ZZ Plant Care Guide: The Ultimate Low-Maintenance Houseplant
If you want a plant but you're gone for weeks, you travel constantly, you forget to water things, or you just kill everything you touch โ the ZZ plant is your salvation. It's basically a plastic plant that never dies.
ZZ Plant Basics
The ZZ plant (Zamioculcas zamiifolia) comes from Eastern Africa, where it evolved to survive long droughts and harsh conditions. That makes it the most forgiving houseplant you can buy.
The plant grows in clumps from rhizomes (underground storage organs) that look like little potatoes. Those rhizomes store water and nutrients, which is why the ZZ can survive months without attention. The glossy, dark green leaves grow in feather-like patterns on thick stems that emerge directly from the soil.
Why ZZ plants are incredible:
- Survives in almost any light condition
- Needs water maybe once a month
- Completely pest-resistant
- Glossy leaves stay looking good without effort
- Produces new growth regularly
- Can survive a month of neglect
Light Requirements
Here's the wild part โ ZZ plants genuinely don't care about light. They evolved in shady forest floors and can photosynthesize efficiently in low light.
Best: Bright indirect light. They'll grow faster and produce more new stems. East or west windows, a few feet back.
Acceptable: Low light, including:
- North-facing rooms
- Offices with fluorescent lighting only
- Corners far from windows
- Dark apartments
Avoid: Prolonged direct hot sun. It won't kill the plant, but it can scorch the glossy leaves and fade that beautiful green. A few hours of gentle morning sun is fine.
๐ก Good to Know
ZZ plants grow very slowly โ maybe 1-2 new stems per year in low light, slightly faster in bright light. If you want faster growth, give it more light. But honestly, the slow growth is part of its charm and makes it easy to maintain.
Watering
This is where ZZ plants truly shine โ they need almost nothing.
The rule: Water only when the soil is completely dry. And I mean completely. Not just the top inch โ stick your finger all the way in. If there's any moisture at all, wait.
Typical schedule:
- Summer: Every 2-4 weeks
- Winter: Every 4-6 weeks (or longer)
When you water: Water thoroughly. Let it flow from the drainage hole. Then empty the saucer. The rhizomes store water, so the plant can handle occasional drought better than overwatering.
Overwatering warning:
This is the #1 way to kill a ZZ plant. If you see:
- Yellowing leaves (especially lower leaves first)
- Mushy stems at the base
- Soil that stays wet for weeks
- Foul smell from the pot
...you've watered too much. Stop immediately. Let the soil dry out completely. If it's really bad, unpot the plant, cut away any soft/mushy rhizomes, and repot in fresh dry soil.
Soil & Potting
ZZ plants need excellent drainage. This is critical.
Soil mix: Use a well-draining potting mix. Add perlite (about 1/3 ratio) to regular potting soil, or use a succulent/cactus mix. The soil should dry out quickly after watering.
Pot choice:
- Terra cotta: Best choice. Breathable, dries out faster.
- Plastic: OK, but soil stays wet longer (increase perlite ratio).
- Ceramic: Fine if it has good drainage holes and you don't overwater.
Always use a pot with drainage holes. ZZ plants sitting in water = death.
Repotting: ZZ plants like being rootbound and grow slowly, so you only need to repot every 2-3 years or when roots are visibly crowding. Go up 1-2 inches in pot diameter.
Propagation
ZZ plants can be propagated, but it's slow โ probably the least exciting thing about them.
Division (Fastest Method)
- Remove plant from pot
- Gently separate the root ball into sections, each with stems and roots
- Pot each section separately in fresh soil
- Water when soil is dry
This gives you instant plants. Best done during repotting every 2-3 years.
Leaf Cuttings (Very Slow)
- Cut a single leaf from the plant (include the base)
- Let it callous over for a few hours
- Stick the base in moist, well-draining soil
- Wait... and wait... and wait
- Roots and a new rhizome take 6-12 months
- It's not unusual for leaf cuttings to take a full year to produce anything
Leaf propagation is slow but satisfying if you're patient. The leaf will eventually shrivel โ that's normal. Underneath, a new rhizome is forming.
Popular Varieties
Raven ZZ โ The new kid on the block. Nearly black/purple foliage. Same easy care as the green variety. Getting popular fast.
Zamioculcas zamiifolia (Classic) โ The standard dark green glossy leaves everyone knows.
Zamioculcas zamiifolia 'Zenzi' โ Compact variety with smaller leaves that curl slightly. Stays more contained.
Variegated ZZ โ Rare and expensive. Yellow or white streaks on leaves. Needs more light to maintain variegation. Slower growing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the ZZ plant pet-safe?
No. ZZ plants are toxic to cats and dogs. Keep them on high shelves or in rooms pets can't access. The ASPCA lists them as toxic, causing oral irritation, vomiting, and difficulty swallowing.
My ZZ plant isn't growing. Is something wrong?
Probably not. ZZ plants grow very slowly โ just 1-2 new stems per year is normal. If it's in low light, it grows even slower. As long as the plant looks healthy (glossy green, firm stems), it's fine. Be patient.
Can I grow ZZ plants outdoors?
Only in warm climates (zones 10-11). They can't handle frost or cold temperatures. Everyone else should keep them indoors year-round.
Why are the stems drooping or falling over?
Usually overwatering. Check the base of the stems โ if they're mushy or yellowing, you've watered too much. Let the soil dry out completely. If the base is firm and green, it might just need more light.
Can ZZ plants survive without light?
No plant can survive without any light indefinitely. But ZZ plants can survive in EXTREMELY low light for much longer than other plants. A few months in a dark corner won't kill it โ but eventually, all plants need some light to photosynthesize.