Window sill plants — mini indoor garden in just a few centimeters
38 products
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Peperomia 'Napoli Nights' H15 cm | Pot Ø11 cmPeperomia 'Napoli Nights' H15 cm | Pot Ø11 cm- Regular price
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€13,95 - Regular price
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- Sale price
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€13,95
Quick view
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Peperomia 'Rana Verde' — H15 cm | Pot Ø11 cmPeperomia 'Rana Verde' — H15 cm | Pot Ø11 cm- Regular price
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€13,95 - Regular price
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- Sale price
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€13,95
Quick view
The windowsill is the most underestimated spot in an apartment. A few centimeters deep, direct natural light, and a stable temperature — it’s the ideal location for compact plants that need sun. With the right species, a kitchen, living room, or bedroom windowsill becomes a productive and decorative mini indoor garden without taking up a single centimeter of floor space.
Peperomia and Pilea: the queens of the windowsill
Peperomia (Obtipan, Rana Verde, Rosso, Hope, Napoli Nights, Angulata) in 11 cm pot are made for the windowsill: compact, light, graphic, and they love the bright indirect light provided by an east- or west-facing window. The Pilea peperomioides with its perfectly round leaves has become a windowsill classic thanks to social media. The variegated Pilea Mojito and the bright Pilea Sugar add variety. The miniature Pilea depressa fills a tiny corner. Lined up in a row, five or six different Peperomia and Pilea create a compact and varied collection on a single windowsill.
Succulents and Crassula: full sun
A south-facing windowsill is too sunny for most tropical plants — but it’s a paradise for succulents. The Crassula Tenelli in 11 cm pot and Aloe vera thrive in full sun with minimal watering. The Senecio herreianus (string of pearls) elegantly cascades from the windowsill with its green bead-like stems. The Hatiora (coral cactus) with its segmented stems forms a small original bush. These plants store water in their leaves and tolerate neglect — perfect for a living room windowsill that isn’t checked every day. The right balance between light and humidity determines which succulents to place in the south (full sun) and which to prefer in the east (soft morning light).
Carnivores: the show in the sun
Dionaea muscipula (Venus flytrap) and Drosera (sundews) absolutely need direct light — the windowsill is their only viable spot in an apartment. Placed side by side, they catch gnats attracted by the light and offer a constant show. Carnivorous plants require non-calcareous water (rainwater or filtered) and a substrate that is always moist — a kitchen windowsill near the sink is the perfect spot to water them effortlessly.
Herbs: from windowsill to plate
The kitchen windowsill is the traditional spot for herbs. The compact Calamondin (indoor orange tree) brings miniature edible citrus fruits and a scent of orange blossom. Lavender (Lavandula Hidcote Blue) perfumes the air and keeps mosquitoes away in summer. The rosemary on stem is both aromatic and decorative. The Set of 4 herbs covers culinary basics in one purchase — fruit and aromatic plants combine culinary usefulness and ornamental greenery.
Mini jars and Tillandsia: the narrow windowsill
When the windowsill is less than 10 cm deep, Clusia in jars (Samoa, Victoria) and glass tubes are the only formats that fit. The Berlin jar plant mix at 7 cm diameter fits between the handle and the window edge. Tillandsia (air plants) don’t even need a pot — placed directly on the windowsill or on a small stand, they occupy just a few square centimeters. The Set of 5 Tillandsia allows you to spread a mini jungle along the entire length of the windowsill. Small indoor plants gather the most compact formats in the catalog.
Trailing from the windowsill: the plant cascade
A high windowsill is the perfect spot for trailing plants that cascade down the wall. Callisia (Repens, Rosato, Turtle) with their small colorful leaves form a dense green curtain. The variegated Tradescantia Sweetness cascades elegantly. The Chlorophytum Ocean (spider plant) produces trailing stolons that carry mini plants suspended in midair — a natural show in front of the window. The Begonia maculata with its silver spots is the most photogenic on a windowsill, its stems gently cascading along the ledge — trailing plants are designed for this type of high placement.

