Houseplants · Guide

Cordyline stricta

Cordyline stricta (Slender Palm Lily) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: Poyt448 Peter Woodard · CC0
In short

Cordyline stricta, sold as Slender Palm Lily, is a fast-growing colourful foliage plant. An Australian Asparagaceae shrub with long narrow lance-shaped dark-green leaves arranged in loose tufts on slender woody stems. Reaches 2 m tall indoors and produces small lilac flowers on mature plants. Like most members of the cultivated colourful-foliage group it grows fast, propagates readily from cuttings, and stays vivid in bright filtered light.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 2 cm of mix has dried.
Humidity
40–60 %
Temperature
16–27 °C
Soil
Free-draining houseplant mix with peat or coir and perlite.
Origin
Specific origins vary by species — Cordyline from south-east Asia / Pacific, Plectranthus and Coleus from Africa and Asia, Iresine from the Americas.
Mature size
30 to 100 cm tall depending on species.

Overview

Cordyline stricta is grown for its colourful foliage rather than for flowers. An Australian Asparagaceae shrub with long narrow lance-shaped dark-green leaves arranged in loose tufts on slender woody stems. Reaches 2 m tall indoors and produces small lilac flowers on mature plants. Most colourful-foliage indoor plants tolerate considerable neglect, root rapidly from cuttings, and stay vivid in bright filtered light.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light keeps colour vivid.
  • Pinch growing tips regularly to encourage branching.
  • Water when the top of the mix dries; tolerates brief drought.
  • Refresh from cuttings every two years — older plants tend to bare at the base.

Common Problems

Pale washed-out colour signals insufficient light. Bare leggy stems are normal in old plants — restart from cuttings. Aphids cluster on growing tips and dislodge with a strong water spray.

Sources & further reading (2)
  1. encyclopedia — accessed 2026-04-29
  2. botanical-garden — accessed 2026-04-29

Frequently asked questions

How is C. stricta different from C. australis?

C. stricta has narrower more grass-like leaves on a more slender stem, while C. australis has broader sword-shaped leaves on a stouter trunk. C. stricta also stays more upright and clumping rather than developing the single thick trunk typical of C. australis.

Why is the colour fading?

Loss of leaf colour signals insufficient light — most colourful foliage plants need bright filtered light to keep pigmentation vivid. Move to a sunnier spot and the new growth comes back colourful within a few weeks.

Can I root cuttings in water?

Yes — cuttings of most colourful-foliage plants root readily in water. Cut a healthy stem section with at least two nodes and stand it in a glass of water. Roots typically emerge within 1 to 2 weeks.

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