Kalanchoe Care As A Houseplant & In The Garden

Oh, how I love succulents! And a succulent with lots of long-lasting flowers is just the cat’s meow. Enter the popular Kalanchoe blossfeldianas that are most commonly sold as indoor plants. In Santa Barbara, where I used to live (USDA zone 10), mine enjoyed the great outdoors year-round. This is about Kalanchoe Care indoors and outdoors, or Kals as we call them.

These long, lasting blooming plants with colorful flowers will brighten up both your garden and home. If you want the flowering period to be more long-lasting, buy your plant with at least half the flower buds partially or not yet opened. They’ll gradually open after you get them home. 

I buy mine at the farmers market, and although we used them a lot in the interiorscaping trade in offices and homes, I had never grown them in the garden before. I’ve discovered that Kalanchoes bloom almost all year round here with very little care. My kind of plant!

Botanical Name:  Kalanchoe blossfeldiana                

Common Names: Kalanchoe, Flowering Kalanchoe, Florist Kalanchoe, Flaming Katy

NOTE: This post was published on 07/16/2014. I’m updating it on 06/22/2023. It’s one of the very first posts that I ever wrote. My how blogging has changed!

I’ve since written newer posts on Kalanchoe Care as houseplants. Rather than extensively update this post, I will list these more current posts Kalanchoe Care, Calandiva Care, and Growing Kalanchoe FAQs with more information and tips.

Kalanchoe Care In The Garden

Pink Klanchoe growing outdoors in a blue pot, garden shown in background.
This is a Calandiva, a popular cultivar of the Flowering Kalanchoe. It has rosebud flowers & the same care requirements. So many blooms!

Light Requirements

Bright shade. Mine get bright light and one or two hours of direct sun in the summer, no more. Too much direct sunlight will cause burn.

Water Requirements

Once a week, thoroughly. They’re succulents, so they like to dry out between waterings.

Soil

Mine are planted in pots in half organic potting soil and half Succulent and Cactus Mix. Kalanchoes are succulents susceptible to root rot; they must be planted in well-draining soil.

Fertilizer

I don’t use any. I plant with worm castings, then top dress with worm castings and compost every spring. Once or twice during the warm months, I’ll water in some seaweed extract.

Pests

None so far, but then they can be susceptible to mealybugs and aphids.

Pruning Tip

I trim off the spent flowers, taking the stem down to where it meets the foliage. I don’t have to do it too often because the flowers are long-lasting, and the plant looks better this way.

Kalanchoe Care As Houseplants

Reddish orange Kalanchoe in a white pot sitting atop a stool, growing indoors.
A small 4″ Kalanchoe can brighten up any spot in your home.

Now, onward to caring for them as houseplants.  At the end of this post, I touch briefly on how to get them to bloom again indoors. Hint: it’s not easy.

Light Requirements

Give yours lots of bright indirect light. As bright as possible, something close to but not in a south and/or west-facing window.  Keep it away from the hot windows – touching that glass will burn it. Ouch!

Water Requirements

Every two weeks in the warmer months. Wait until the soil drys out before watering again. And don’t let it sit in water. Remember, they’re succulent plants that store water in their fleshy leaves and stems, so keeping them too wet can cause mildew.  

Too much moisture will also lead to root rot. They like to be kept on the dry side.

Tip: Yes, that paper or foil wrapping may be prettier than the grow pot but remove it when you water your plant. Remember, the Kalanchoe is a succulent, and too much water building up in the bottom will drown it out.

Soil

Use a potting soil mix formulated for houseplants with good drainage. A mixture of half potting soil and half Succulent and Cactus Mix would be fine. That’s what I used to plant up my new pink Kalanchoes.

Tip: Make sure the pot has drainage holes so the excess water can freely flow out. 

Close up of the pink flowers of Kalanchoe aka flaming katy.
This one is the rosebud or double kalanchoes called a Calandiva.

Temperature

I say if your home is comfortable to you, then your houseplants should be just fine too. They would enjoy a vacation outdoors in the warmer months (refer to outdoor care above).

Fertilizer

Use an organic balanced liquid fertilizer like Sea Grow if you feel yours needs it.  Easy does it—only two yearly applications – once in mid-spring and the other in mid-summer.

Here are some of our houseplant guides you may find helpful: 13 Stores Where You Can Buy Houseplants Online, 6 Low Maintenance Plants For Travelers, 11 Pet Friendly Houseplants, Tips For Buying Houseplants, Best Low Light Indoor Plants, Easy Care Office Plants, 7 Easy Care Floor Plants, 7 Easy Tabletop & Hanging Plants

Pests

Keep an eye out for Mealybugs. They leave behind a residue that looks like specks of cotton. Aphids and Scale can also be an issue.

Pruning Tip

The foliage grows very densely.  I snip away some of those leaves growing over the blooms. Those purdy little flowers will show more!

Getting Kalanchoes To Rebloom

Now, on to how to get them to bloom again. If yours hasn’t ever repeat bloomed, don’t feel bad.  I’ll start by saying “good luck” because you must work for it. 

Kalanchoes, like Poinsettias, are photoperiodic. This means they react to periods of light exposure and need at least 12-14 hours of darkness to bloom again.

Chances are, if you have them in your home, you have them in a room that isn’t getting that amount of complete darkness. Starting in winter, you must put them in a closet or a pitch-black room for 12-14 hours. And yes, they need that every night for two months. Be sure to cut back on the watering too.

Kalanchoe Blossfeldiana Flower Colors

Kalanchoes are known for their beautiful flowers, which come in vibrant red, orange, and pink shades. You can also find them in white and more subtle shades of pink. There are bi-color flowers as well.

The flowers are long-lasting, and the rich green leaves are attractive and shiny. A great blooming plant for the garden or your home!

White and pink ceramic pot sitting outside on ground.
In the video (below) I said that you could see the pot before I painted it. Well, here it is.
Freshly painted blue and green decorative pot sitting outside on the ground.
Here’s the pot after a bit of dry brushing & a couple of “look at me” dots of poly jewels glitter.
Freshly painted blue and green decorative pot sitting on ledge outside with 2 pink Kalanchoe's planted inside.
The beautiful Kals on my covered front porch where I, & others, saw them many times a day.

Kalanchoe Care Video Guide

(Warning: This is an old video!)

In conclusion, taking care of a Kalanchoe plant is not as daunting as it may seem. With the right light levels, water, and well-drained soil, your kalanchoe can thrive and bring life to any room in your house or the right spot in your garden. 

We have written more current posts on Kalanchoes: Kalanchoe Care, Calandiva Care, and Kalanchoe FAQs with lots more information and tips. 

Note: This post was originally published on 07/16/2014 and updated on 06/22/2023.

Happy Gardening,

Signed by Nell Foster

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98 Comments

  1. Hi Nell

    I received Kalanchoe yesterday evening i scrolled all the comments but could not fighure out where should i keep it..indoor or outdoor..in my patio i get sunlight and the temperature here is between 5-15 amd sometimes its all freezing going in minus…i mean temperature is very fluctuating these days… Btw i live in Atlanta
    I m very much new to plants but i love them… i want to care this as good as i can…
    TIA

  2. Hi Nell, thank you so much for sharing your wisdom!
    I have never gardened before and I wanted to try so I planted some Kalas.
    I have a rectangular planter and I have a lavender plant in the middle, and a Red Kala on each side.
    It has only been a few days so far, but they look great. I am wondering if there are can any tips you could give me to make sure I keep it alive!

    I am worried that the plants are too close together, there might be about 1-2 inches of space between the lavender plan in the middle and the Kalas on the sides. Is this going to become a problem? The person at Orchard Supply Hardware suggested everything and I went by his recommendation.
    I used their potting soil mix.

    Additionally, there are two holes at the bottom of the planers and he said I should be watering twice a week, about a half gallon – gallon each time, is that correct? I watered it just a bit as a was planting them, and the water pooled up for a bit and then went into the soil, is there a rule of thumb for how saturated it should be?

    Lastly, do I ever need to fertilize them? And if so, when? And do I ever cut them or anything?

    Thanks for all of your helpful insight again!

    My plans sits on my patio and gets a few hours of sunlight per day. Just asking now so that I can keep them pretty and alive.

  3. Hi Kevin – Welcome to the world of gardening. Kalanchoes, when grown outside, likes a bit of protection from the hot sun. Lavender loves the heat & sun so they aren’t the ideal plants to put together, unless you’re growing them for a week or 2 of show. About the spacing, can’t tell you because I don’t know what variety of lavender you have. You want to get the soil as saturated as you can with the first few waterings. I don’t fertilize, I use worm compost & compost. As to how often to water, depends on how hot your temps are. Deadhead & pinch the lavender back as needed. Nell

  4. Hi, l enjoy all of your wonderful information! However my problem seems different. I have a white kal plant and when I bought it some of the the flowers were brown on top. I made the mistake of leaving it in direct hot sunlight ( sticker said 60 to 85 degrees). The plant grew a bit but the new flowers continued to be brown afterwards. I have since put it in a shadier area. How can I restore the plant so that the flowers will bloom white flowers? Thanks!

  5. May 2, 2018 at 4:24 pm
    Hi, l enjoy all of your wonderful information! However my problem seems different. I have a white kal plant and when I bought it some of the the flowers were brown on top. I made the mistake of leaving it in direct hot sunlight ( sticker said 60 to 85 degrees). The plant grew a bit but the new flowers continued to be brown afterwards. I have since put it in a shadier area. How can I restore the plant so that the flowred will bloom white? Thanks.

  6. Hi, Nell- I came across your great website looking for an answer to my issue. I bought a beautiful red flowering kilanchoe about 1 month ago from a major hardware store chain. It is flowering, but the blooms are off color. It looks like someone threw some liquid bleach onto the blooms. They are yellow-orange in color and the very edges are outlined in red. Did the grower add food dye into the watering process during growth? When I bought it, it was in a tiny 1″ plastic pot and was close to 8″ tall and full of beautiful red flowers and I repotted it into a 6″ pot right after I bought it. I repotted it in cactus soil. Thank you for your help. I water it moderately.

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