Light
Bright, indirect
Ideal spot
Colocasia esculenta 'Taro' · Aroid
Bright, indirect
Ideal spot
2–3 times a week
In the growing season
Easy
Moderate grower
Toxic
Cats & dogs
Taro (Colocasia esculenta 'Taro') belongs to the Araceae family and is a easy houseplant to look after. This moderate grower plant is happiest in bright, indirect and reaches 60–200 cm indoors.
For watering, the rule is simple: keep evenly moist. In the growing season it needs water roughly every 3 days, dropping to every 12 days in winter. Use the watering calculator below to tune that rhythm to your pot size, light and household humidity.
Important: Taro is toxic to pets — keep it out of reach of cats, dogs and children.
Set your pot size, light and humidity — the calculator tunes the watering rhythm to your home.
Light at the spot
Humidity
Season
Water Taro
every 3 days
≈ 2–3 times a week · 10× per month
Let the top 2–3 cm dry and finger-check before watering again.
Taro prefers bright, indirect but will cope with medium, indirect. Harsh midday sun can scorch sensitive leaves, while too little light leads to leggy, sparse growth.
Keep Taro between 18–27 °C and aim for around 60% humidity (40% minimum). Below 12 °C it risks cold damage — keep it away from draughty windows and radiators.
18–27 °C
Not below 12 °C
60%
40% minimum
Keep evenly moist
Soil between waterings
Pot Taro in chunky, airy aroid mix (bark, perlite, coco coir). A drainage hole is essential — soggy, airless soil is the single most common way houseplants die.
Contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals. Chewing causes intense oral burning, drooling and swelling in cats, dogs and people. Keep out of reach.
The best ways to propagate Taro are stem cuttings, water-rooting nodes, division and air layering. Late spring and summer are ideal, when the plant is growing most actively.
The natural holes and splits in aroid leaves (fenestration) let wind and light pass through to lower leaves in the rainforest canopy.
In the growing season Taro needs watering 2–3 times a week (about every 3 days in a 16 cm pot at medium light), and much less in winter — roughly every 12 days. Use the watering calculator above to get the exact interval for your conditions.
Taro thrives in bright, indirect. A spot near a bright window out of harsh midday sun is ideal; give it a little more light in winter.
Taro is toxic to pets. Contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals. Chewing causes intense oral burning, drooling and swelling in cats, dogs and people. Keep out of reach.
The most common problem with Taro is root rot from overwatering. Check your watering and drainage first — most issues trace back to too much or too little water.
The best ways to propagate Taro are stem cuttings, water-rooting nodes, division and air layering. Late spring and summer are ideal, when the plant is growing most actively.
Indoors Taro typically reaches 60–200 cm. With the right light and occasional repotting it stays compact and bushy.
Care data last verified on 15 June 2026.
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