Who we are · How we work · How we make money
IndoorPlantGuide is written and reviewed by an editorial team covering indoor plant care, propagation, pest management, and light conditions. We publish under a team byline rather than individual bios because the work — sourcing, drafting, fact-checking, and updating — is a shared effort. Every article you read has passed through at least two sets of eyes before it goes live.
1Research. We pull from primary sources: government agencies, peer-reviewed studies, manufacturer specs, and reputable trade publications. No content is spun from other affiliate blogs.
2Draft. Writers with subject-matter familiarity produce the first version. We use AI-assisted tools for grammar, structure, and outline generation — every draft is then rewritten and fact-checked by a human editor before publication.
3Review. A second editor cross-checks every factual claim (dates, rates, formulas, product specs) against the original source. Any claim we can't verify gets cut or clearly labeled as opinion.
4Update. When rules, rates, or products change — laws, tax thresholds, model years — we revisit the affected articles. Every published piece shows both its original publication date and its last update.
Every care guide is checked against published guidance from the RHS, Missouri Botanical Garden, and university extension services before we hit publish. We grow the plants we write about.
We use AI-assisted writing tools (LLMs) for outline generation, structure, and draft polishing. We do not publish unedited AI output. Every article on IndoorPlantGuide has been reviewed, corrected, and re-shaped by a human editor. If you spot a factual error, please tell us and we'll fix it — with a visible correction note.
IndoorPlantGuide is reader-supported. Some links on our site are affiliate links, meaning we may earn a commission if you make a purchase — at no extra cost to you. This never influences which products or services we cover, nor how we rank them. See our full affiliate disclosure.
We take factual accuracy seriously. If you find an error — an outdated rate, a mis-cited formula, a broken source link — please email us. We update the article and, when the change is material, add a dated correction note at the top.