FAQ – by Plant Circle
The Ultimate Guide to Identifying Philodendrons: How to Tell Your Pink Princess from Your White Knight
If you've ever stood in a plant shop (or scrolled through our collection) feeling completely overwhelmed by the sheer number of philodendron varieties, you're not alone. With over 450 species and countless hybrids, philodendrons are one of the most diverse and beloved houseplant families – and honestly? They can be confusing as hell to tell apart.But here's the thing: once you know what to look for, identifying philodendrons becomes way easier. Whether you're trying to figure out if that cutting you got from a friend is actually a Pink Princess or just a very optimistic Birkin, this guide will help you become a philodendron identification pro.What Actually Makes a Philodendron a Philodendron?Before we dive into specific varieties, let's talk about what all philodendrons have in common. Philodendrons are part of the Araceae family (same as Monstera, Anthurium, and Alocasia), and they're native to the tropical Americas. The name literally means "tree-loving" in Greek, which makes sense because most species are climbers or epiphytes in their natural habitat.Key philodendron characteristics:
Cataphylls: These are protective sheaths that cover new leaves as they emerge. They're usually papery and fall off as the leaf matures – a telltale philodendron trait.
Aerial roots: Most philodendrons produce aerial roots along their stems, especially climbing varieties.
Leaf shape diversity: From heart-shaped to deeply lobed, philodendron leaves come in wild variety.
Growth habit: They're either climbers (vining types) or self-heading (upright, non-vining types).
Climbing vs. Self-Heading: The Two Main Growth TypesUnderstanding whether your philodendron is a climber or self-heading is the first step in identification.Climbing Philodendrons (Vining Types)These produce long vines and need support to grow upward. In nature, they climb trees using aerial roots. Examples include Philodendron hederaceum (heartleaf), Pink Princess, White Knight, and Brasil. They typically have smaller leaves when juvenile that get larger as they climb.Self-Heading Philodendrons (Upright Types)These grow in a rosette pattern from a central point without vining. Examples include Birkin, Black Cardinal, Prince of Orange, Imperial Green, and Moonlight. They tend to be more compact and bushier.The Variegated Royalty: Pink Princess, White Knight, White Wizard & Caramel MarbleThese are probably the most commonly confused philodendrons because they're all variegated climbing types. Here's how to tell them apart:Philodendron Pink PrincessKey identifiers:
Pink variegation on dark green to burgundy leaves
Variegation appears in splashes, sectors, or half-moon patterns
New leaves emerge burgundy-brown before developing pink
Stems are often burgundy or dark green
Leaf shape: elongated heart shape with pointed tips
Shop Pink Princess →Philodendron White KnightKey identifiers:
White to cream variegation on dark green leaves
Burgundy to dark red stems and petioles (this is the giveaway!)
New leaves emerge with reddish cataphylls
Variegation tends to be more sectoral than splashy
Leaf undersides often have burgundy tones
Shop White Knight →Philodendron White WizardKey identifiers:
White variegation on green leaves (similar to White Knight)
GREEN stems and petioles (this is how you tell it from White Knight!)
Often more stable variegation than White Knight
Variegation can be speckled, sectoral, or marbled
Generally lighter green base color than White Knight
Pro tip: If the stems are burgundy, it's White Knight. If they're green, it's White Wizard. That's literally the main difference.Shop White Wizard →Philodendron Caramel MarbleKey identifiers:
Cream, yellow, and pink variegation (not pure white or hot pink)
Marbled, swirled pattern rather than sectoral blocks
New leaves emerge peachy-orange before maturing
Base color is lighter green than Pink Princess
The variegation has a softer, more pastel quality
Shop Caramel Marble →The Self-Heading Squad: Birkin, Black Cardinal, Prince of Orange & MoonlightThese upright philodendrons are easier to tell apart because they have very distinct coloring and leaf patterns.Philodendron BirkinKey identifiers:
White pinstripe variegation on dark green leaves
Variegation appears as thin lines radiating from the midrib
Compact, upright growth habit
New leaves emerge solid green, develop stripes as they mature
Can revert to solid green (it's a sport of Philodendron 'Rojo Congo')
Fun fact: Birkin is actually unstable and can produce leaves that are half-reverted, creating cool patterns.Shop Birkin →Philodendron Black CardinalKey identifiers:
Deep burgundy to almost black new leaves
Mature leaves turn dark green with burgundy undersides
Compact, self-heading rosette growth
Leaves are broad and oval-shaped
No variegation – just moody, dark vibes
Shop Black Cardinal →Philodendron Prince of OrangeKey identifiers:
New leaves emerge bright orange to peachy-coral
Mature leaves fade to lime green, then dark green
Self-heading, compact growth
Creates a gradient effect with different-aged leaves
No variegation – the color change is natural maturation
Shop Prince of Orange →Philodendron MoonlightKey identifiers:
New leaves emerge bright neon yellow-green
Mature leaves are lime to medium green
Self-heading, upright growth
Leaves are more elongated than Prince of Orange
The whole plant glows in bright light (hence "Moonlight")
How to tell Moonlight from Prince of Orange: Moonlight is yellow-green, Prince of Orange is peachy-orange. Easy!Shop Moonlight →The Heartleaf Family: Hederaceum VarietiesPhilodendron hederaceum (also called scandens or heartleaf philodendron) is THE classic trailing philodendron. It has several popular varieties:Standard Green HeartleafSolid green, heart-shaped leaves on long trailing vines. This is the OG, the classic, the plant your grandma probably had.Philodendron BrasilSame as standard heartleaf but with yellow-lime variegation down the center of each leaf. The variegation creates a stripe pattern that's super distinctive.Philodendron Hederaceum VariegataKey identifiers:
White to cream variegation (not yellow like Brasil)
Variegation is more random and marbled
Can have half-moon or sectoral variegation
Much rarer and more expensive than Brasil
Shop Hederaceum Variegata →The Velvet-Leaved Beauties: Gloriosum, Verrucosum & GigasThese philodendrons are known for their velvety leaf texture and stunning veining. They're crawlers rather than climbers.Philodendron GloriosumKey identifiers:
Large, heart-shaped velvety leaves
Prominent white or pink veining
Crawling growth habit (grows horizontally along the ground)
Leaves can get HUGE (30-90cm in ideal conditions)
Dark form has deeper green leaves with more contrast
Shop Gloriosum Dark Form →Philodendron VerrucosumKey identifiers:
Velvety leaves with iridescent sheen
Fuzzy, hairy petioles (stems) – this is the giveaway!
Climbing growth habit (unlike Gloriosum)
Leaves have prominent pale veining
Can have reddish undersides
How to tell from Gloriosum: Verrucosum climbs and has fuzzy stems. Gloriosum crawls and has smooth stems.Shop Verrucosum →Philodendron GigasKey identifiers:
Copper-toned new leaves that mature to dark green
Velvety texture similar to Gloriosum
Climbing growth habit
Leaves are more elongated than Gloriosum's heart shape
Can develop stunning coppery iridescence
Shop Gigas →The Weird & Wonderful: Unique Leaf ShapesSome philodendrons have such distinctive leaf shapes that they're impossible to confuse with anything else.Philodendron Hastatum 'Silver Sword'Key identifiers:
Long, narrow, sword-shaped leaves
Silvery-blue-green coloring
Climbing growth habit
Juvenile leaves are more arrow-shaped, mature leaves elongate
Absolutely unmistakable once you see it
Shop Silver Sword →Philodendron MayoiKey identifiers:
Deeply lobed, palm-like leaves
Reddish petioles and stems
Climbing growth habit
Leaves have 5-7 distinct lobes
Often confused with Pedatum but Mayoi has redder stems
Shop Mayoi →Philodendron JoepiiKey identifiers:
Bizarre tri-lobed leaves that look almost alien
Three distinct sections per leaf
Climbing growth habit
Discovered in 1991 in French Guiana
Absolutely nothing else looks like this
Shop Joepii →Philodendron Rugosum (Pigskin Philodendron)Key identifiers:
Heavily textured, pebbled leaf surface (like pigskin, hence the name)
Elongated heart-shaped leaves
Climbing growth habit
The texture is the dead giveaway – run your fingers over it and you'll know
Shop Rugosum →Rare & Collector VarietiesPhilodendron Billietiae VariegataKey identifiers:
Long, narrow leaves (similar to hastatum but wider)
Bright orange petioles (this is THE identifier for Billietiae)
Yellow to cream variegation (in the variegated form)
Climbing growth habit
Extremely rare and expensive
Shop Billietiae Variegata →Quick Identification ChecklistWhen trying to ID a philodendron, ask yourself these questions:
Is it climbing or self-heading? This narrows it down immediately.
What's the leaf shape? Heart, elongated, lobed, or something weird?
Is there variegation? What color? Pink, white, yellow, cream?
What color are the stems/petioles? Green, burgundy, orange, fuzzy?
What's the leaf texture? Smooth, velvety, pebbled?
How do new leaves emerge? What color are they before maturing?
Are there any unique features? Fuzzy stems, iridescence, specific vein patterns?
Common Identification MistakesMistake #1: Confusing White Knight and White WizardSolution: Check the stems. Burgundy = White Knight. Green = White Wizard.Mistake #2: Thinking all pink variegation is Pink PrincessSolution: Caramel Marble has softer, peachy-pink tones. Pink Princess has hot pink on dark leaves.Mistake #3: Confusing Gloriosum and VerrucosumSolution: Feel the stems. Fuzzy = Verrucosum. Smooth = Gloriosum. Also, Gloriosum crawls, Verrucosum climbs.Mistake #4: Thinking Brasil is just a variegated heartleafSolution: It is! But the variegation pattern is specific – yellow-lime stripe down the center, not random white splashes.Mistake #5: Confusing juvenile and mature formsSolution: Many climbing philodendrons have completely different leaf shapes when juvenile vs. mature. Always check if it's climbing – mature leaves will be larger and more dramatic.Why Identification Matters (Beyond Just Knowing What You Have)Knowing exactly which philodendron you have isn't just about bragging rights (though let's be real, it's nice to correctly identify your White Knight). Different species have different care needs:
Climbing vs. self-heading: Climbers need support and will get leggy without it. Self-heading types stay compact.
Velvet-leaved types: Need higher humidity and are more sensitive to water quality.
Variegated varieties: Need more light to maintain variegation and grow slower.
Rare species: Often have specific temperature or humidity requirements.
The Bottom LinePhilodendron identification gets easier with practice. Start by learning the major categories (climbing vs. self-heading, variegated vs. solid), then dive into the specific characteristics that make each variety unique. Pay attention to stem color, leaf texture, growth habit, and how new leaves emerge – these are your best clues.And remember: even experts sometimes need to wait for a plant to mature or produce new growth before making a definitive ID. If you're unsure, take photos of the whole plant, close-ups of leaves (top and bottom), stems, and new growth, then ask the plant community. We're all learning together.Ready to start your philodendron collection? Browse our complete philodendron collection and find your next plant baby. Every variety comes with care instructions and expert packaging for safe EU shipping.Happy identifying, plant nerds! 🌿✨