Plumeria
Orange KLS stands out with a rare mix of five colors - peach, yellow,
orange, white, and crimson - all blending into one vivid bloom. Fragrant and
eye-catching, it’s a truly unique plumeria.
Plumeria Plant Facts
Botanical name: Plumeria sp. Also known as: Plumeria, Frangipani
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
Practical Growing Tips (Keep It Simple)
Sun: Full sun is key. 6+ hours daily for best
blooms.
Soil: Fast-draining mix. In pots, use cactus mix or add
perlite and sand. The best soil for Plumerias is a
50:50 mix of
Abundance potting soil with coarse sand.
Watering: Water well, then let soil dry out before
watering again.
Containers: Excellent for pots. Easier control and
mobility.
Airflow: Good airflow keeps plants healthy and
clean.
Spacing: Give each plant room - better shape and more
flowers.
Blooming plumeria plants in pots after rain.
Winter Care (Very Important)
Temperature: Protect from freeze. Below 40F they need
protection.
Dormancy: Leaves drop in winter. This is normal.
Watering: Almost dry during dormancy.
Indoors: Move containers inside if frost is
expected.
Light: Bright spot is enough. No need for full sun in
dormancy.
No feeding: Do not fertilize during winter rest.
Restart: Resume watering when new growth appears in
spring.
Potted plumeria in bloom.
About Plumeria Rust (Florida Reality)
If you are growing plumerias in Florida, you will likely see plumeria rust
at some point. It shows up as orange powdery spots on the
underside of leaves and can cause leaves to yellow and drop early. It is
driven by high humidity and is most common in the fall, right before the
plant naturally starts dropping its leaves.
It looks alarming, but it is mostly a cosmetic issue and does not harm the
plant long term. Good airflow, full sun, and avoiding overhead watering help
reduce it. If needed, you can remove affected leaves or use a simple
fungicide (in our experience, the most effective one for Plumeria rust is
Southern Ag Garden Friendly Fungicide), but in most cases the plant
grows
right through it and comes back clean with fresh growth.
White and
Yellow Plumerias are the most fragrant.
Plumeria Fragrance - Bring It Anywhere
That scent does not have to stay in the garden. Fresh plumeria flowers can
be brought inside and placed in a small bowl of water they will float and
gently perfume the room. You can make a simple lei, keep a few blooms
on a table, or even place a flower in your car on a hot day - the warmth
releases the fragrance.
Bowl with Plumeria flowers
creates a scented space anywhere
Red Plumeria is not just fragrant, it is one of the
most spectacular trees when in full bloom
Build Your Plumeria Paradise - Save
10%
Get 10% off with coupon code PLUMERIA2026
on plumeria trees.
Offer valid through 04/15/2026.
Discount applies to plumeria plants only. Not valid on previous purchases
and cannot be combined with other promotions or discounts. Offer
subject to change without notice.
Date: 29 Jun 2026
😾
When Orange
Isn't a Good Thing
Smokey: Those orange spots are plumeria rust. Sunshine: Orange is an excellent color. Smokey: On cats, yes. On plumeria leaves, no. Sunshine: I represent the good kind of orange.
🌸 Plumeria Rust in Humid Climates:
What Finally Worked for Us
By Tatiana Anderson, Plant Expert, Top
Tropicals
Healthy
plumerias with clean, vibrant foliage after successful rust
management. Good airflow, bright conditions, and effective fungicide
treatment
help keep plants growing strong through Florida's rainy season.
If you grow plumerias in Florida,
you probably know what comes next. Around June, when the rainy season begins
and afternoon thunderstorms become part of the daily routine,
orange-yellow spots start appearing on the undersides of plumeria leaves.
Plumeria rust arrives almost like clockwork.
If you have ever tried to fight it, you know how frustrating that battle can
be.
Plumeria
rust appears as bright orange powdery spores on the underside of
leaves. Warm, humid, rainy conditions allow the fungus to spread quickly,
making it a common sight in tropical and subtropical gardens.
Let me be clear about something right away: Plumeria rust is
rarely fatal to an otherwise
healthy plant.
In our experience, we have never lost a healthy plumeria
to rust alone. The disease is mostly
cosmetic, but it causes significant yellowing, triggers premature leaf drop,
and can turn a beautiful specimen into something that looks ragged
throughout the best months of the growing season. For a plant grown as much
for its attractive foliage as its spectacular flowers, that matters.
At Top Tropicals, we have grown plumerias for many years and have tried most
of the approaches gardeners typically recommend: sulfur-based fungicides,
neem
oil, copper sprays, improving drainage, and removing infected leaves before
they hit the ground. Some of those things helped to varying degrees. None
of them felt like a real breakthrough until recently.
The Fungicide That Actually Did Something
Real-world results after treating plumeria rust with Southern Ag
Garden Friendly Fungicide. The inset shows a
leaf heavily infected with orange rust spores before treatment, while the
main image shows clean, healthy new foliage after the fungus was
brought under control.
A few seasons ago, on the recommendation of another grower, we tried
Southern Ag Garden Friendly Fungicide
. This biological fungicide contains the beneficial bacterium Bacillus
sp, and I want to be careful here: I am not suggesting it is the best
product for everyone or that it will produce the same results in every
situation. What I can say is that, in our experience, it was the first
fungicide that consistently produced visible improvement when applied
according to the label directions.
We applied it at the first sign of rust, repeated applications according
to the label, and actually saw the progression slow down while new
infections became less severe. Whether that was
the product, the timing, or some combination of factors, I cannot say with
certainty. But after cycling through several options over the years, it
was the one that felt like it was doing something real. If you are looking
for a starting point, it is worth trying.
But the fungicide wasn't our main discovery. That came this past season,
and it changed how we think about this disease.
☔️ What This Season Taught Us About Leaf Wetness
Healthy, dry plumeria foliage is one of the best defenses against
plumeria rust. Good airflow, bright light, and keeping leaves dry whenever
possible help prevent the fungus from taking hold during the rainy
season.
This season we moved our prized container plumerias under a covered
growing area with a clear plastic roof and approximately 30 percent shade
cloth overhead. The structure provides excellent light, warm temperatures,
and very good air circulation while protecting the plants from Florida's
frequent summer rains. It is not a climate-controlled greenhouse, but rather
a protected outdoor growing area.
Here is the important part: these plants were still irrigated regularly,
every two to four days, with overhead watering. The leaves did get wet. But
because they were not sitting outside
during Florida's daily summer downpours, the foliage dried within a
reasonable
amount of time instead of remaining wet for hours, which is common after a
heavy rain followed by cloudy skies and still air.
The result? Not a single case of rust developed on those plants
throughout the season.
Considering how consistently plumeria rust appears each summer in our
nursery,
that result immediately caught our attention. The most significant
difference was how long the foliage remained wet after watering or
rain.
Meanwhile, plumerias growing in the ground nearby, fully exposed to the
weather, showed rust
infection at the usual time.
💦 Ambient Humidity vs. Standing Water
That observation made us rethink what we believed was driving the
disease. We had always assumed Florida's high humidity was the primary
factor. Humidity certainly plays a role. But this experience suggested that
prolonged leaf wetness may be a much more significant factor than ambient
humidity by itself.
There is a real difference between air that feels humid and leaves that stay
wet for four, six, or eight hours after a rain. Humid air means the
moisture content of the atmosphere is high. Wet leaves means there is
standing water on the leaf surface. Both conditions can occur together, but
they are not the same thing. A leaf in a humid but breezy location can dry
within an hour. A leaf in still, wet conditions after a heavy rain may stay
wet most of the day. That difference may be far more important than many
gardeners realize.
We are not plant pathologists, and we do not want to overstate what we
learned from one growing season. But after many years of growing plumerias
in Florida, the results were convincing enough that we now
protect our best container specimens from prolonged summer rainfall whenever
possible.
👉 What We Recommend
Based on many years of growing plumerias in Florida, here are the
practices that have worked best for us:
Grow plumerias in full sun whenever conditions allow. Good light means
faster drying after rain or
irrigation, and plants grown in low light often seem to show rust symptoms
more readily.
Keep your plumerias well-fed. Healthy, vigorously growing plants recover
from stress and disease much better than weak ones. We apply Green
Magic
controlled-release fertilizer every six months for a steady supply of
nutrients, and supplement with Sunshine
Boosters Megaflor during the growing season. Because Megaflor is gentle,
it can be safely applied with every watering, all
year long.
During extended rainy periods, consider moving valuable container plants
under cover if possible. Even a covered patio can make a difference if it
keeps the leaves from remaining wet for most of the day.
Provide air circulation. Plants crowded together stay wet longer. Space
them properly and position them where they receive good airflow.
Remove infected fallen leaves. They can continue serving as a source of
spores.
Pick them up and dispose of them rather than leaving them beneath the
plants.
If rust begins to appear, start fungicide applications early. Slowing an
infection at the beginning is much easier than trying to control one that
is already well established.
💡 A Realistic Conclusion
A parade
of healthy plumerias in full color. Clean foliage, bright blooms, and
vigorous growth show what plumerias can look like when rust is kept under
control, letting each variety shine in its own unique colors.
Plumeria rust is mostly a cosmetic problem rather than a life-threatening
one.
Healthy plants usually recover well, but yellowing foliage and premature
leaf drop can take much of the beauty out of an otherwise
beautiful blooming season.
We cannot promise these methods will eliminate rust in every garden.
Every growing environment is different.
However, after years of battling this disease, reducing how long the leaves
remain wet made a bigger difference than any other single change we have
tried. If
you grow plumerias in a humid climate and continue struggling with rust, it
may be worth focusing not only on humidity itself, but also on how quickly
the foliage dries after the rain
stops.
Mix and match your favorite varieties! Purchase 2 or more
plumerias and receive 25% off all plumerias in
your order. No coupon code required. Discount is applied automatically when
qualifying items are added to your cart.
Valid through July 3, 2026
Offer applies to new orders only. Not valid on previous purchases, pending
orders, gift certificates, shipping charges, or combined with other
discounts or promotional offers.
Plumerias come in an amazing spectrum of colors and forms. From pure
white
and buttery yellow to fiery reds, soft pinks, rainbow blends, and even
variegated foliage, there is a plumeria to match every tropical garden and
collector's taste.
Sunshine: Healthy plumerias need sunshine... that's me...
good airflow, and dry leaves. Smokey: That's a surprisingly accurate summary. Sunshine:We can help with all of that. Donut worry. Coffee
first.
Date: 29 Apr 2026
Soft peach tones - calm and glowing plumerias
Plumeria Morland
Plumeria Thong Taweechok
Plumeria Gred Gaew
Plumeria Moung Sangeam
Soft peach tones - calm and glowing plumerias. Pruning tip 🌈
Plumeria Plant Facts
Botanical name: Plumeria sp. Also known as: Plumeria, Frangipani
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
This set is all about warmth without intensity - soft peach, coral, and golden tones that feel calm, balanced, and easy on the eyes. These are the plumerias you enjoy up close, where the subtle color blends really shine.
🌸 Today's featured plumerias:
✦ Plumeria Morland - soft pink petals with a creamy yellow center fading into white edges. Gentle gradient with a fresh, radiant look and light fragrance. ✦ Plumeria Thong Taweechok - warm golden-yellow petals infused with orange and coral, softening into creamy edges with a light pink blush. Smooth, glowing and well-balanced. ✦ Plumeria Gred Gaew - soft coral and peach tones with a glowing orange center and a clean white edge. Refined, crisp, and quietly elegant. ✦ Plumeria Moung Sangeam - creamy white to pale blush petals with a warm golden-orange center and a hint of peach at the edges. Soft, delicate, and naturally graceful.
💡 Plumeria tip: pruning for more blooms
Light pruning encourages branching - and more branches mean more flower tips. Trim after a bloom cycle or in early growing season, and your plumeria will come back fuller, bushier, and ready to produce more flowers.
Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity
Plumeria Maneerat
Plumeria Siam Ruby
Plumeria Red Siam
Plumeria Kled Tabtim
Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity. Feeding tip 🌈
Plumeria Plant Facts
Botanical name: Plumeria sp. Also known as: Plumeria, Frangipani
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
This set is all about depth, richness, and that unmistakable red glow. From ruby shades to deep velvety tones, these plumerias bring strong color and a luxurious feel - the kind that instantly draws your eye.
🌸 Today's featured plumerias:
✦ Plumeria Maneerat - golden-yellow center fading into creamy tones and strong pink to red edges, creating a radiant, glowing effect. Full, layered blooms with a rich, jewel-like look. ✦ Plumeria Siam Ruby - deep ruby pink petals with softer rosy highlights and a luminous center. Smooth, rounded blooms with a polished, gemstone feel. ✦ Plumeria Red Siam - rich, velvety red flowers with deep, consistent color and a soft satin finish. Dense clusters create a bold, classic tropical look. ✦ Plumeria Kled Tabtim - vibrant pink petals deepening toward a warm orange-red center, outlined with a clean white edge. Bright, refined, and glowing with a ruby-like effect.
💡 Plumeria tip: feeding for flowers
Plumerias are heavy feeders, especially when actively growing.
Use a fertilizer higher in phosphorus to push blooming.
Liquid feeding like Sunshine Megaflor can be used regularly, while a controlled release like Green Magic gives steady nutrition over time.
Rainbow plumerias - the wild side of color. Winter dormancy tip 🌈
Some plumerias don’t follow rules - they mix, swirl, and splash colors all over the petals like a tropical sunset in motion. These “rainbow” types are the most playful and unpredictable, with every bloom looking a little different from the next.
Plumeria Plant Facts
Botanical name: Plumeria sp. Also known as: Plumeria, Frangipani
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
🌸 Today's featured plumerias:
✦ Plumeria Mui Rainbow - deep orange-red center blending into golden yellow and finishing with pink to magenta edges. Bright, fiery colors with a smooth, glowing transition. ✦ Plumeria Pink Jaopraya - a bold swirl of red, white, pink, and yellow all in one flower. Complex, eye-catching, and impossible to ignore. ✦ Plumeria Sunset Symphony - creamy ivory, golden yellow, and coral-pink tones with deeper rose edges, creating a layered sunset effect that shifts from bloom to bloom. ✦ Plumeria Dook - rich pink petals melting into a glowing orange and golden center. Bright, warm, and full of tropical energy that stands out from a distance.
💡 Plumeria tip: winter dormancy
In cooler months, plumerias slow down and may drop all leaves. That’s normal.
During this rest period, cut watering way back and let the plant sleep.
Growth will restart when temperatures rise.