Houseplants · Guide

Epipremnum aureum

Epipremnum aureum 'N'Joy' Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: Joydeep · CC BY-SA 3.0
In short

Epipremnum aureum 'N'Joy' is a cultivar of pothos, a French Polynesian aroid widely naturalised across the wet tropics. A relatively recent pothos cultivar (2010s) with smaller leaves than typical pothos and crisp white-and-green sectoral variegation rather than the marbled pattern of older cultivars. Like all pothos cultivars it climbs in the wild via aerial roots, tolerates lower light than most variegated houseplants, and propagates almost trivially from stem cuttings.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 3 cm of mix has dried.
Humidity
40–70 %
Temperature
18–27 °C
Soil
Free-draining houseplant mix with perlite or bark for aeration.
Origin
French Polynesia (Mo'orea) — wild origin only, although pothos has naturalised across the wet tropics.
Mature size
Vining stems to 3 m or more on indoor specimens with support.

Overview

Epipremnum aureum is endemic to French Polynesia (specifically Mo'orea) but has naturalised across the wet tropics, sometimes invasively. A relatively recent pothos cultivar (2010s) with smaller leaves than typical pothos and crisp white-and-green sectoral variegation rather than the marbled pattern of older cultivars. The species exists in the wild only as a juvenile vine — adult flowering plants are unknown outside cultivation, where they require a moss pole and several years to develop the larger fenestrated mature foliage.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light intensifies the variegation.
  • Free-draining mix; pothos tolerates a wide range of substrate.
  • Water when the top 3 cm of mix is dry; pothos tolerates extended drought.
  • Pinch growing tips to encourage branching.

Common Problems

Reverting (loss of variegation) signals insufficient light — move to a brighter spot and prune away all-green shoots. Yellow leaves are usually overwatering. Pale weak growth on long vines is often nutrient depletion; refresh the upper potting mix.

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

Frequently asked questions

Why are 'N'Joy' leaves so small?

N'Joy is a sport-mutation cultivar with permanently smaller, more compact leaves than the species form — typically 5 to 8 cm long compared to 10 to 15 cm in plain pothos. The compactness combined with the bold sectoral variegation makes the cultivar particularly photogenic in close-up shots.

Will pothos tolerate low light?

Plain green pothos tolerates surprisingly low light, but variegated cultivars need bright filtered light to keep the cream or yellow patches stable. In dim conditions variegated cultivars revert toward solid green; once a shoot reverts it stays green permanently.

Can I root pothos in water?

Yes — pothos is one of the easiest plants to root in water. Cut a healthy section with at least two nodes, place in a glass of water, and roots typically emerge within two weeks. Pot up in mix once roots reach 3 to 5 cm long.

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