Product Details
Highlights
Echeveria 'Lotus' is a graceful and symmetrical succulent named for its resemblance to a blooming lotus flower. Its plump, spoon-shaped leaves form tight, overlapping rosettes in a soft blue-green hue, often tinged with blush pink or lilac at the edges under sun stress. Compact and elegant, this variety adds a calming, sculptural element to containers, windowsills, or succulent arrangements. Like most Echeverias, it thrives in bright, indirect light with excellent drainage and infrequent watering. Easy to care for and visually soothing, 'Lotus' is perfect for both beginner growers and design-focused collectors seeking serene beauty in their plant displays.
Echeveria need bright sunlight to maintain their colors and compact rosette form. They will not survive a hard frost, but if there is a risk of freezing temperatures they can be brought indoors to grow on a sunny window sill or under a grow light.
Like most succulents, they need great drainage and infrequent water to prevent rot. Pick containers with drainage holes and use well-draining cactus and succulent soil with 50% to 70% mineral grit such as coarse sand, pumice, or perlite. Water deeply enough for water to run out the drainage hole, then wait for the soil to fully dry before watering again.
Also known as "Mexican Hens & Chicks", Echeveria can produce new offsets or "chicks" around the base of the mother plant. These chicks can be left to form a tidy cluster or removed and transplanted. Additionally, Echeveria can be propagated from stem cuttings or mature leaves. Look to our Succulent Cuttings Guide for more information.
Product Size
2.0" Pot
Current Primary Color
Blue-Green
Bloom Color
Pink Bloom
Grow Zone (Hardiness)
Zone 10 (30F)
Recommended Light Conditions
Bright Indoor Light
Recommended Light Conditions
Filtered / Partial Sun
Maximum Height
3"-5"
Maximum Rosette Size
5"-6"
Growth Habit / Shape
Rosette
Special Characteristic
Easy to Propagate
Special Characteristic
Pet Safe

THIS PLANT IS HARDY IN ZONES 10+
WHAT IS MY HARDINESS ZONE?
Videos
Echeveria soft succulents, sometimes known as Mexican Hens and...