


Apocynaceae
Hoya ruthiae
VAT included · plus
- Curated selection:
Every plant is hand‑picked for health and visual appeal, so you receive a strong, well‑established plant.
- Representative photos:
Product images show a typical plant of this variety. Natural differences in leaf number, shape or variegation are normal, your plant will still match in type and quality.
- Size details:
Listed sizes refer to pot diameter (cm) and approximate overall height (cm) from the base of the pot to the tallest leaf or stem.
- “Get What You See” items:
If you are buying the exact plant shown in the photos, this is clearly stated in the size section.
- Individual photos:
One‑off photos are only provided when this is explicitly mentioned in the size section. - For special traits or small quirks, please check the full product description.
Secure shipping, carefully packed orders with safe delivery across the EU, UK and Switzerland.
28-day plant guarantee, if a plant arrives damaged or fails soon after delivery, we help you make it right.
Free returns, simple, cost-free returns according to our policy.
For full details, please see:
Please head to our FAQ Page or Contact us.
Interested in Hoya ruthiae? Worth reading:
Comprehensive FAQ Guide for Hoya Plant Care: Tips, Troubleshooting & Growth
Why So Many Houseplants Don’t Belong in Soil — Epiphytes Explained
Hoya ruthiae at a glance:
Hoya ruthiae is a lithophytic Hoya from Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo, where it grows on vertical limestone rather than in ordinary organic pockets. Its glossy lance-shaped leaves can reach about 7–15 cm and often blush red in stronger light, with fine speckling and thin stems that give the plant a refined, slightly delicate look. Flowers appear in small rounded umbels, each bloom showing pale pink to cream tones with yellow and purple details and visible nectar.
Indoors it performs best in very airy, rocky, breathable media or on mounts, with bright filtered light, warm temperatures around 18–28 °C, humidity around 60–80%, and drying between waterings.
Slow to root and slow to bulk up, it rewards patient growers who can replicate its limestone, high-airflow conditions.
Hoya ruthiae
Quick Care Guide
Light
Bright indirect • approx. 10,000–20,000 lux
Water
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
twining epiphytic vine
Support
optional
Growth speed
Average
Max size indoors
Max. trail length: 100 cm • Max. spread: 50 cm
Toxicity & safety
Non-toxic & Pet Friendly
Origin & habitat
Philippines; wet tropical habitat
How to read these metrics
These metrics are standardised reference points. We compile them by reviewing and cross-checking multiple botanical and horticultural references, then refining them through real-world growing experience. Source links: Plant Care Resources.
Please use the values as guidance. Conditions vary by home, so the same plant can respond differently. For plant-specific context, read the full product description and browse our Plant Care Guides.
- Light: level + approximate lux at leaf level;
- Watering: “% dry” is the trigger before watering again; lower % stays more evenly moist.
- Potting mix: one-line profile (structure/drainage • moisture buffer • base • particle size).
- Temperature: “Ideal” comfort range; “Avoid below” marks higher stress risk.
- Humidity: target bands (Normal/Moist/Humid); consistency usually matters most.
- Growth habit: growth form (rosette, trailing, climbing) for placement and training.
- Support: needed/optional/none, whether stake, pole, or trellis improves structure and size.
- Growth speed: fast/average/slow under decent indoor conditions—expectations, not a promise.
- Max size indoors: realistic long-term potential; format differs for climbers vs. trailers.
- Toxicity & safety: chemical irritants/toxicity and physical hazards (spines, bristles).
- Origin & habitat: native region + typical biome/habitat as context.
Can Hoya ruthiae be grown outdoors in European climates?
Summer outdoors onlyMore outdoor growing details
Move outside once nights stay above
16°C
Bring under cover below
16°C
Best outdoors in
Warm summer patio, Covered terrace
It can spend warm months outside, but it should go back under cover before cool nights return.
Outdoor note
Best outdoor fit
- Best outdoors in: Warm summer patio, Covered terrace
- Best grown in: Better in container
- Works best as: Summer patio container, Warm wall pot
Timing
- Move outside once nights stay above: 16°C
- Bring under cover below: 16°C
- Before moving outdoors: Let it adjust slowly and keep rain off while it settles.
- Seasonal timing: Outdoor time starts once nights are consistently above 16°C. Do not leave it out once forecasts dip below 16°C.
Protection and winter
- Protection: Frost-free wintering indoors
- Protection note: Warmth, bright shelter and sharp drainage matter most; cold wet roots are the usual problem.
- Wintering: Overwinter bright, frost-free and out of draughts
- Winter protection: Bring indoors before cold nights or autumn chills
- Not a good fit for: Skip any spot without shelter from rain and strong air movement.
Outdoor conditions
- Drainage: Free-draining
- Moisture outdoors: Dry slightly between waterings
- Wind exposure: Sheltered from drying wind
Plant Care Basics:
- Care basics , Main hub with links to all houseplant care guides.
- After delivery & first week , Unpacking, first placement, and early recovery.
- Light, How much light houseplants really need indoors.
- Watering , When to water and how to avoid root rot.
- Substrates & roots , Potting mixes and drainage for strong root systems.
- Humidity, When humidity matters and what actually helps.
- Fertilizing, Simple feeding routine without burning roots.
- Problems & pests, Yellow leaves, brown tips, bugs, and fixes that work.
- Semi-hydro , How to run low-maintenance mineral substrates.
Your new plant has just travelled a long way and needs a calm start in its new home. For step-by-step unboxing and first-week care, check our after-delivery care guide. For deeper tips on how your plant settles in over the next weeks, read our houseplant acclimatization guide.
