The tips of herbaceous plants turning brown is a common symptom called “tip burn” or “leaf tip necrosis.” It usually means the plant is under some kind of stress rather than dying outright.
Here are the most common causes:
💧 1. Water stress (most common)
Both too little and too much water can cause brown tips in herbaceous plants.
- Underwatering: plant dries out → tips die first
- Overwatering: roots suffocate → plant can’t absorb nutrients properly
🧂 2. Salt buildup in soil
Excess fertilizer or hard water can leave salts in the soil, which “burn” the leaf tips.
This is especially common in:
- Potted plants
- Indoor herbs
- Over-fertilized gardens
🌱 3. Nutrient imbalance
Deficiencies or excesses of certain nutrients can cause tip damage:
- Too much fertilizer (especially nitrogen)
- Lack of potassium or other minerals
- Poor soil quality
🌞 4. Environmental stress
- Too much direct sun (leaf scorch)
- Very dry air (low humidity)
- Strong wind exposure
🦠 5. Root problems or disease
If roots are damaged, the plant cannot properly supply water and nutrients:
- Root rot from overwatering
- Compacted soil
- Poor drainage
🌿 6. Natural aging (less serious)
Older leaves may brown at the tips as they age and the plant reallocates nutrients.
🧠 How to fix it
- Water consistently (not too much, not too little)
- Flush soil occasionally to remove salts
- Use balanced fertilizer sparingly
- Improve drainage
- Trim brown tips (optional, cosmetic only)
⚠️ When to worry
It’s more serious if:
- Browning spreads quickly
- Whole leaves wilt
- Stems soften or rot
Bottom line
Brown tips are usually a stress signal, most often from watering issues or salt/fertilizer buildup, not a single disease.
If you want, tell me what herb or plant you’re growing and how you’re watering it—I can pinpoint the exact cause more precisely.