Indoor Plants

15 Holiday-Inspired Indoor Plant Ideas

Festive holiday plants embrace the spirit of the season and enrich our connection with nature, bringing cheer from the winter landscape indoors. With so many beautiful evergreens, seasonal blooms, and natural accessories, the creative potential is endless. 

Indoor plant designs are the perfect opportunity to highlight jewels of the winter garden and to tailor them to any holiday celebration. From simple to ornate, achieve color and texture in holiday containers with a foundation of rich evergreens and winter bloomers that brighten shorter days. You can also incorporate natural embellishments like fruits, pinecones, birch poles, and red berries among evergreen boughs in arrangements. Fill gaps with boxwood, fir, and magnolia cuttings. Then, let houseplants join the party by decorating them with a holiday twist.

Here, we’ll explore inspiring holiday indoor plant ideas. Cheers to enjoying the season naturally!

Holiday Amaryllis

Close-up of a beautiful flowering plant in a glass vase surrounded by Christmas decorations, featuring vertical thick green stems ending with large flowers featuring velvety red petals and prominent stamens.Close-up of a beautiful flowering plant in a glass vase surrounded by Christmas decorations, featuring vertical thick green stems ending with large flowers featuring velvety red petals and prominent stamens.
Bold blooms in vibrant colors brighten any winter space beautifully.

Amaryllis bulbs create a beautiful potted plant display that spans the weeks of the holiday season. With large, bold blooms in various colors, there’s one for every display. Amaryllis ‘Red Lion’ is bright red, ‘Christmas Star’ has red edges filled with white, ‘White Christmas’ is pure white, and ‘Candy Cane’ has striped petals of red and white.

Amaryllis stands alone as a stately beauty. Arrange multiple bulbs in a glass bowl for a luxe look, and add moss to soften the terrarium aesthetic. Place pebbles and fill with shallow water so that only the very bottom of the bulb is submerged (too much water coverage causes rot). Potted in soil, leave ⅓ of the bulb exposed above the soil line.

Amaryllis grow and bloom quickly – within four to six weeks of forcing indoors. They bloom once annually, and while we associate them with the holidays, their natural bloom time is in late spring to early summer.

Christmas Cactus

A close-up of a Schlumbergera bridgesii plant in a white ceramic bowl set against the backdrop of a Christmas tree, featuring long green stems with smooth, slightly scalloped segments and vibrant pink, tubular star-shaped flowers at the tips, creating a festive and charming display.A close-up of a Schlumbergera bridgesii plant in a white ceramic bowl set against the backdrop of a Christmas tree, featuring long green stems with smooth, slightly scalloped segments and vibrant pink, tubular star-shaped flowers at the tips, creating a festive and charming display.
Colorful blooms brighten winter, adding tropical charm to any home.

Christmas cactus is easy to care for and blooms for four to six weeks in the winter. Buds emerge along branches of succulent, segmented leaves in late fall and become billowy blooms in winter. Flowers in shades of pink, red, white, salmon, purple, and bicolor embellish the display.

Christmas cactus hails from Brazilian rainforests and lends a tropical accent along with holiday counterparts poinsettia and Norfolk pine. Christmas cactus is a long-lived houseplant—often lasting generations—providing all-season interest that spans beyond the holidays. You can also move them outdoors in warm weather or grow them indoors year-round.

Potted Fir Ensemble

Close-up of Potted Fir Ensemble with dense, dark green needles and evenly spaced branches in white pots near a wooden decorative fireplace in a bright white room.Close-up of Potted Fir Ensemble with dense, dark green needles and evenly spaced branches in white pots near a wooden decorative fireplace in a bright white room.
A small evergreen adds festive charm and cozy warmth indoors.

Fir trees are quintessential holiday plants. From their Christmas tree shape to their thick, dark needles and sugary pine fragrance, even a small, singular specimen evokes festive charm. In a bundle of ranging sizes, they essentially create a mini-forest indoors, offering a soothing ambiance on cold days and nights.

Look to Fraser, noble, white, and balsam species for the hallmark holiday aesthetic. As a bonus, these are also North American native trees. Potted evergreens can move to the landscape after the indoor festivities wind down. 

Choose evergreen trees suited to your hardiness zone to become handsome landscape specimens. Firs prefer rich, well-draining soils for best growth.

Simple Norfolk Island Pine

Araucaria heterophyllaAraucaria heterophylla
Soft, symmetrical evergreen needles bring a lush, year-round charm.

Norfolk Island pines feature soft, symmetrical evergreen needles in a loose pyramidal shape for a lush look any time of year. Norfolk Island pine is not a true pine but a different conifer native to the subtropical South Pacific. It thrives as an indoor plant, or it can move outdoors during warmer months, bringing joy beyond the holidays.

Decorate with strands of tiny lights for a festive addition. If your specimen is small, use it as a tabletop decoration. Norfolk Island pine is slow-growing and can remain dwarfed as a houseplant, usually three to six feet tall – perfect for a holiday container.

Elegant Orchid

A close-up of a potted flowering plant with glossy green leaves, a tall stem, and a cluster of soft pink blooms with rounded petals and vibrant magenta centers, set against the warm glow of a Christmas tree.
A close-up of a potted flowering plant with glossy green leaves, a tall stem, and a cluster of soft pink blooms with rounded petals and vibrant magenta centers, set against the warm glow of a Christmas tree.
These stunning flowers bring tenderness and classic elegance to your home.

A classic addition to the interiorscape, orchids add an elegant touch to the season. Opt for a readily available Phalaenopsis variety for a stunning, reliable orchid. Phalaenopsis stems produce numerous large, bright blooms at once.

Orchids typically lend themselves to formal and contemporary designs. For a bright display, arrange a few orchids in complementary color schemes among natural accents like branches, seed pods, and moss. Scarlet, rosy pink, bronze-peach, and white blooms are beautiful holiday options.

Rustic Paperwhite Narcissus

A close-up of blooming daffodils with slender green stems and long, narrow leaves, topped with small, double white flowers with bright yellow centers growing on a decorative log indoors.A close-up of blooming daffodils with slender green stems and long, narrow leaves, topped with small, double white flowers with bright yellow centers growing on a decorative log indoors.
Charming little flowers require minimal effort to bring joy.

Paperwhites bring a bouquet of cheer, especially those with a light, sweet fragrance like ‘Inbal,’ ‘Ariel,’ and ‘Nir.’ Other varieties can have acrid notes and may be less pleasing up close, though just as beautiful in the landscape.

In crisp white, paperwhites are small bulbs that make the most significant impact planted in numbers. Force them indoors where the easy growers bloom as quickly as two to three weeks after planting. Forced bulbs root in a variety of vessels, from a shallow dish of pebbles and water to a bulb vase to a shallow log planter. This novel twist on potted bulbs combines naturalistic elements with a contemporary style of a single row of blooms.

Make sure bulbs are pre-cooled, either from the grower or from time in the refrigerator. Once new growth appears, move them to a warmer, brighter spot to initiate budding and hasten flowering.

Poinsettia and Evergreens

A close-up of a Christmas arrangement of brightly coloured plants with red bracts surrounding tiny yellow and green clusters of flowers, surrounded by fresh fir branches, branches with red berries and red hearts woven from branches.A close-up of a Christmas arrangement of brightly coloured plants with red bracts surrounding tiny yellow and green clusters of flowers, surrounded by fresh fir branches, branches with red berries and red hearts woven from branches.
Bright blooms and fresh greens create a festive scene.

Around the globe, we associate poinsettia plants with the holiday season. With merry names like ‘Jingle Bells,’ ‘Winter Rose,’ and ‘Plum Pudding,’ the colorful varieties we celebrate today are bred in various colors and patterns, from bright red to white to pink, and even blotched coloration.

Usher in the season with welcoming containers of poinsettias, evergreen boughs, and accessories. Cuttings from conifers, hollies, eucalyptus, magnolia, and boxwood also make a bold statement in an indoor arrangement.  

Arrange live greens around vibrant poinsettias with the same rule of thumb as potted containers—a “thriller,” or taller focal point, “filler” to create an abundant look, and “spillers” to overflow the pot. Branches of interesting form or color can also become the focal point among filler evergreen boughs and spilling clippings of eucalyptus and boxwood. Finally, add natural elements like pinecones and berries to accent the display. 

Rosemary Tree

Close-up of a potted rosemary plant adorned with a bright yellow star on top and wrapped in tinsel, featuring thin upright stems with narrow green needle-like leaves, resembling a miniature Christmas tree on a wooden table.
Close-up of a potted rosemary plant adorned with a bright yellow star on top and wrapped in tinsel, featuring thin upright stems with narrow green needle-like leaves, resembling a miniature Christmas tree on a wooden table.
Fragrant herbs bring warmth and flavor to winter spaces.

Rosemary brings form and fragrance to invigorate the winter home. Select a rosemary specimen already pruned into conical or standard tree forms for a unique twist on a container, or plant a classic upright or trailing variety in a decorative pot.

Enjoy the lemony-camphor scent of this iconic Mediterranean plant throughout the season, then add flavor to holiday dishes with fresh herb clippings. Grow rosemary indoors year-round or move it to the garden after winter to let it thrive in summer’s sun and warmth. Where not hardy, overwinter it in a pot inside or in an unheated, sheltered space.

Tillandsia Ornaments

A close-up of a number of hanging glass rounded terrariums containing incredible Tillandsia plants featuring spiky, silvery-green leaves radiating outward from a central base.A close-up of a number of hanging glass rounded terrariums containing incredible Tillandsia plants featuring spiky, silvery-green leaves radiating outward from a central base.
Create a cozy atmosphere with glass terrariums filled with silvery-green air plants.

Tillandsia species are fine-leaved, silvery-green air plants that absorb water and nutrients epiphytically. The fun tropical houseplants make unique ornaments to hang or gift. Depending on the species, their leaves grow spiky and upright or long and curled.

Airplants need little more than bright light and occasional water to flourish. An east-facing window is ideal. Tillandsia also appreciates a good long soak every week or two to absorb moisture. They do well resting on a piece of driftwood and in terrariums. 

Succulents and Live Greens

The wooden table is decorated for Christmas in an old-fashioned style, characterized by golden ornate candlesticks, dishes, vases with branches of fresh fir trees and clay pots with succulents.The wooden table is decorated for Christmas in an old-fashioned style, characterized by golden ornate candlesticks, dishes, vases with branches of fresh fir trees and clay pots with succulents.
Bring color and texture to your Christmas table decoration.

Succulents such as sedums, echeverias, and crassulas offer color and textural contrast to make a creative display. With varying scale and form, from spiky to flat-leaved to trailing, and with thick, fleshy foliage, succulents shine in a shallow bowl, pot, or terrarium.

Here, the tablescape features live greens—clipped evergreen boughs in vessels at varying heights. The nestled succulents balance the scheme. Use twigs (red twig dogwood would be gorgeous) to add height and continue the natural theme. Fruits like apples and citrus would add to the arraignment.

Nestled Cyclamen

Close-up of a potted arrangement with blooming white Cyclamen and white Primrose flowers on a wooden table, surrounded by festive Christmas decorations.
Close-up of a potted arrangement with blooming white Cyclamen and white Primrose flowers on a wooden table, surrounded by festive Christmas decorations.
Mottled leaves and vibrant white blooms brighten the winter arrangement.

Cyclamen, with mottled, heart-shaped leaves, offer a sweet choice of white, pink, purple, red, or bicolor flowers for winter. Cyclamen blooms from November through April, giving months of color and active growing until summer dormancy.

Hardy cyclamen provide a profusion of upright blooms, rising in a bunch above deep green leaves. Cyclamen hederifolium and Cyclamen coum are smaller relatives of the florist’s cyclamen (C. persicum). C. hederifolium is the hardiest and easiest to grow, with fragrant pink blooms in October and November, while C. coum blooms mid-to-late winter with a profusion of pink-purple flowers.

Tucking cyclamen into a pot with other blooms, greenery, and ornaments is an easy alternative to direct-planting seasonal growers. Nestle them into a basket, wooden crate, galvanized bucket, or wooden trough, and keep them in their nursery pots for easy watering. Then, use moss or greenery to conceal the individual pots.

Here, cyclamen pairs with primrose and white blossoms among a rosette of dark, ruffled leaves. With a sweet, subtle fragrance and low-growing habit, primrose makes excellent border plantings in garden beds, along walkways, and in container arrangements. 

Cyclamen and primrose can live indoors until temperatures warm in the spring. The portable potted versions make lovely host gifts.

Festive ZZ

Close-up of a large, glossy, dark green houseplant with thick, upright stems and shiny, oval-shaped leaves in a large paper-wrapped Christmas pot, decorated with red and yellow Christmas tree decorations among a stack of gifts wrapped in craft paper.Close-up of a large, glossy, dark green houseplant with thick, upright stems and shiny, oval-shaped leaves in a large paper-wrapped Christmas pot, decorated with red and yellow Christmas tree decorations among a stack of gifts wrapped in craft paper.
With minimal care, it thrives and beautifies in any space.

The ZZ, or Zuzu plant, carries a structural form with sturdy, slightly arching stems. Its architectural stems hold thick, waxy leaves in dark olive, black, or variegated.

ZZ is exceedingly low maintenance; it requires little water and can also improve air quality by filtering volatile compounds. ZZ is relatively slow-growing and seldom needs repotting.

Zuzu tolerates low to bright, indirect light and grows well in fluorescent lighting – perfect for the home or office. Here, little ornaments don the arching branches, perfect for tabletop decor or to gift.

Themed Terrarium

Close-up of a florarium featuring a composition of succulents, stones, sand, and a decorative deer figurine, all illuminated by a twinkling garland.
Close-up of a florarium featuring a composition of succulents, stones, sand, and a decorative deer figurine, all illuminated by a twinkling garland.
Create a cozy and creative composition with mosses, and succulents.

For a unique indoor composition, try a seasonal take on a terrarium. Terraria bring boundless creativity in combination and form and a chance to highlight details. They also make for a fun activity on a chilly day for adults and kids alike.

Opt for ferns and mosses in contrasting heights and textures on a micro-scale. Additionally, include natural elements like lotus pods, pine cones, red berries, and budded branches from the garden. Mini succulents offer a low-moisture, low-maintenance arrangement with varied shapes and colors.

Lemon Cypress Grinch

Close-up of a small plant with vibrant yellow-green foliage and dense, needle-like leaves, wrapped in a red ribbon and topped with a red glass ornament, placed in a metal pot in a garden.
Close-up of a small plant with vibrant yellow-green foliage and dense, needle-like leaves, wrapped in a red ribbon and topped with a red glass ornament, placed in a metal pot in a garden.
Bright yellow needles and fresh scent brighten any space.

Lemon cypress adds a pop to the houseplant jungle with its fine, bright yellow needles and conical form. Fresh, lemony-scented needles complement its striking color. To get a little Grinch-y, lemon cypress tied into a Grinch hat is a whimsical twist.

I like an unfettered lemon cypress so it can brighten in lime green with full, aromatic stems. A tidy evergreen with a tight, uniform habit, lemon cypress is also available in tall columnar or dwarf pyramidal varieties. Dwarf varieties like ‘Gold Crest Wilma’ are well-suited for containers and reach only three feet.

Aloe Holiday

Close-up of a potted succulent with thick, dark green leaves speckled with white spots, arranged in a rosette pattern, topped with red glass Christmas balls and a red star, set against a pink background.
Close-up of a potted succulent with thick, dark green leaves speckled with white spots, arranged in a rosette pattern, topped with red glass Christmas balls and a red star, set against a pink background.
Succulents with vibrant leaves thrive with minimal care and sunlight.

Say “aloe” to the season with a funky decorated indoor succulent. Aloes have spiny, juice-filled leaves with soothing gel. The southern African, Mediterranean-climate natives do best without much attention and minimal water.

Gasteria (Gasteria spp.) resembles aloe and is a group of succulents with rosettes of bladed leaves in dark green with colorful spots and striations. Gasteraloe hybrids between gasteria and aloe present the best of both species in thick, gelled, colorful structural leaves.

These succulents seldom need pot changes and do well in low-quality, well-draining soils. Warm temperatures and drying out between watering are optimal. They prefer sunny spots indoors and out.

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