Houseplants · Guide

Goeppertia elegans

Goeppertia elegans (Elegant Calathea) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFact-checked
Photo: National Museum of Natural History · CC0
In short

Goeppertia elegans, sold under the common name Elegant Calathea, is a tropical Marantaceae understorey plant kept indoors for its patterned foliage. An older horticultural favourite with silver-veined elliptic leaves, often confused in the trade with G. ornata cultivars. Like most members of the genus, it prefers bright filtered light, evenly moist soil, and humidity above 60 percent — the leaves curl and brown at the edges when air is too dry or watering is uneven.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 1 to 2 cm of mix has dried, then water thoroughly.
Humidity
60–80 %
Temperature
18–27 °C
Soil
Peat-based, well-draining houseplant mix with extra perlite for aeration.
Toxicity
Non-toxic. Considered safe to grow around people. (humans) · Non-toxic to cats and dogs per ASPCA listings for the Marantaceae family. (pets)
Origin
Tropical forest understorey of Central and South America.
Mature size
30 to 90 cm tall depending on species, similar spread.

Overview

Goeppertia elegans was reclassified from Calathea into Goeppertia in 2012 along with most ornamental species in the genus. An older horticultural favourite with silver-veined elliptic leaves, often confused in the trade with G. ornata cultivars. The leaves fold upward at night — the prayer-plant nyctinasty that Marantaceae is named for.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light, never direct midday sun.
  • Evenly moist soil — neither soggy nor dry.
  • Humidity above 60 percent; group with other tropicals or use a pebble tray.
  • Water with rainwater or distilled water to avoid leaf-edge burn.
  • Divide every two to three years to refresh growth.

Common Problems

Crispy leaf edges almost always trace back to dry air, hard water, or inconsistent watering. Curled leaves point at thirst or low humidity. Yellow lower leaves with a sour-smelling pot mean root rot — repot into fresh free-draining mix.

Sources & further reading (3)
  1. encyclopedia — accessed 2026-04-28
  2. botanical-garden — accessed 2026-04-28
  3. toxicity-database — accessed 2026-04-28

Frequently asked questions

How is Goeppertia elegans different from G. ornata?

G. elegans has lighter silver-grey veining on a green ground, while G. ornata (now G. fasciata) shows pink or white pinstripes. The leaf shape is also more lance-like in G. elegans.

Why are my Goeppertia leaves browning at the edges?

Browning edges are usually caused by tap water (chlorine and fluoride accumulate in the leaf margins), low humidity, or dry root balls between waterings. Switch to rainwater or distilled water and aim for at least 60 percent humidity.

Should I mist this plant?

Misting raises humidity briefly but is not a substitute for ambient humidity above 60 percent. A humidifier or grouping with other plants is more effective and avoids fungal problems on the leaves.

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