If you have ever brought a plant home in Delhi in May, or tried keeping something alive on a Bengaluru balcony during construction season, you already know that standard gardening advice doesn't quite apply here. Most of it was written for gentler climates.
Growing indoor plants in Indian cities is its own discipline. It rewards a specific kind of knowledge, the practical, slightly unglamorous kind. Which plants actually hold up. Which ones look fine for two weeks and then collapse. And crucially, which ones pull enough weight on the air quality front to justify the space they take up.
What the science actually says about plants and indoor air
The 1989
NASA Clean Air Study by B.C. Wolverton is widely cited as proof that houseplants purify indoor air, but the research was conducted in sealed chambers, a very different environment from a real home with continuous air exchange, larger spaces, and persistent pollutant sources. So no, a single peace lily is not going to neutralise your neighbour's diesel generator fumes.
NASA research found that living plants are remarkably efficient at absorbing contaminants, and that the most important filtering happens through the roots and associated soil microorganisms, which destroy pathogenic viruses, bacteria, and organic chemicals. In the context of Indian cities,where, according to WHO estimates, indoor air pollution contributes to approximately 1.3 million deaths a year in India, even marginal improvement matters, particularly in homes where windows stay shut for weeks during peak pollution season.
The plants that actually hold up in Indian conditions
Snake plant
The snake plant is probably the single most resilient option for urban Indian homes. It is drought-tolerant and can handle temperatures up to 29°C without any notable stress, which covers a significant chunk of the Indian calendar. The NASA Clean Air Study identified the snake plant as effective at removing benzene, xylene, formaldehyde, and toluene, all of which are common indoor pollutants from furniture, paint, and cleaning products. Wipe the leaves once a week with a damp cloth.
Money plant
The money plant, or pothos, is the other workhorse. It's been growing in Indian homes for generations for a reason, it genuinely doesn't need much. Low light, inconsistent watering, dusty air. It tolerates all of it. It filters common indoor toxins, improves indoor humidity, and thrives across all Indian climates, which is saying something given how different the conditions are between, say, humid Mumbai and arid Jaipur.
Areca palm
The areca palm deserves more attention than it gets. It increases indoor humidity through transpiration, making dry summer air feel noticeably more comfortable. In cities like Delhi, where summer humidity drops and the indoor air feels desiccating, a couple of areca palms in a living room make a measurable difference to how breathable the space feels. They also filter xylene and toluene effectively. The one downside is that areca palms prefer good light, a south or east-facing room works well. Don't put them in a dark corner and expect much.
Spider plant
The spider plant tolerates almost any temperature and it's one of the few plants that performs consistently whether the air is dry or humid. In Indian cities, that adaptability is genuinely valuable. Most plants want stable conditions. Indian homes rarely provide them.
Dust management
Dust is a genuine threat to plant health in Indian cities. Dust blocks leaf pores, and when those pores are blocked, plants cannot absorb pollutants efficiently, which somewhat defeats the purpose of keeping them for air quality. Weekly wiping is not optional here. It's maintenance, the same way you'd clean an air filter. A damp microfibre cloth does the job.
The other practical point: don't overcrowd plants in rooms with poor ventilation. A tightly packed corner of pots in a room that never gets airflow creates a damp microenvironment that invites fungal problems. Indian summers are punishing enough. Give each plant a little room to breathe.