Light
Bright indirect • approx. 10,000–20,000 lux










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Quick Care Guide
Light
Bright indirect • approx. 10,000–20,000 lux
Watering
Water when ~25–40% dry
Substrate
Aerated • Moisture-buffered • Balanced organic + mineral • Medium
Temperature
Ideal: 18–24 °C • Avoid below: 15 °C
Humidity
Moist 50–60 %
Growth habit
Upright palm.
Support
not needed
Growth speed
Slow
Max size indoors
Max. height: 300 cm • Max. spread: 200 cm
Toxicity & safety
Non-toxic
Origin & habitat
Lord Howe Island; wet tropical habitat
Outdoor growing
Outside from 14 °C · rain-sheltered spot
These care values are quick reference points for indoor growing. Use them as a guide, then adjust for your space, pot size, substrate, temperature and how quickly the substrate dries.
For more detail, read the full product description or visit our Plant Care Guides.
Howea forsteriana, commonly called Kentia palm, is a slow-growing, pinnate palm with long arching fronds and an open habit. Young plants are often grown with several seedlings in one pot, creating a fuller indoor specimen while each palm still keeps its own single stem. The leaflets are narrow, dark green and arranged along elegant fronds that soften as they mature.
This palm grows steadily rather than quickly and keeps its shape for years in a container. Its roots dislike rough disturbance, so consistent watering, a suitable pot and patient repotting matter more than constant feeding or moving.
Howea forsteriana is a member of Arecaceae and comes from Lord Howe Island, a subtropical island in the Tasman Sea. Mature palms outdoors eventually form tall trunks, but indoor plants remain much slower and show their frond shape long before a visible trunk develops. Nursery-grown indoor specimens are commonly produced as grouped seedlings, which explains the fuller pot appearance compared with a solitary mature palm in habitat.
Low light slows growth, dry air can mark the leaflet tips and overwatering can damage roots that already grow slowly. A bright position with gentle light, careful watering and minimal root disturbance reduces brown tips, weak fronds and root stress.
Howea forsteriana develops slowly and should be handled with minimal root and frond disturbance. Rotate the pot occasionally so fronds develop evenly, remove fully brown fronds at the base and avoid cutting green fronds simply to reshape the plant. A deep, stable pot helps support the weight of the fronds as the plant matures.
Howea forsteriana is listed as non-toxic to cats and dogs. Even so, chewing large amounts of plant material can still cause stomach upset, and the long fronds are better kept out of busy traffic paths where they may be bent or torn.
Howea is named for Lord Howe Island, the native home of the genus. The species epithet forsteriana honours William Forster, a 19th-century senator of New South Wales. The common name Kentia palm is also connected with Lord Howe Island, where Kentia is the island’s main settlement.
Howea forsteriana develops slowly into an arching Kentia palm with dark green pinnate fronds in a deep, stable pot.
Plant names, growth habits, natural habitats and indoor care guidance are checked against trusted botanical, habitat and horticultural references before publication.View our plant care resources and references.