Overwatering / root rot
Soggy soil with browning, drooping lower branches points to roots drowning rather than thirst.
Diagnosis
Overwatering / root rot
What's happening
Norfolk pines need consistent moisture but hate sitting in water. When the soil stays waterlogged, the fine roots suffocate and rot, and the plant can no longer move water to its branches — so the lowest ones yellow, brown, and droop even though there's plenty of water in the pot.
How to fix it
Stop watering and let the soil dry down to the top inch. Slip the plant out and check the roots — trim any brown, mushy ones with sterilized scissors and repot into fresh, fast-draining mix in a pot with drainage holes. Always empty the saucer after watering so the pot never sits in standing water. Then return to keeping the soil evenly moist, watering only when the top inch is dry.
What fixes it
- Pots with drainage holes — A pot with real drainage stops water pooling at the bottom and re-rotting the fine roots.
If that doesn't fix it
This is general guidance based on common symptoms; individual plants vary.
Read the full Norfolk Island Pine care guide →
Reviewed June 2026 · how we check this