Low humidity

Crispy, shriveling edges in dry air are the nerve plant's number-one complaint.

Diagnosis

Low humidity

What's happening

Fittonia is a rainforest-floor plant that expects constantly humid air. Its leaves are paper-thin with almost no waxy coating, so in dry indoor air — especially near a vent, radiator, or air conditioner — the edges lose moisture far faster than the roots can replace it, and they brown, curl, and shrivel.

How to fix it

Raise the humidity right away: group it with other plants, set the pot on a tray of pebbles and water, or run a small humidifier nearby — and move it away from any heat source or draft. A closed terrarium or a covered cloche is ideal, since nerve plants thrive in trapped humid air. Trim the worst-browned edges with clean scissors so the plant looks tidy while new, healthy growth fills in.

What fixes it

  • A small room humidifier — A small humidifier near the plant keeps the thin leaves from crisping, especially in dry winter air.

If that doesn't fix it

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

Reviewed June 2026 · how we check this