Overwatering or a nutrient gap

Widespread yellowing usually traces back to soggy roots, or a long stretch with no feeding.

Diagnosis

Overwatering or a nutrient gap

What's happening

Yellowing across many fronds at once is most often advanced overwatering, so the roots are the first thing to check. Occasionally it's a palm that has sat in the same tired soil for a couple of years without feeding and has simply run out of nutrients — palms are particularly prone to magnesium and potassium shortfalls.

How to fix it

Check the soil and roots first: if they're wet or rotting, treat it as overwatering — dry the plant out, trim away mushy roots, and repot into fresh mix. If the roots are firm and it just hasn't been fed in ages, resume a balanced liquid fertilizer at half strength every few weeks through spring and summer to bring the color back.

What fixes it

If that doesn't fix it

This is general guidance based on common symptoms; individual plants vary.

Reviewed June 2026 · how we check this