Tiny dots on leaves, fine webbing between stems, and yellow stippling? Spider mites. They thrive in hot, dry indoor air and multiply fast — one female lays 200 eggs in 3 weeks. This guide covers how to identify spider mites, kill them with water spray, neem oil, rubbing alcohol, or miticides, and stop them from coming back by raising humidity.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
My Garden Journal
Why Spider Mites Are Dangerous — and Fast
Spider mites (Tetranychidae family) are not insects — they are arachnids, more closely related to spiders than to flies or gnats. What makes them particularly dangerous is their reproductive speed: in warm, dry indoor conditions a single female can lay 200 eggs over three weeks, and eggs hatch into reproducing adults in as few as 5 days at 27°C/80°F. A light infestation becomes a heavy one in less than two weeks if left untreated.
They are also difficult to see with the naked eye — adult mites are only 0.3–0.5mm. Most people notice the webbing or leaf damage long before they see the mites themselves.
The environment matters: spider mites thrive in hot, dry conditions. A heated indoor space in winter — low humidity, warm air — is the perfect spider mite habitat. The single most effective long-term prevention is simply keeping indoor humidity above 50%.
Not sure what pest you have? The houseplant pest symptoms guide uses a symptom-first approach — webbing, sticky residue, white fluff, or tiny flies — to help you identify the exact pest before treating. The plant pests overview covers all major houseplant pests in one place.
Spider Mites vs Thrips: How to Tell the Difference
Both pests cause speckled, discolored leaves. The treatment differs, so identification matters.
| Spider Mites | Thrips | |
|---|---|---|
| Size | 0.3–0.5mm, barely visible | 1–2mm, visible with effort |
| Color | Red, yellow, brown, or green dots | Brown-black, slender |
| Webbing | Fine silk webbing between leaves and stems | No webbing |
| Leaf damage | Yellow or bronze stippling (tiny dots) | Silver streaks, scarred surface |
| Movement | Crawl slowly on underside of leaves | Fast-moving, jump when disturbed |
| Where found | Leaf undersides, especially in dry air | Leaf edges, flowers, growing tips |
| Preferred conditions | Hot, dry air (low humidity) | Any conditions |
Diagnostic test: Hold a white sheet of paper under affected leaves and tap the stem sharply. Spider mites fall onto the paper as tiny moving dots. Thrips will also fall but are visibly larger and elongated. If the dots are microscopic and you see webbing — spider mites confirmed.
Identify the Severity
| Level | Signs | Urgency |
|---|---|---|
| Light | Yellow stippling on a few leaves; little or no webbing | Treat now — they multiply fast |
| Moderate | Widespread stippling; visible webbing; leaves bronzing | Treat immediately; isolate plant |
| Heavy | Dense webbing covering stems; leaves turning brown and dropping | Aggressive treatment required; consider whether plant is salvageable |
At heavy infestations, the plant may be beyond saving. Discard heavily infested plants — especially if they are near other houseplants — to stop the colony spreading.
Treatment: Step-by-Step
The most effective elimination combines physical removal (water spray) + contact killer (neem oil or alcohol) + environment correction (humidity). Chemical miticides are reserved for heavy infestations. All methods work faster if repeated every 5–7 days to break the full lifecycle.
Step 1: Isolate the Affected Plant Immediately
Spider mites spread by contact and by air movement. Move the infested plant away from all other houseplants before beginning any treatment — at minimum 1–2 metres of clear space. Check neighbouring plants for early signs (hold paper beneath leaves and tap stems).
This is not optional. Skipping isolation is the primary reason spider mites reinfest treated plants.
Step 2: Wash the Plant with Water
Take the plant to a shower, sink, or outdoors. Use a strong but gentle spray of lukewarm water to dislodge mites from all leaf surfaces, focusing on undersides of leaves where mites concentrate. Rotate the pot to reach all angles.
- This physically removes 50–80% of the mite population in one step
- Mites that fall to the floor or soil do not re-climb and die quickly
- Safe for all houseplants
- Repeat every 3–5 days throughout treatment
For large plants, use a damp cloth to wipe every leaf individually — top and underside. Rinse the cloth frequently.
Step 3: Apply Neem Oil Solution
Mix a neem oil spray: 2 teaspoons neem oil + 1 teaspoon dish soap per litre of warm water. Emulsify thoroughly — neem oil will separate unless vigorously stirred or shaken.
Spray the entire plant, covering all leaf surfaces including undersides. Neem oil's active compound (azadirachtin) disrupts mite reproduction and acts as a contact killer for juveniles. It also leaves a residual layer on the plant surface that deters re-infestation.
- Spray in the evening or away from direct light (neem oil can cause sunburn in bright light)
- Allow leaves to dry before returning to normal conditions
- Repeat every 5–7 days for 3–4 weeks
- Safe for all houseplants at these dilutions
Alternative to neem oil: 70% isopropyl rubbing alcohol. Mix 1 part alcohol to 3 parts water, spray or wipe on leaves. Alcohol kills on contact and evaporates without residue. Effective but has no residual protection — requires more frequent application than neem oil.
Step 4: Raise Humidity Above 50%
Spider mites cannot reproduce effectively above 60% relative humidity. Low humidity (below 40%) is their ideal breeding environment — precisely the conditions most homes provide in winter.
Raise humidity around the affected plant using any of these methods:
- Humidifier: Most effective for large areas and multiple plants
- Pebble tray: Fill a tray with pebbles, add water, place pot on top. The evaporating water raises local humidity
- Grouping plants: Transpiration from clustered plants raises local humidity
- Misting: Temporary only — wet leaves for 30–60 minutes, then dry. Not sufficient alone but helpful alongside other methods
See the houseplant humidity guide for comparisons of these methods including effectiveness data and costs.
This step is not treatment — it is root cause correction. Without raising humidity, spider mites will return even after successful treatment.
Step 5: Use a Miticide for Heavy or Persistent Infestations
If neem oil and water treatments have not reduced the population after two weeks, escalate to a dedicated miticide (also called an acaricide). Mites are not insects, so standard insecticides often do not work — choose a product specifically labelled for mites or arachnids.
Effective active ingredients:
- Pyrethrin: Botanical, fast knock-down, low residual. Apply in evening.
- Spinosad: OMRI certified organic, effective on mites in liquid spray form
- Abamectin: Systemic option for heavy infestations; not suitable for edibles
- Bifenazate: Contact miticide, effective on eggs and adults; low toxicity to beneficials
Important: Rotate miticide classes between applications. Spider mites develop resistance to chemical treatments faster than almost any other pest — resistance to a single miticide can develop within a single generation (as fast as 5 days). Alternating mechanisms of action prevents resistance buildup.
Follow label instructions exactly. Most miticides require 2–3 applications 5–7 days apart.
Why Spider Mites Keep Coming Back
If your spider mites return after treatment, one of these is the cause:
1. Humidity is still too low This is the #1 cause of recurrence. If you did not raise indoor humidity above 50%, conditions still favour mite reproduction. Every time you treat the infestation, the survivors reproduce faster in the dry air. Fix the environment, not just the pest.
2. Incomplete treatment — eggs survived Spider mite eggs are resistant to many treatments that kill adults. A single application that kills visible adults leaves eggs already on the plant. The standard 5-7 day repeat interval is calibrated to this: treat adults, wait for eggs to hatch, treat juveniles before they reproduce. Three weeks of weekly treatments is the minimum for full lifecycle interruption.
3. Neighbouring plants re-infected the treated plant Spider mites spread by crawling and by air movement (they balloon on silk threads). If neighbouring plants were not inspected and treated, they will re-establish the colony on your treated plant. Treat all plants in the same room simultaneously.
4. Mites in the soil or pot Two-spotted spider mites (Tetranychus urticae) occasionally lay overwintering eggs in soil debris and around pot rims. After treating leaves, wipe the pot exterior and top soil layer, and consider replacing the top 2–3cm of soil.
5. Resistance to the treatment used If neem oil treatment is not working after 3 full application cycles (3 weeks), the population may have developed resistance. Switch to a different mechanism: replace neem oil with rubbing alcohol, or escalate to a registered miticide.
Neem Oil vs Rubbing Alcohol vs Miticide: Which to Use?
| Method | Kills Adults | Kills Eggs | Residual | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water spray | Removes (not kills) | No | None | First step; physical reduction |
| Neem oil | Yes (contact) | Disrupts hatching | 3–5 days | Light–moderate; organic preference |
| Rubbing alcohol (70%) | Yes (contact) | No | None | Quick knockdown; spot treatment |
| Pyrethrin spray | Yes (fast) | No | Short | Light–moderate; fast knockdown |
| Miticide (bifenazate) | Yes | Yes | 7–14 days | Heavy or resistant infestations |
Recommendation: Start with water + neem oil for any light or moderate infestation. Only escalate to miticide if three weeks of neem oil treatment has not produced improvement.
Plants Most Vulnerable to Spider Mites
Some houseplants are disproportionately targeted, typically because they have soft, smooth leaves or are grown in dry conditions:
- Fiddle leaf fig — Smooth large leaves; often in low humidity
- Roses — Outdoor and indoor; classic spider mite host
- Cucumber and tomato — Vegetable plants frequently attacked outdoors in hot weather
- Peace lily — Prefers high humidity; mite attacks signal the environment is too dry
- Prayer plant, calathea — Humidity-loving; attacks indicate conditions are suboptimal
- Herbs (basil, thyme) — Particularly in dry kitchen environments
For these plants, maintaining humidity above 55% is the most effective prevention strategy.
Prevention: The Long-Term Plan
| Practice | How It Prevents Spider Mites |
|---|---|
| Keep humidity above 50% | Mites cannot reproduce effectively in humid conditions |
| Wipe leaves monthly with damp cloth | Removes eggs and early mite colonies before they establish |
| Inspect undersides of leaves regularly | Early detection before population explodes |
| Quarantine new plants 2 weeks | New purchases and gifts frequently carry mites |
| Avoid placing plants near heating vents | Hot, dry air from vents is prime mite habitat |
| Keep plants well-watered | Stressed, dry plants are more vulnerable |
| Spray neem oil preventatively in winter | One application per month when heating reduces indoor humidity |
Are Spider Mites Harmful to Humans or Pets?
Spider mites do not bite humans or pets and do not carry disease. They are exclusively plant pests. The treatments typically used (neem oil, rubbing alcohol spray, water) are also safe for humans and pets at the dilutions applied to plants.
One caveat: Chemical miticides should be used according to label instructions. Most are low toxicity but keep children and pets away from treated plants until dry.
FAQ
What do spider mites look like on plants?
Spider mites look like tiny moving dots — red, brown, yellow, or green — typically on the undersides of leaves. They are 0.3–0.5mm and difficult to see without magnification. The more visible signs are their damage: yellow stippling (tiny pale dots) across the leaf surface, and the fine silk webbing they spin between leaves, stems, and growing tips.
How do spider mites get on houseplants indoors?
Spider mites arrive on new plants brought home from nurseries or shops, on cut flowers, on outdoor clothing, or through open windows during warm weather. They can also balloon indoors on silk threads carried by air movement. Once inside, hot and dry conditions (common in heated homes) allow them to reproduce rapidly.
Does neem oil really kill spider mites?
Yes — neem oil kills spider mites on contact and disrupts reproduction through the azadirachtin compound, which acts as an insect growth regulator. It is most effective when applied to all leaf surfaces (especially undersides) every 5–7 days for 3–4 weeks. Neem oil alone may be insufficient for heavy infestations or resistant populations — escalate to a dedicated miticide in those cases.
How long does it take to get rid of spider mites?
With consistent treatment (water spray + neem oil every 5–7 days + humidity increase), light to moderate infestations typically show significant improvement within 2 weeks. Full elimination of all eggs and adults takes 3–4 weeks. Heavy infestations may take 4–6 weeks. A miticide shortens this to 2–3 weeks for severe cases.
Can spider mites live in soil?
Primarily no — spider mites feed and live on plant tissue, specifically on leaf undersides. However, some species (including two-spotted spider mites) can lay dormant or overwintering eggs in soil debris, leaf litter, and around pot rims. Replacing the top layer of soil and wiping the pot exterior is worthwhile for persistent infestations.
Will spider mites go away on their own?
No. Spider mite populations grow exponentially in warm, dry conditions. Without treatment and humidity correction, a light infestation will become a heavy one within 2–3 weeks. The only exception is a dramatic change in conditions — sudden high humidity or temperature drop — which suppresses reproduction but does not eliminate an established colony.
Can I use dish soap alone to kill spider mites?
Diluted dish soap (insecticidal soap) does kill spider mites on contact by disrupting their cell membranes. Mix 1 teaspoon mild liquid soap per litre of water and spray all surfaces. It is less effective than neem oil because it has no residual action — it only kills mites it directly contacts. Use it as a supplement to neem oil or as an alternative when neem oil is not available.
Do spider mites cause yellow leaves?
Yes. Spider mites feed by piercing leaf cells and extracting their contents, leaving the cell empty — this appears as a pale yellow or bronze dot. Heavy feeding across many leaf cells produces widespread yellowing or bronzing. If yellowing is accompanied by webbing, spider mites are the likely cause. See the yellow leaves guide for a broader diagnosis if no webbing is present.
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