Plant profile beginner #peperomia#plant-profile
Peperomia for terrariums: the small ones that thrive
Not all peperomias work in terrariums. Here's which do, and how to keep them looking great for years.
By Mossroom Team · · 5 min read
Peperomia is a huge genus — over 1,000 species — and most don’t belong in terrariums. But the small, humidity-tolerant varieties are stunning additions.
Terrarium-suitable varieties
- P. prostrata (string of turtles) — small round patterned leaves, trailing
- P. caperata (ripple peperomia) — textured, comes in many colors
- P. obtusifolia (baby rubber plant) — small-leaved varieties only
- P. tetraphylla — tiny succulent-ish leaves, slow grower
Avoid for closed terrariums
- Large-leaved peperomias (P. obtusifolia ‘Variegata’ full size) — need air circulation
- Succulent peperomias — rot in high humidity
- Anything labeled “easy care houseplant” — usually means low humidity
Care basics
| Light | Medium indirect |
| Humidity | 60-80% (closed jar, but with air exchange) |
| Water | Let top of substrate dry between waterings |
| Difficulty | Beginner |
Key difference from other terrarium plants
Peperomia are slightly more drought-tolerant than fittonia or pilea. They have thick leaves that store water. This means:
- Don’t keep substrate soggy (will rot roots)
- Better in slightly open terrariums than fully sealed
- Pair with plants that don’t need 100% humidity
Propagation
Easy from leaf or stem cuttings:
- Cut a healthy stem with 3-4 leaves
- Let cut end callus for 24 hours
- Place on moist substrate
- Roots in 3-4 weeks
Common problems
- Drooping leaves: Underwatering OR overwatering. Check soil.
- Crispy edges: Low humidity. Increase misting or close jar.
- Black spots: Too wet. Improve drainage, air exchange.
- Leggy growth: Not enough light. Move to brighter spot.
Where to buy: Most nurseries carry small peperomias. Etsy for rarer varieties.