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




Wax Plant
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Hoya ruthiae
Light
Bright indirect • approx. 10,000–20,000 lux
Watering
Water when ~60–80% dry
Substrate
Airy + fast-draining • Light moisture buffer • Bark-based • Medium-chunky
Temperature
Ideal: 16–24 °C • Avoid below: 10 °C
Humidity
Humid 60–80 % +
Growth habit
Climbing or trailing epiphytic perennial vine.
Support
recommended
Growth speed
Average
Max size indoors
Max. trail length: 100 cm • Max. spread: 50 cm
Toxicity & safety
Non-toxic
Origin & habitat
Native to Philippines
Outdoor growing
Outside from 15 °C · sheltered from wind and rain
These care values are quick reference points for indoor growing. Use them as a guide, then adjust for pot size, substrate, temperature and how quickly the substrate dries.
For more detail, read the full product description or visit our Plant Care Guides.
Hoya ruthiae is a slow-growing, lithophytic vine native to the limestone cliffs of Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo. With lance-shaped leaves that blush red in strong light and petite star-shaped flowers in pink, cream, and golden yellow, it’s one of the most delicately structured hoyas available in cultivation. This plant is built for the patient collector. Its trailing stems creep across rock faces in the wild, not soil, and indoors it does best when mounted or placed in a very loose, mineral-rich substrate. Once mature, it rewards consistent care with nectar-rich umbels that last for several days. Described only recently in 2015, Hoya ruthiae remains extremely rare in the hobby – and deeply rewarding to grow.
This species grows on vertical limestone rock faces in Sarawak’s low- to mid-elevation forests (200 – 500 m). Its native microhabitat is warm, breezy, humid, and well-drained, often shaded by ferns and forest canopy. These ecological cues help guide ideal indoor care: light but not direct sun, air flow around roots, and a substrate that mimics its rocky substrate in the wild. Unlike common trailing hoyas, Hoya ruthiae won’t thrive in dense or peat-heavy mixes. It needs a setup that breathes – mossy bark mounts, slotted orchid pots, or very coarse, rocky blends.
Hoya ruthiae was formally described by Michele Rodda in 2015, published in PhytoKeys 53:84. It belongs to the Apocynaceae family, subfamily Asclepiadoideae. The species is named in honour of Ruth Kiew (b. 1946), a botanist and prolific author based in Malaysia, known for her work on Southeast Asian flora – particularly Begonia and Gesneriaceae. No seed or fruit has yet been documented.
This species is extremely rare in cultivation. It’s seldom offered commercially, propagated slowly, and highly sought-after by hoya collectors interested in habitat-specific, lithophytic vines. Its modest size, detailed bloom structure, and foliage response to light make it a standout species for advanced growers seeking something unique and under-the-radar.
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.
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