Best Plants for Your Bathroom in Singapore | Tumbleweed Plants Singapore
Posted on April 10 2026
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The bathroom is the most underrated room for plants. It offers something no other room in most Singapore homes can match: natural humidity. Every shower sends a burst of warm, moist air into the space — exactly what many tropical plants crave. While the rest of your home may be dried out by air conditioning, the bathroom provides a microclimate that ferns, orchids, and humidity-loving tropicals thrive in.
The hesitation is understandable — bathrooms are often small, dimly lit, and seem like an afterthought for decoration. But a single plant on the vanity or a fern hanging beside the shower transforms a functional room into something that feels like a spa. And the plants love it.
Assessing Your Bathroom
Light
Bright bathroom (window present): The best scenario. Natural light plus humidity creates ideal conditions for a wide range of plants. Place plants near the window for maximum light.
Dim bathroom (no window or small window): Common in HDB flats. Only low-light champions survive here — Snake Plant, ZZ Plant, Pothos, or plastic alternatives. If you shower with the door open, some light may enter from adjacent rooms.
Artificial light only: Some plants can survive under bathroom lighting if it is bright enough (LED downlights rather than dim bulbs). Rotate plants between the bathroom and a brighter room every 2-3 weeks to prevent decline.
Humidity
Singapore bathrooms typically maintain 70-90% humidity, especially during and after showers. This is paradise for tropical plants. However, ventilation fans and windows that are kept open can reduce humidity significantly.
Temperature
Singapore bathrooms maintain consistent warmth (24-30°C). No cold drafts or temperature swings — ideal for tropical plants.
Space
HDB bathrooms are compact — often 4-6 sqm. Plant placement must not interfere with showering, toilet use, or vanity access. Every plant needs to earn its spot.
Best Bathroom Plants
Boston Fern (Nephrolepis exaltata)
Why it is perfect: The Boston Fern is the ultimate bathroom plant. It thrives in high humidity, tolerates lower light, and its cascading fronds create a lush, spa-like atmosphere. In a hanging planter or on a high shelf, it transforms the room.
Care: Keep soil moist. Medium indirect light (near a window). Mist occasionally if the bathroom has good ventilation that reduces humidity.
Orchid (Phalaenopsis)
Why it works: Orchids are epiphytes from tropical forests — they love humidity. A Phalaenopsis orchid on the bathroom vanity blooms for months and adds elegant colour to a neutral space. The humidity extends bloom life.
Care: Water weekly (or less — the humidity reduces watering needs). Bright indirect light (window bathroom).
Pothos
Why it works: Pothos grows in any light condition, handles humidity beautifully, and trails attractively from a shelf or the top of a mirror cabinet. It is the easiest bathroom plant — place it and forget it.
Care: Water every 1-2 weeks (may need less in a humid bathroom). Any light.
Snake Plant (Sansevieria)
Why it works: The Snake Plant tolerates low light, high humidity, and irregular watering — the trifecta of bathroom conditions. A small 'Hahnii' on the vanity or a tall variety on the floor beside the toilet adds architectural greenery to the smallest space.
Care: Water every 2-3 weeks. Any light. Possibly the lowest-maintenance bathroom option.
Staghorn Fern (Platycerium)
Why it works: Mounted on a piece of wood or in a wall basket, the Staghorn Fern turns a bare bathroom wall into living art. It loves humidity and handles the indirect light of most bathrooms well. The antler-shaped fronds are dramatic and unique.
Care: Mist 2-3 times per week or soak the root ball weekly. Medium indirect light.
Air Plants (Tillandsia)
Why they work: No soil, no pot, no mess. Place them on a shelf, in a small holder, or on a decorative stone. The bathroom humidity means they need less soaking than air plants elsewhere in the home.
Care: Soak every 1-2 weeks (less often in a humid bathroom). Bright indirect light.
Calathea / Prayer Plant
Why it works: Calathea loves humidity and struggles in dry rooms — making the bathroom its ideal home. The patterned leaves add colour and visual interest. Place on the vanity or a small shelf.
Care: Keep soil moist. Medium indirect light. Thrives in the bathroom's consistent humidity.
ZZ Plant (for Dark Bathrooms)
Why it works: If your bathroom has no window, the ZZ Plant is one of the few plants that genuinely thrives in near-darkness. Its glossy leaves look permanently polished — fitting for a bathroom aesthetic.
Care: Water every 2-3 weeks. Tolerates extremely low light.
Bathroom Plant Styling Ideas
The Vanity Plant
One small plant on the bathroom vanity — beside the soap dispenser, the toothbrush holder, and the everyday items. A small orchid, Peperomia, or air plant adds life without consuming functional space.
The Hanging Shower Plant
A Boston Fern or Pothos in a hanging planter near (not in) the shower. The humidity from showering benefits the plant directly. Ensure the planter is securely mounted and positioned where it will not be bumped.
The Toilet Tank Garden
The top of the toilet tank is unused horizontal space. A small Snake Plant, ZZ Plant, or Peperomia sits perfectly here.
The Wall-Mounted Feature
A Staghorn Fern mounted on a piece of driftwood, hung on the bathroom wall. It is living art that thrives in the humid environment.
The Window Ledge Collection
If your bathroom has a windowsill, line it with 2-3 small plants — orchid, small fern, air plant. The combination of light and humidity creates perfect growing conditions.
Practical Tips
Choose plants in cache pots or waterproof containers. Water damage on bathroom surfaces is more visible and problematic. Ensure no water drips onto vanities, shelves, or floors.
Clean leaves more frequently. Bathroom humidity combined with product aerosols (hairspray, cleaning products) can create residue on leaves. Wipe monthly.
Ensure drainage. Bathroom plants in constant humidity are at risk of overwatering. Use well-draining soil and pots with drainage holes. Water less frequently than you would for the same plant in a drier room.
Ventilation matters. Some air circulation prevents mould and mildew on both plants and surfaces. Run the exhaust fan regularly.
Rotate with brighter rooms. For windowless bathrooms, rotate plants with a brighter room every 2-3 weeks. Two weeks in the bathroom, two weeks recovering in a lit room. This extends the life of plants that would otherwise decline in darkness.
Shop Bathroom Plants
Browse our indoor plant collection for humidity-loving plants delivered across Singapore. From lush Boston Ferns to elegant orchids, transform your bathroom into a space that feels alive.
The bathroom is where you start and end every day — and it deserves more than tiles, chrome, and a bottle of shampoo. A single plant changes the energy of the room. It softens the hard surfaces, adds colour to the neutral palette, and turns a functional space into one that feels intentionally designed. Start with one plant on the vanity. If you like how it feels — and you will — add a trailing Pothos on the shelf and a fern beside the shower. Your bathroom will never feel the same.
Quick summary
Key Takeaways
- Assessing Your Bathroom
- Best Bathroom Plants
- Bathroom Plant Styling Ideas
- Practical Tips
- Shop Bathroom Plants
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