Artificial Lighting for Indoor Plants | RHS Advice

Discover how to use artificial lighting to grow healthy houseplants. Our beginners guide covers setup, tips, and plant care essentials.

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Toegevoegd op

17 maart 2026

Vak & domein

life-health · plants-photosynthesis

Schooljaar

Groep 7–Klas 4

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Article

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Artificial Lighting for Indoor Plants

  • Purpose: Artificial lighting supplements natural light for winter growth, starting seedlings early, illuminating dark areas, or creating decorative indoor displays.
  • Recommended Equipment:
    • T5 High Output (HO) Fluorescent Tubes: The current top choice for home use. They are long-lasting (~20,000 hours), inexpensive, emit little heat, and provide sufficient intensity for growth and flowering.
    • LEDs: Highly energy-efficient and long-lasting with low operating temperatures, though often more expensive to install and may require specialist light meters.
    • Avoid: Standard domestic bulbs (insufficient intensity) and HID lights (excessive heat requiring complex extraction).
  • Light Spectrum:
    • Blue light: Stimulates growth and keeps seedlings compact.
    • Red light: Important for growth and flower production.
    • Strategy: Use a combination of red and blue tubes (or Kelvin-rated tubes) to balance development.
  • Operational Guidelines:
    • Duration: Typically 16 hours per day.
    • Setup: Reflectors are recommended to direct light downward; a basic setup often involves suspending lights approximately 60cm above plants.
    • Efficiency: Maximize natural daylight first and only use artificial systems when necessary.
  • Monitoring Plant Health:
    • Ideal: Mid-green foliage.
    • Too much light: Bleached appearance, stunted growth, or yellow-green foliage. Remedy by moving lights further away, reducing the number of tubes, or shortening the duration.
    • Too little light: Poor growth and dark green foliage. Remedy by moving plants closer to lights or increasing the duration/number of tubes.
    • Imbalanced Spectrum: Too much blue causes stunted, thick-stemmed plants; too much red causes tall, spindly growth.

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