Not enough light
An air plant that looks pale, soft, and stretched out is almost always under-lit.
Diagnosis
Not enough light
What's happening
Tillandsia needs bright, indirect light to stay compact and keep the silvery sheen its trichomes give it. In a dim spot the plant stretches and loosens, its color fades toward a flat, weak green, growth stalls, and it won't build the energy reserves needed to push out a bloom or pups. Greener, smoother-leaved varieties tolerate less light than the fuzzy silver types, which need the most.
How to fix it
Move the plant to a bright spot within a few feet of an east or south window with filtered light, but out of scorching direct sun. If your space is genuinely dim, a full-spectrum grow light on for 12 hours a day makes a real difference and is often the only way to restore vigor. Keep soaking on schedule — better light slightly increases how fast the plant dries, so check it isn't drying out between waterings.
What fixes it
- A full-spectrum LED grow light — A full-spectrum grow light gives an air plant the steady, gentle light it needs in a dim room.
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