Fenestrated & Split-Leaf Plants
Fenestrated and split-leaf plants are grouped by openings, cuts and deep lobes that make each leaf feel lighter and more architectural. Some develop those features early, while others only show the full effect once they have size, support or maturity.
Few groups change the look of a plant display faster. Openings, cuts and lobes create shape and shadow immediately, but it still helps to check the growth habit behind the leaf, because a climber, crawler and self-heading plant all use that silhouette differently indoors.

About Our Filters
Filters are here to help you get to the right plants faster — without guessing. We keep our filter values consistent across the shop by cross-checking multiple references and sanity-checking them against real-world indoor growing and handling.
Use them as guidance, not guarantees. Two homes can have the same “light level” on paper and still be very different. For the details that matter most, open the product page and read the full description.
How filtering works
- Filters stack: Every selection narrows the results.
- Multiple picks in one filter are usually either/or: Selecting two genera shows plants from either genus.
- Different filter groups work together: For example, Light level + Non-toxic narrows to plants that match both.
- Undo anytime: Click a selected option again (or use the clear/reset option in the filter panel).
Quick start: pick Light level first, then refine by Plant Type and size.
Shop & availability
- Favourite Collections: Curated groups like Bestsellers, Baby Plants, Rare Plants, Easy-Care Plants, Variegated Plants, Classic Houseplants, XL Houseplants, and Plant Sets. These are browsing shortcuts, not strict care categories.
- Availability (In stock only): Hides sold-out items so you only see what can ship right now.
- Price: Narrows by the current listed price range. If a product has multiple sizes/variants, prices can span a wider range.
Pet friendly & safety
- Non-toxic: Plants we classify as not known for relevant chemical toxicity for common pets. Still: chewing can cause irritation or stomach upset even with non-toxic plants.
- Non-toxic & Pet Friendly: A stricter shortlist for curious noses and paws. This isn’t only about chemical toxicity — it also helps you avoid many plants with physical hazards like spines, sharp tips, hooked thorns, stiff bristles, or scratchy textures that can cause discomfort or minor injuries. It’s still not a green light for chewing.
Care-related filters
- Light level: From Low indirect to Full sun/direct. “Indirect” means bright light without sun hitting leaves. “Some direct” means a limited amount of gentle sun. “Full sun/direct” means sustained direct sun.
- Water Needs: Low / Medium / High describes how quickly substrate is typically allowed to dry before watering again in normal indoor conditions.
- Humidity Level: Normal (40–50%), Moist (50–60%), Humid (60–80%+). This is about your usual range and consistency, not short-lived spikes.
Growth habit & training
- Growth Habit: How a plant naturally grows: Climbing, Hanging & trailing, Crawling & spreading, Upright, Self-heading, Clumping (offsets), or Rosette (compact). Use this for placement, training, and pot shape.
- Needs support? “None” holds shape without help. “Optional” means support improves structure/size but isn’t required. “Needed” means a stake, pole, or trellis noticeably improves performance or form.
- Growth Speed: Slow / Average / Fast under decent indoor conditions. Helpful for expectations, not a promise.
Size filters (delivered vs. long-term)
- Pot size (delivered): The nursery pot diameter your plant ships in (⌀).
- Plant height (delivered): The approximate height range of the plant you’ll receive. Natural variation is normal.
- Max. Height Indoors: Realistic long-term height potential indoors with time, care, and training where relevant.
- Max. Spread Indoors: How wide a plant can get long-term (clumping width, rosette width, or overall footprint).
Looks: shape, size, colour
- Leaf Shape & Size: Quick visual categories. “Small/Medium/Large” refers to typical mature leaf size, while shape labels describe the dominant outline.
- Foliage Colour: Dominant tones/patterns (e.g., Silver & grey, Pink & Red, Golden-yellow). Individual plants can vary, and new growth often looks different before it matures.
Botanical browsing
- Plant Type: Broad groups like Aroids, Hoyas, Cacti, Ferns, Succulents, Prayer plants, and more — good for browsing by “plant vibe” and general care style.
- Genus: Filters by botanical genus (e.g., Alocasia, Philodendron, Hoya). Great if you already know what you collect.
- Family: Filters by plant family (e.g., Araceae, Apocynaceae). Useful for deep browsing across related genera.
Want to see what we reference when standardising labels? Plant Care Resources is simply a curated list of the sources we use (POWO, Kew, and more).
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Frequently Asked Questions About Fenestrated Split Leaves
What do “fenestrated” and “split-leaf” actually mean?
Fenestrated leaves develop natural inner holes or openings. Split-leaf plants develop cuts that run in from the edge. Some plants show one trait more strongly than the other, and some mature leaves can show both.
Are holes and splits in the leaves a sign of damage?
No, not when they emerge cleanly as part of the leaf. Regular, symmetrical openings on healthy new growth are normal; ragged tears, browning, or random breaks are damage.
Why is my plant not making fenestrated or split leaves indoors?
Usually because it is still juvenile, has not been supported properly if it is a climber, or is not growing strongly enough yet. Mature leaf shape is tied to overall development, not just time since you bought the plant. If you want a fuller breakdown for Monstera-type climbers, you can read more in this Guide.
Do fenestrated plants need a support to mature well?
Many of the best-known indoor ones do, especially climbing aroids such as Monstera and Rhaphidophora. Support is not a universal rule for every divided-leaf plant, but it often makes a big difference in the common climbing types people grow indoors.
Does stronger light create more splits or holes?
No, not by itself. Better light supports stronger growth, but fenestration is not a simple switch you turn on with brightness alone. Species, maturity, support, and overall vigour all work together.
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