Rot from trapped moisture
Frequent soaking plus a damp, airless spot lets water pool in the base and rot the plant from the center out.
Diagnosis
Rot from trapped moisture
What's happening
After a soak, water that lingers in the tightly packed leaf base has nowhere to evaporate if the plant can't dry quickly. The crown stays wet, tissue breaks down, and you'll see browning that starts at the very base — often with leaves pulling loose from the center if you tug gently.
How to fix it
Stop soaking until the plant dries completely. After every future soak, shake the plant hard to fling water out of the crown, then dry it upside down in a bright spot with good air movement so no water sits in the base. Never leave an air plant wet in a closed terrarium or on a saucer. If the center is already soft and the core leaves slip out, the crown has rotted and won't recover — but firm offsets (pups) at the base can be salvaged.
What fixes it
- Pots with drainage holes — An open, well-ventilated holder with no standing water lets the base dry fast and prevents rot.
If that doesn't fix it
This is general guidance based on common symptoms; individual plants vary.
Read the full Air Plant care guide →
Reviewed June 2026 · how we check this