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More Sun Is Not Always Better: Light Myths Busted

Most indoor plants thrive in bright, indirect light — not direct sun. Find out which plants tolerate low light well and how to position them for healthy growth without leaf burn.

3 min read Published June 2026
Houseplant on a bright windowsill
Houseplant on a bright windowsill

One of the biggest myths about indoor plants is that more light is always better. In reality, many popular houseplants are forest understory plants that evolved in dappled, filtered light. Blasting them with direct sun can actually damage leaves and stunt growth.

Understanding Light Intensity

Direct sun (south-facing windows) is intense and can burn leaves of shade-loving plants like Pothos, Philodendron, or African Violets. These plants show sun damage as bleached, papery patches on leaves.

Bright, indirect light (near an east or west window, or filtered through sheer curtains) is ideal for most houseplants. It's the sweet spot that encourages growth without stress.

Medium light (a few metres from a window, or north-facing) works for many tolerant plants like Dracaena, ZZ plants, and Pothos, though they grow slower.

Which Plants Handle Low Light?

If your home lacks bright windows, don't despair. These plants thrive in lower conditions:

Positioning for Success

Place plants a few feet back from windows to filter direct rays, or use sheer curtains to soften strong south-facing light. Rotate plants quarterly for even growth on all sides. If your space is genuinely low-light, prioritise these tolerant species and accept slower growth — that's better than pushing the wrong plant into unsuitable conditions.

Originally sourced from

Royal Horticultural Society open_in_new

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