Plant pairings for low-light apartments
No south-facing window? No problem. Five beautiful plant combinations that thrive in dim conditions.
If your apartment has north-facing windows or just isn’t bright, you can still build gorgeous terrariums. Here are five plant combinations designed for low light.
Combination 1: “Forest floor”
- Cushion moss (ground cover)
- Selaginella kraussiana (low texture)
- Small button fern (height)
A classic. All three thrive in low light and high humidity. Looks like a tiny forest.
Combination 2: “Color in the dark”
- Fittonia ‘Red Anne’ (color)
- Fittonia ‘White Anne’ (more color)
- Sheet moss (ground cover)
Fittonias are some of the most colorful low-light plants. Pair two varieties for contrast, fill in with moss.
Combination 3: “Soft and trailing”
- Pilea glauca (cascading)
- Selaginella (ground cover)
- Small maidenhair fern (delicate height)
Textural contrast: tiny round leaves, moss-like spikes, and feathery fronds.
Combination 4: “All green, all textures”
- Pilea glauca (small round leaves)
- Small fern (feathery)
- Cushion moss (puffy)
- Sheet moss (flat)
Same color, four different textures. Looks sophisticated and natural.
Combination 5: “Succulents? No — but kinda”
- Small peperomia (thick leaves)
- Pilea (round leaves)
- Sheet moss (green ground cover)
For people who like the succulent look but need humidity-tolerant plants.
Light requirements recap
All plants above tolerate:
- North windows
- 3-5 feet from east/west windows
- Rooms with only overhead lighting (with grow light supplement)
When to add a grow light
If your plants are getting leggy (stretching toward light), it’s time for a grow light. For low-light setups:
- Small full-spectrum LED (15-25W equivalent)
- 8-12 inches above the terrarium
- 8-10 hours per day
- Use a smart plug with timer
Cost: $15-30, lasts years.
The full low-light plant list
- Fittonia (any variety)
- Pilea glauca
- Selaginella (most varieties)
- Small ferns (button, lemon button, holly)
- Sheet moss, cushion moss
- Small peperomias (with monitoring)
Browse all plant profiles for more details on each.