it's large enough to plant in a permanent location.
Potting and Repotting Yucca Plant
Yuccas do well if they are slightly pot-bound as long as they don't become heavy enough to tip over their containers. You won't need to bother with repotting for at least two or three years.
Repotting larger yucca plants can be difficult, so larger plants can be refreshed with new potting soil by digging out the top 2 inches of the container and adding new soil. During a typical repotting, you can remove the yucca plant from its container and increase it by one container size, always using fresh potting soil.
Overwintering
Container-grown seedlings should be kept inside and protected from frost the first winter.
Mature plants can get winter burn on their leaves in regions with cold, windy winters. As yucca plants enter dormancy in the cold months, they will stop storing water in their leaves, protecting the plant from deep freezes. In regions with frigid winters, reduce supplemental watering in late summer. Halt watering entirely by September.
Let the stalks naturally die back. The plant will store its nutrients in its roots. Insulate and protect it from the cold winter weather by cutting the withered foliage to the ground and applying 6 to 8 inches of mulch over the plant in late fall before the first frost.
Cover the mulch pile with plastic sheeting or burlap in the coldest zones to provide further insulation. Remove the sheeting and mulch in the spring after the chance of frost has passed.
Common Pests & Plant Diseases
While yucca plants don't have many pest issues, there are a few typical culprits you should watch out for, such as aphids and small mealybugs.
Many yucca plants also have to contend with agave plant bugs that pierce the leaves and suck the juices out. If you notice tiny brown scars on the leaves of your plant, chances are you have an agave plant bug problem. To treat, spray the plant with several applications of insecticidal soap until all signs of an infestation have ceased.
In addition to mild pest issues, yucca plants can be susceptible to fungal diseases, which appear with spreading black spots. The plant's foliage can be extra sensitive to overhead watering, which introduces excess moisture into the plant's dense core and can breed fungal disease. To eradicate, treat the plant with a copper fungicide or neem oil until lesions have decreased.
| Pest | Common Cause | Signs to Look For |
| Aphids | New growth in plants, nitrogen in fertilizers | Sticky residue ("honeydew") on plants that causes sooty mold; excess ants on the stems of your plant, feasting on the sticky residue |
| Spider mites | Hot, dry conditions (air and soil) | Webbing on leaves; white speckles on leaves; tiny bugs on leaves |
| Mealybugs | High-nitrogen, wet soil | Small fuzzy white globs on stems and leaves |
How to Get Yucca to Bloom
Yucca plants are beloved additions because they erupt into beautiful blooms. If your yucca isn't blooming, there are a few things you can consider tweaking. For starters, make sure you are fertilizing your yucca enough. If your soil is particularly nutrient-deficient, choose a fertilizer rich in phosphorous—bone meal could also work.
In addition to ample feedings, be careful not to overwater your yucca plant. Too much water can lead to fungal diseases, sickening the plant and discouraging blooming. Also, consider moving your plant outdoors in the early spring if possible. Most yuccas will bloom in the spring and early summer.
Ultimately, it can take several years for a yucca plant to reach maturity and begin to bloom, so if your plant is still young, have patience and confidence it will bloom.
Common Problems With Yucca Plants
Yucca plants are so easy to care for, drought tolerant, and pest resistant, but they can still get occasional problems if their care isn't ideal.
Yellowing Leaves and Spongy Stem
In most cases, yellowing leaves can be caused by the plant getting too much water. The central stem may start getting soft, which is a sure sign the plant is being overwatered. Yuccas only need to be watered once the soil has almost completely dried out. Don't plan to keep to a routine watering schedule; instead, assess the dryness of the soil by using your finger as a guide.
To fix an overwatered plant: Stop watering and improve drainage by moving the plant to a pot with more drainage holes or providing well-draining soil. Increase the ventilation around the plant and ensure the humidity is not too high near the plant.
Yellow, Brown, or White Spots on Leaves
Yucca plants like the sun, but they can get sunburned if they are suddenly exposed to too much sun without acclimation. Sunburn on plants looks like yellow, brown, or white spots. To prevent this from happening, slowly acclimate the plant to more and more sun each day. It will eventually adjust when done gradually.
To help a plant recover from sunburn, move the plant to a shadier spot. Make sure it has water and let it heal. Gradually reintroduce it to the sunnier spot, more and more each day.
Curling Leaves
If you notice your yucca leaves are curling, it could be too hot or too cold for the plant. Yuccas prefer a temperature range between 45 F to 90 F. Whenever a yucca plant is experiencing temperature stress, it might even get red spots on the leaves and start dropping.
To correct the situation, move the plant to a location where the temperature suits the plant. It should begin to improve within the next two days.
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- Where should I place my yucca plant?
Yucca plants thrive in full-light locations, so they're perfect for a west-facing window that may be too bright for most other houseplants.
- What plants are similar to yucca plants?
If you like a yucca plant's look and care requirements, you can try growing a plant from the similar-looking Dracaena genus.
- How fast do yucca plants grow?
Some yucca plants grow relatively slowly, particularly if grown indoors. For example, you can grow an indoor yucca plant for at least five years without replanting or pruning it.
- Can you cut a yucca trunk and replant it?
If your yucca plant gets too large for your liking, you can feel safe cutting the trunk. It may not look the best at first, but the remaining will re-sprout eventually and you can easily replant the top portion—now you have two yucca plants!
From: thespruce
Post Navigation
- Growing Outdoor Yucca Plants
- Indoor Yucca Plant Care
- Types of Yucca Plants
- Pruning Yucca Plant
- Propagating Yucca Plant
- How to Grow Yucca From Seed
- Potting and Repotting Yucca Plant
- Overwintering
- Common Pests & Plant Diseases
- How to Get Yucca to Bloom
- Common Problems With Yucca Plants
- You Might Also Like



