Jade Plant care guide

Jade Plant Care Guide

Jade plants are succulents — the leaves store water for weeks, the woody trunk thickens over decades, and the plant can live for half a century or more. Unlike most plants in this guide, jade actively wants direct sun and infrequent watering. The fastest way to kill one is to keep it in a low-light corner and water on the same schedule as your monstera.

Quick answer: Every 2-4 weeks; let the soil dry completely between waterings in Bright direct sun; needs at least 4 hours of direct light per day. Use the watering estimator below to tune the interval to your pot and conditions.

Scientific nameCrassula ovata LightDirect WaterSparse Last reviewed2026-06-16

Quick facts

Light, water, soil, temperature, humidity

Light
Bright direct sun; needs at least 4 hours of direct light per day
Water
Every 2-4 weeks; let the soil dry completely between waterings
Soil
Cactus or succulent mix; sharp drainage essential
Temperature
16-24°C (60-75°F); tolerates down to 10°C / 50°F
Humidity
Prefers dry; 30-40% household air is fine
Growth habit
Tree-like with thickening woody trunk; very slow
Mature size
60-150 cm (2-5 ft) over decades indoors
Pet toxicity
Mildly toxic to cats and dogs if ingested

Tool 1 · Watering estimator

How often should I water this jade plant?

Your pot, light, season, humidity, and soil
Watering interval days between thorough waterings

Adjust the inputs above and the recommended interval updates instantly. Always check the soil with your finger before watering — the estimator is a starting point, not a substitute.

Tool 2 · Troubleshooting

What's wrong with my jade plant?

Pick the symptom you're seeing. The decision tree below walks through diagnostic questions and lands on a specific cause and remedy.

Tool 3 · Printable

Care card

A one-page printable care card with the quick-facts and watering baseline. Fold or pin to a fridge / kitchen wall as a quick reference next to the plant.

Jade Plant watering baseline ~21 days at a 6-inch pot, medium light, spring, normal humidity, standard potting mix

Expert tips

Three or four things most jade plant owners get wrong

  • Put it on a sunny windowsill — south-facing in the northern hemisphere, north-facing south of the equator. Jades grown in low light grow leggy and weak-stemmed.
  • Water deeply, then wait. Soak the soil thoroughly, let the excess drain, then do not water again until the soil is bone dry. Two weeks is normal; four weeks is fine in winter.
  • Hold off on fertilizer in the first year after potting. Jade plants store more nutrients than they need, and fertilizer in fresh soil burns the roots.
  • If a leaf falls off, you can propagate it. Lay the leaf on the soil surface — within 4-6 weeks a tiny plantlet emerges from the base.

Background

Where this plant comes from

Crassula ovata is native to the dry interior plateaus of southern Africa — South Africa and Mozambique. In Chinese and Japanese culture the round, coin-like leaves became a symbol of prosperity, giving it the names 'money plant' and 'lucky plant'. The plant's longevity is exceptional: well-cared-for jade plants have been documented at 70+ years old, with the trunk thickening into a bonsai-like tree.

Sources

Related plants

Other houseplants in this guide