The Next Big Thing in Indoor Plants is...
Charming Pilea peperomioides, also called pancake plant or Chinese money plant. It makes a big impact with little effort
Lauren Dunec Hoang
3 April 2018
Houzz Editor; landscape designer and former garden editor for Sunset Magazine and in-house designer for Sunset's Editorial Test Garden. Her garden designs have been featured in the Sunset Western Garden Book of Landscaping, Sunset Western Garden Book of Easy-Care Plantings (cover), Inhabitat, and POPSUGAR.
Houzz Editor; landscape designer and former garden editor for Sunset Magazine and... More
You may have spotted this houseplant with round, pancake-shaped leaves popping up in photos of Scandinavian interiors, often positioned in a place of reverence on a minimalist bookshelf or a mid-century modern side table.
Pilea peperomioides, commonly called pilea, pancake plant or Chinese money plant, has an ultra-adorable, almost Seussian form that adds character and a hit of green to any interior space.
While you’re scouting out the best spot for your future pilea, here’s what to know about how to keep these charming little plants happy and healthy.
Pilea peperomioides, commonly called pilea, pancake plant or Chinese money plant, has an ultra-adorable, almost Seussian form that adds character and a hit of green to any interior space.
While you’re scouting out the best spot for your future pilea, here’s what to know about how to keep these charming little plants happy and healthy.
Botanical name: Pilea peperomioides
Common names: Pilea, pancake plant, Chinese money plant, missionary plant
Temperature requirement: Grows anywhere as a houseplant; outside, grows best in warm, mild climates with a minimum temperature of about 10°C (some sources say they are hardy down to freezing)
Water requirement: Low to moderate (water only when dry); thrives in well-draining soil
Light requirement: Bright, indirect light; needs shelter from intense sun
Mature size: About 30 centimetres tall and wide
Benefits and tolerances: Like other houseplants, pilea can improve air quality
Seasonal interest: Evergreen grown as a houseplant; forms tiny, inconspicuous white flowers
Where to put it. Pilea thrives in bright, indirect light – like a sunny south-facing window or a north-facing window with a gauzy curtain. Direct sunlight can cause the delicate leaves to burn.
In mild climates, you can move the plant outside in summer – a good time to wash off the leaves if they’ve become dusty – as long as you keep it out of direct sunlight.
Common names: Pilea, pancake plant, Chinese money plant, missionary plant
Temperature requirement: Grows anywhere as a houseplant; outside, grows best in warm, mild climates with a minimum temperature of about 10°C (some sources say they are hardy down to freezing)
Water requirement: Low to moderate (water only when dry); thrives in well-draining soil
Light requirement: Bright, indirect light; needs shelter from intense sun
Mature size: About 30 centimetres tall and wide
Benefits and tolerances: Like other houseplants, pilea can improve air quality
Seasonal interest: Evergreen grown as a houseplant; forms tiny, inconspicuous white flowers
Where to put it. Pilea thrives in bright, indirect light – like a sunny south-facing window or a north-facing window with a gauzy curtain. Direct sunlight can cause the delicate leaves to burn.
In mild climates, you can move the plant outside in summer – a good time to wash off the leaves if they’ve become dusty – as long as you keep it out of direct sunlight.
Photo by James Renaud
How to use it
Show off pilea’s quirky form by potting up plants in simple containers like plain white or natural terracotta that won’t compete with it for attention. Because pilea stays desk-topper size, it’s a perfect plant to place on side tables, bookshelves, windowsills, sideboards, desks or kitchen shelves. Position plants close to eye level, where you can appreciate the slightly translucent quality of the leaves and notice small changes in your plant.
Why we love it
Pilea brings loads of character for its pint-size form. It’s almost a child’s drawing of a plant, except it’s real and – best yet – super easy to grow. Pilea holds its round, lily pad-like leaves at a jaunty angle from the main stem as if it’s greeting the day with its hands reaching upward.
How to use it
Show off pilea’s quirky form by potting up plants in simple containers like plain white or natural terracotta that won’t compete with it for attention. Because pilea stays desk-topper size, it’s a perfect plant to place on side tables, bookshelves, windowsills, sideboards, desks or kitchen shelves. Position plants close to eye level, where you can appreciate the slightly translucent quality of the leaves and notice small changes in your plant.
Why we love it
Pilea brings loads of character for its pint-size form. It’s almost a child’s drawing of a plant, except it’s real and – best yet – super easy to grow. Pilea holds its round, lily pad-like leaves at a jaunty angle from the main stem as if it’s greeting the day with its hands reaching upward.
Photo by James Renaud
Care tips
Pot up plants in well-draining potting soil and make sure all containers have a drainage hole. If you’re dropping a nursery container into an outer ceramic pot without a hole, make sure to set the nursery container on a layer of gravel to elevate the soil from standing water.
Water about once a week, perhaps a bit more in the warm summer months, allowing the top 5 centimetres of soil to dry out between waterings.
To keep your pilea from growing unevenly, turn the container around every time you water to face the opposite side of the plant toward the light. Pilea is naturally a slow grower, but feeding it with a water-soluble fertiliser (according to package instructions) in spring and summer can speed up new leaf growth.
8 Essentials to Keeping Your Indoor Plants Alive and Thriving
Care tips
Pot up plants in well-draining potting soil and make sure all containers have a drainage hole. If you’re dropping a nursery container into an outer ceramic pot without a hole, make sure to set the nursery container on a layer of gravel to elevate the soil from standing water.
Water about once a week, perhaps a bit more in the warm summer months, allowing the top 5 centimetres of soil to dry out between waterings.
To keep your pilea from growing unevenly, turn the container around every time you water to face the opposite side of the plant toward the light. Pilea is naturally a slow grower, but feeding it with a water-soluble fertiliser (according to package instructions) in spring and summer can speed up new leaf growth.
8 Essentials to Keeping Your Indoor Plants Alive and Thriving
Photo by Maja Dumat
How to propagate it
Pilea is easy to propagate. Once you have one plant, you can quickly create a small jungle or share them with your friends by potting up plant starts that spring up from the mother plant. Plant starts show up either in the soil a few centimetres away from the mother plant or as tiny plants growing directly from the main stem.
For the plant starts that sprout from the soil, use a clean knife to gently cut the plant start free a few centimetres below the soil. Hold on to as much soil as you can around the mini root ball and immediately pot up the baby plant in a small container with fresh potting soil. Keep the soil moist until the plant start sprouts new leaves and then reduce watering.
For plant starts that spring from the stem of the mother plant, gently snap them off where the baby plant meets the main stem and place the plant start in water until roots develop. Then transplant it to a small container with fresh potting soil as described above.
How to propagate it
Pilea is easy to propagate. Once you have one plant, you can quickly create a small jungle or share them with your friends by potting up plant starts that spring up from the mother plant. Plant starts show up either in the soil a few centimetres away from the mother plant or as tiny plants growing directly from the main stem.
For the plant starts that sprout from the soil, use a clean knife to gently cut the plant start free a few centimetres below the soil. Hold on to as much soil as you can around the mini root ball and immediately pot up the baby plant in a small container with fresh potting soil. Keep the soil moist until the plant start sprouts new leaves and then reduce watering.
For plant starts that spring from the stem of the mother plant, gently snap them off where the baby plant meets the main stem and place the plant start in water until roots develop. Then transplant it to a small container with fresh potting soil as described above.
Where to find one
Pilea isn’t yet that common in Australia, but they can be found at some nurseries. You may have more luck finding a fellow plant enthusiast – perhaps online through Gumtree or eBay – who would be willing to share a cutting with you. If you can get your hands on one, in the spirit of tradition, share a few cuttings with your friends and family.
History
As the story of pilea goes, the plant originated in Yunnan Province in southern China and was brought back to Europe by a Norwegian missionary. He then passed on cuttings of the easily propagated plant to friends and family to grow as houseplants. Pilea quickly spread throughout Scandinavia, Europe and the UK, finally to be recognised by Kew Gardens in a published story in the 1980s.
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Pilea isn’t yet that common in Australia, but they can be found at some nurseries. You may have more luck finding a fellow plant enthusiast – perhaps online through Gumtree or eBay – who would be willing to share a cutting with you. If you can get your hands on one, in the spirit of tradition, share a few cuttings with your friends and family.
History
As the story of pilea goes, the plant originated in Yunnan Province in southern China and was brought back to Europe by a Norwegian missionary. He then passed on cuttings of the easily propagated plant to friends and family to grow as houseplants. Pilea quickly spread throughout Scandinavia, Europe and the UK, finally to be recognised by Kew Gardens in a published story in the 1980s.
Tell us
If you enjoyed this story, like it, save it, save the photos and share your thoughts below. Join the conversation.
More
Read more plant profiles
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This plant is definitely banned from sale in New Zealand by MPI, Ministry of Primary Industries. The plant that many people think is Pilea peperomoides and is legally sold in Palmer's is in fact Peperomia Polybotrya which is similar in appearance, at a glance..
Hopefully MPI will reconsider their decision in time as Pilea peperomoides has yet to become a pest species in the many varied climate zones of Australia where it is now freely available.
Fingers crossed...
Does anyone actually have any in New Zealand? Pilea peperomoides. Especially as this online magazine is aimed at New Zealanders as Hanna Leier quite rightly pointed out.
Asking for a friend...
Looks like dollar weed to me….please, come dig up all you want from my yard…or any yard in Florida! 😄