Houseplants · Guide

Hoya wayetii

Hoya wayetii (Wayeti's Hoya) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: scott.zona from Miami, Florida, USA · CC BY 2.0
In short

Hoya wayetii, sold as Wayeti's Hoya, is a member of *Hoya*, a tropical Asian epiphytic vine genus in Apocynaceae. A Philippine Hoya with narrow lance-shaped fleshy leaves edged in a fine reddish line on slender pendulous stems. Produces dark red star flower clusters in summer. Like most Hoya it grows slowly and blooms on short woody peduncles that produce successive flushes of waxy star-shaped flowers.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 3 cm of mix has dried.
Humidity
50–70 %
Temperature
18–27 °C
Soil
Free-draining epiphytic mix of orchid bark, perlite, and a small fraction of coco coir.
Origin
Tropical and subtropical Asia and the Pacific, mostly epiphytic in forest canopies.
Mature size
Trailing or twining stems to 2 m or more on mature plants.

Overview

Hoya wayetii sits in Hoya, a hyperdiverse tropical Asian genus where new species are still being described almost every year from Borneo, the Philippines, and New Guinea. A Philippine Hoya with narrow lance-shaped fleshy leaves edged in a fine reddish line on slender pendulous stems. Produces dark red star flower clusters in summer. Hoya flowers form on persistent woody flower stalks (spurs) that bloom repeatedly across years — never cut a spur off after flowering, because the same spur produces every subsequent flush of blooms.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light keeps stems compact and supports flowering.
  • Free-draining epiphytic mix with orchid bark.
  • Water when the top 3 cm of mix is dry; reduce in winter.
  • Never cut off the woody flower spurs — they bloom repeatedly across years.

Common Problems

Failure to flower is most often insufficient bright light or repotting too frequently — Hoya bloom best when slightly root-bound. Yellow leaves are usually overwatering. Mealybugs cluster in leaf axils and on flower spurs.

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

Frequently asked questions

Why are the leaf edges red?

H. wayetii leaves carry a thin red marginal line that stays consistent across plants and intensifies in bright light. The pigmentation is genetic and is one of the easiest visual signals separating the species from other narrow-leaved Hoyas.

Why does my Hoya never bloom?

Hoya needs sustained bright filtered light, slightly root-bound conditions, and patience to flower — many plants take three to five years before producing their first bloom. Once flowering, the woody peduncle (flower spur) blooms repeatedly across years; cutting the spur off resets the cycle.

Should I repot my Hoya frequently?

No — Hoya prefer to stay slightly root-bound and resent root disturbance. Repot only every 3 to 5 years, sizing up just one pot diameter at a time. Frequent repotting checks growth and delays flowering.

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