I spent months watching white mold fuzz creep across the soil of my favorite houseplants. I tried everything: better drainage, less water, moving them to brighter spots. Nothing worked. Then I discovered that cinnamon has antifungal properties and decided to try it.
A simple dusting of ground cinnamon from my kitchen cupboard cleared the mold completely and it hasn’t come back. I was skeptical at first. How could a spice work where everything else failed? But the science is straightforward: cinnamon contains compounds that actively suppress the fungi causing the problem.
After testing it on seven houseplants, I can confirm it does the trick. Here’s exactly how to do it.
Why cinnamon actually works
Cinnamon contains cinnamaldehyde and eugenol, which are natural compounds with proven antifungal properties. These chemicals create a hostile surface for the common molds that appear on houseplant soil, particularly Penicillium and Trichoderma, which show up as white or gray-green fuzz.
The key is that cinnamon works as a preventative layer, not a cure-all. It slows mold growth while you fix the underlying problem — usually overwatering or poor air circulation.
In my experience, once you address those issues and apply cinnamon, the mold doesn’t return. I reapply lightly every month as a maintenance step, particularly on plants in shadier corners of my home where moisture lingers longer.
Remove the mold and apply cinnamon
Start by scraping away the top layer of soil where you can see the white fuzz. Use a small spoon or knife to gently remove the moldy layer, just the top 5-10mm, and throw it away. Don’t compost it.
Let the soil surface dry completely for a few hours. Once dry, sprinkle ground cinnamon over the soil surface. A lighter dusting is much better than dumping it on. More cinnamon doesn’t mean better results. In fact, too much creates a hydrophobic layer that actually repels water.
Keep the cinnamon away from the plant’s stem or crown. Leave a small gap around the base so the spice doesn’t irritate tender tissue. Then water from the bottom of the pot for the next two or three waterings so you don’t wash the cinnamon away immediately.
The mistakes I made (so you don’t)
My first attempt failed because I applied cinnamon to wet soil. It trapped moisture and made things worse. Wait until the surface is completely dry before dusting.
I also used too much cinnamon initially, creating a thick layer that repelled water instead of letting it through. A light coating is all you need
Finally, I realized cinnamon alone wasn’t enough. If your houseplant is in a dark corner with a saucer that stays wet constantly, cinnamon won’t solve the problem. You have to fix the watering habits and light situation first. Cinnamon is the finishing touch, not the full solution.
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