Houseplants · Guide

Tradescantia mundula

Tradescantia mundula (Variegated Inch Plant) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: Heiti Paves — approximate match (genus-only) · CC BY-SA 3.0
In short

Tradescantia mundula, sold as Variegated Inch Plant, is a fast-growing Commelinaceae trailing herb popular for its colourful patterned leaves. Sold under names like 'Tricolor' or 'Variegata', this species has narrow green leaves striped with white and pink and a fast-trailing habit similar to T. fluminensis. Tradescantia roots from stem cuttings within a week, making it one of the easiest houseplants to share or rejuvenate when growth becomes leggy.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 2 cm of soil has dried.
Humidity
40–60 %
Temperature
13–24 °C
Soil
Standard houseplant mix with added perlite for drainage.
Origin
Tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas.
Mature size
Trails 30 to 90 cm; stem segments root readily.

Overview

Tradescantia mundula is one of about 75 Tradescantia species, all native to the Americas. Sold under names like 'Tricolor' or 'Variegata', this species has narrow green leaves striped with white and pink and a fast-trailing habit similar to T. fluminensis. The genus is named for the 17th-century English plant hunter John Tradescant the Younger.

Care Priorities

  • Bright indirect light keeps the colour vivid and growth compact.
  • Water when the top 2 cm of soil is dry; reduce in winter.
  • Pinch growing tips to encourage branching.
  • Refresh leggy plants by taking cuttings — old plants get bare-stemmed by year two.
  • Average humidity is fine; high humidity invites botrytis.

Common Problems

Pale or all-green foliage signals too little light. Mushy stem bases mean overwatering or botrytis from too-humid air. Grey fuzzy mould on leaves is botrytis — improve air circulation and remove affected stems.

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

Frequently asked questions

Why are the pink stripes fading on my Tricolor Tradescantia?

Pink colour is enhanced by very bright indirect light. In medium light, new leaves emerge mostly green and white. Increase light and prune off all-green reverted stems to keep the variegation strong.

Why is my Tradescantia getting leggy?

Legginess is usually a light problem. Move to a brighter spot (no direct midday sun) and pinch back the leggy tips — those cuttings root in water within a week and can be replanted into the original pot.

Why is my Tradescantia losing its colour?

Tradescantia variegation fades in low light. Move the plant to bright filtered light or a few hours of direct morning sun and pinch the growing tips; new growth usually returns to full colour within a month.

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