Fiddle Leaf Fig Dropping Leaves: Causes and How to Fix It
Few plants protest change as dramatically as the Fiddle Leaf Fig — and dropped leaves are its go-to complaint. The good news is that most leaf drop traces back to a handful of stressors you can identify and reverse. Here are the likely causes, ranked, with how to tell them apart and fix each one.
Sudden change or shock (the usual culprit)
What's happening
The Fiddle Leaf Fig is notoriously sensitive to change. Moving it to a new room, bringing it home from the store, a drop in light, or a season shift can all trigger a wave of dropped leaves as the plant adjusts to new conditions.
How to confirm
Leaf drop started within days or a week or two of a move, a repot, or a noticeable change in light or temperature, and the soil and roots otherwise look healthy.
How to fix it
Pick a good permanent spot — bright, warm, and draft-free — and then leave the plant alone. Resist the urge to keep moving it. Keep watering consistent and give it a few weeks to settle; new growth from the top signals recovery.
Prevent it
Choose the right location from the start and avoid relocating the plant unnecessarily, especially right after buying or repotting it.
Cold drafts and temperature swings
What's happening
Blasts of cold or hot air shock this tropical fig into dropping leaves. Drafty doorways, frosty windows, and air-conditioning or heating vents are common triggers, especially in winter.
How to confirm
The plant sits near a door, an exterior window, or a vent; leaf drop worsened when the weather turned or the heat or AC came on, and falling leaves often come from the side facing the draft.
How to fix it
Move the plant away from drafts, vents, and cold glass to a spot with a steady temperature between 65–75°F. Avoid letting it touch cold windows in winter.
Prevent it
Keep it in a draft-free location with stable temperatures and away from any source of sudden hot or cold air.
Inconsistent watering
What's happening
Both overwatering and letting the plant bone-dry cause leaf drop. Soggy soil rots roots and the plant sheds leaves; severe dryness leaves it unable to support its foliage, so lower leaves crisp and fall.
How to confirm
Overwatering: soil stays wet, leaves may brown or yellow before dropping, and the pot feels heavy. Underwatering: soil is bone-dry, the pot is light, edges go crispy, and lower leaves drop first.
How to fix it
Reset to a steady rhythm — water thoroughly only when the top 2 inches of soil are dry, then empty the saucer. If overwatered, check the roots and repot into fresh, fast-draining mix if any are mushy. If bone-dry, soak the rootball and resume regular checks.
Prevent it
Water on a consistent schedule driven by the soil, not the calendar, and always use a pot with drainage holes.
Too little light
What's happening
In a dim spot the Fiddle Leaf Fig can't sustain all its leaves, so it sheds the lower and inner ones, grows leggy, and leans hard toward the nearest window.
How to confirm
The plant is in a low-light corner or far from any window, lower leaves are dropping while the stem stretches and bare patches appear, and growth has slowed.
How to fix it
Move it to the brightest spot you have — right in front of an east window or a few feet from a south or west one. If bright natural light isn't available, supplement with a grow light. Rotate the pot weekly so it grows evenly.
Prevent it
Keep it in consistently bright light year-round and supplement during dark winter months.
When to worry (and when not to)
Losing a leaf or two after a move or a repot is normal Fiddle Leaf Fig drama — give it time to adjust before reacting. Worry when leaves keep dropping steadily over weeks, when drop comes with widespread brown spots and soggy soil (a sign of root rot), or when the trunk softens. Caught early, most leaf drop reverses once you give the plant a stable, bright, draft-free home and consistent care — and it will leaf out again from the top.
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