Gasteria With Soft, Mushy, Translucent Leaves: Causes and Fixes
Soft, see-through, or mushy leaves are the most common way a Gasteria gets into trouble — and too much water is almost always the reason. Here are the likely causes, how to tell them apart, and how to fix and prevent each one.
Overwatering and root rot (the usual culprit)
What's happening
Gasteria stores water in its thick leaves, so when the gritty mix stays wet the fine roots suffocate, rot, and stop working. Starved of healthy roots, the lower leaves turn soft, yellow-translucent, and mushy, often starting at the base of the fan.
How to confirm
Press a finger into the soil — still damp days after watering? Lift the plant from its pot and check the roots: firm and pale is healthy, while brown, soft, foul-smelling roots confirm rot. Affected leaves feel squishy and may peel away with no resistance.
How to fix it
Stop watering at once and let the soil dry. If roots are mushy, slip the plant out, trim away every rotten root and softened leaf with clean snips, let the wounds callus for a day, then repot into fresh, dry, gritty succulent mix in a pot with drainage holes. Resume watering only when the mix is bone dry.
Prevent it
Use a fast-draining cactus mix, a pot with drainage, and the soak-and-dry method — water only when the soil has dried completely.
Water trapped in the crown
What's happening
Gasteria's leaves stack tightly in a flat fan, and water poured over the top can pool between them. Sitting moisture in that crevice rots the central crown, turning the inner leaves brown and mushy from the middle outward rather than from the bottom.
How to confirm
The damage is concentrated at the center or where leaves meet, not the oldest outer leaves. The crown looks dark and feels soft, and there may be a sour smell or fungal spotting between the leaves.
How to fix it
Stop overhead watering immediately. Gently dab out trapped water and remove any rotted inner leaves. Move the plant somewhere bright with good airflow so the crown dries fully, and water only at the soil surface from now on.
Prevent it
Always water the soil, never the rosette, and keep the plant in a well-ventilated spot so any stray moisture evaporates quickly.
Cold or frost damage
What's happening
Gasteria is not frost-hardy. Exposure to temperatures near or below freezing ruptures the water-filled cells in its leaves, which then collapse into soft, mushy, translucent patches once they thaw.
How to confirm
Mushiness appeared suddenly after a cold snap, a frosty windowsill, or a chilly draft. Affected leaves look water-soaked and glassy, and the damage often shows on the side that faced the cold glass or door.
How to fix it
Move the plant to a warm spot between 60–80°F right away. Trim off the collapsed, mushy leaves with clean snips and let the plant recover — undamaged leaves and the roots will usually carry it through.
Prevent it
Keep Gasteria above 40°F, away from cold windows and drafts in winter, and bring outdoor pots inside before the first frost.
When to worry (and when not to)
A single soft outer leaf can simply be an old one being retired — snip it and move on. Worry when several leaves go mushy at once, when the softness spreads from the crown, or when it comes with damp soil and a sour smell, all signs of active rot. Caught early, an overwatered Gasteria usually recovers once the rotten tissue is removed and the roots can dry out and breathe again.