Indoor plants that bloom all year round

Anthurium, Spathiphyllum, Kalanchoe, Bromeliads: some plants produce flowers for months without interruption. Discover the species that guarantee color at home all year round.
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Flowers at home all year round, without a garden and without effort: it’s possible with the right species. Some indoor plants bloom continuously for months, while others take turns throughout the seasons to ensure constant flowering. This selection brings together the champions of long-lasting blooms.

Anthurium: flowers 12 months a year

Anthurium is probably the indoor plant with the longest flowering period. Its waxy spathes — red, white, pink, or almost black — appear one after another throughout the year with enough light. Each flower lasts 6 to 8 weeks before being replaced by the next. The secret: bright indirect light, regular watering, and fertilizing every two weeks in spring and summer. Find all our varieties in the Anthurium collection.

Spathiphyllum: blooming even in the shade

Spathiphyllum (peace lily) is one of the few plants to produce flowers in low light. Its elegant white spathes appear several times a year, held above dark green, glossy foliage. As a bonus, it’s also one of the most effective plants for purifying indoor air. Discover our varieties in the Spathiphyllum collection and read our article plants that purify the air.

Kalanchoe: a compact burst of color

Kalanchoe produces dense clusters of small flowers in bright shades — red, pink, white — that last several weeks. As a succulent plant, it requires very little water and tolerates direct sunlight. To encourage reblooming, reduce the light exposure to 10 hours a day for 6 weeks: flower buds will naturally form. Our Kalanchoes come in decorative pots, ready to display or gift.

Bromeliads: spectacular and long-lasting blooms

Guzmania, Vriesea, and Bromelia produce a central inflorescence in fiery colors (red, orange, yellow, pink) that lasts 3 to 6 months. Yes, months. It’s a single bloom per rosette, but its exceptional duration makes up for it. After flowering, the plant sends out offsets that will take over. Find them in our Guzmania collection.

Organizing continuous flowering all year round

The trick to having flowers all the time: combine species with complementary flowering cycles. Anthurium and Spathiphyllum provide a steady flow all year. Cyclamen takes over from October to March. Schlumbergera (Christmas cactus) blooms in winter. Begonia Betulia and miniature roses cover spring and summer. Read our flowering calendar and our article the plant life cycle: dormancy, growth, and flowering to plan your rotation.

Care to maximize flowering

Three factors stimulate indoor flowering: light, fertilizer, and proper watering. The more bright light the plant receives (without burning), the more flowers it produces. A potassium-rich fertilizer every two weeks during the growth period encourages flower bud formation. And regular watering — not too much, not too little — keeps the plant in optimal condition. Check out our complete watering guide and our month-by-month care calendar.

Giving a flowering plant as a gift

A flowering plant is a gift that lasts much longer than a bouquet. An Anthurium blooms for months, a Kalanchoe in a decorative pot is ready to gift, and a Cyclamen brightens up the whole winter. Find our ready-to-gift plants collection and our guides giving a plant in winter and plants to give: symbolism and meaning.