Succulent Identifier — Identify Any Succulent Plant Free | ZonedGarden
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Succulent Identifier — Free

Identify any succulent plant in seconds. Select its shape, colour, leaf type, and size — get the most likely matches with care tips instantly. No botanical knowledge needed.

See How It Works
200+
Succulent Types
5
ID Filters
<5s
Result Time
Succulent Identifier — ZonedGarden
Leaf Shape
Leaf Colour
Plant Size
Texture
Flower Colour
Flower Shape
Bloom Season
Natural Habitat / Origin
Growing Environment
100% Free — no paywall ever 200+ Species — comprehensive database 3 ID Methods — appearance, flower, origin Care Tips — included with every result No Account — instant results
SIMPLE PROCESS

How to Identify Your Succulent — 3 Steps

From observation to identification in under 30 seconds. No botanical knowledge needed — just describe what you see.

01
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Observe Your Plant

Look at your succulent's leaves, colour, size, and texture. Check if it's forming a rosette shape, has paddle-shaped leaves, or cylindrical tubes. Note any powdery coating or fuzzy texture. If it's flowering, the flower colour and shape are extremely helpful for narrowing identification.

Takes 1 minute to observe
02
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Select Your Features

Choose the tab that matches what you know most about your plant — appearance, flower, or origin. Fill in the dropdowns for the features you can observe. You don't need to complete all fields — even 2–3 matching features will significantly narrow down the possibilities.

Takes 15 seconds
03
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Get Your Matches

Results show the top matching succulent species with their common name, Latin name, care difficulty, and key growing tips — watering frequency, light needs, and ideal temperature range. Use the results to confirm identification with a quick image search of the suggested species.

Results in under 5 seconds
WHAT YOU GET

Full Care Profile — Not Just a Name

Every identification result includes the care information you need to keep your succulent thriving — not just a species name and a Wikipedia link.

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Echeveria 'Perle von Nürnberg'
Rosette · Purple-pink · Medium · Smooth
💧 Watering frequencyEvery 2–3 weeks
☀️ Light requirementsFull sun / Bright indirect
🌡️ Min. temperature5°C (41°F)
🌱 Care difficultyEasy — beginner friendly
🪴 PropagationLeaf cuttings / Offsets
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Common & Latin Names

Both the common name (e.g. "Hens and Chicks") and the Latin binomial name are shown so you can search nursery catalogues, plant apps, and growers' websites with precision — common names vary by country; Latin names are universal.

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Watering & Light Guide

Exact watering frequency and light requirements for each matched species — the two most common reasons succulents fail. Overwatering is the number one killer; knowing whether your plant needs a drink every 10 days or every 4 weeks makes the difference.

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Temperature Tolerance

Minimum temperature each species can tolerate tells you whether your succulent can survive outdoors in your climate, needs bringing inside in winter, or is strictly an indoor plant — essential for UK and Northern European growers.

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Propagation Method

How to multiply your succulent — leaf propagation, stem cuttings, offsets (pups), or division. Different species propagate very differently; knowing the right method saves failed attempts and damaged plants.

WHY USE THIS IDENTIFIER

Why Misidentifying a Succulent Gets Care Wrong

Succulent care varies dramatically between species. Treating an Aloe like an Echeveria — or a Haworthia like a desert cactus — leads to predictable failure.

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Watering Requirements Vary by 400%

Some succulents (Crassula ovata) can go 4–6 weeks without water in winter. Others (Aloe vera) prefer watering every 2 weeks year-round. A generic "water sparingly" instruction is useless — the right frequency depends on knowing exactly which plant you have.

☀️

Light Needs Are Opposite Between Species

Haworthias thrive in low light and will sunburn on a sunny windowsill. Echeverias need full sun and etiolate (stretch and distort) in low light conditions. Placing the wrong succulent in the wrong light spot causes irreversible damage within weeks.

❄️

Cold Tolerance Ranges from -20°C to +5°C

Sempervivums are fully frost-hardy down to -20°C and can live outdoors year-round in the UK. Many Echeverias die below 5°C. The difference between an outdoor and an indoor succulent starts with correct identification — not guessing.

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Propagation Method Differs by Genus

Leaf propagation works for Echeveria and Sedum but fails completely with Aeoniums and Aloes. Spending weeks waiting for leaf cuttings that will never root is a common mistake that comes from misidentification. Knowing your plant saves time and money.

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Toxicity Varies — Important for Pet Owners

Euphorbia species are toxic to cats and dogs; Haworthia is non-toxic. Aloe vera is mildly toxic to pets despite being useful medicinally for humans. Identifying your succulent correctly tells you whether it's safe to keep in a home with animals.

🆓

Free — Unlike Plant ID Apps

Most plant identification apps charge a monthly subscription after a trial. This identifier is permanently free — no in-app purchases, no photo upload limits, no account required. Open it, select your plant's features, and get your result immediately.

MethodWorks offlineCare tips includedNo photo neededFree to useResult in seconds
ZonedGarden Identifier✓ Yes✓ Full care profile✓ Yes✓ Always✓ Under 5 sec
Photo ID apps (PictureThis etc.)✗ Requires internetBasic only✗ Photo required✗ Subscription✓ Yes
Google Image Search✗ Online only✗ No care tips✗ Photo required✓ YesSeveral minutes
Facebook plant groups✗ Online onlyCommunity answers✓ Often yes✓ Yes✗ Hours to days
POPULAR SPECIES

Common Succulents This Tool Can Identify

From the most popular beginner species to unusual collector finds — the most searched succulent genera are all covered.

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Echeveria
Rosette succulents, wide colour range
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Aloe
Spiky, medicinal, aloe vera family
🍃
Haworthia
Low-light tolerant, window-leaf types
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Crassula
Jade plant family, stacked-leaf types
🔵
Sedum
Ground covers & roof garden species
❄️
Sempervivum
Frost-hardy "Hens and Chicks"
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Kalanchoe
Flowering succulents, fuzzy leaves
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Gasteria
Ox-tongue leaves, very tough species
💡 Hard to Identify?
If your succulent doesn't match any obvious category, try the "By Origin" tab and select the continent where the plant was purchased or collected. Many unusual succulents are identifiable by habitat even when leaf shape is ambiguous. For collector species, a combination of origin + leaf texture narrows results significantly.
HOW IT WORKS

How the Succulent Identifier Works

A feature-matching system built on botanical characteristics — not AI guesswork.

The identifier uses a weighted feature-matching system that compares your selections against a database of succulent characteristics. Each feature you select narrows the result set. Leaf shape is the strongest identifier — it alone eliminates around 70% of candidates for most species.

Colour and texture are secondary filters that distinguish between closely related species within the same genus. For example, both Echeveria 'Perle von Nürnberg' and Echeveria subsessilis have rosette forms — but colour separates them instantly. Size then confirms or eliminates further.

The flower tab uses reproductive characteristics which are highly reliable for identification when blooms are present. Flower shape and colour are more genus-specific than leaf shape in many succulent families, making the flower tab particularly accurate for Echeveria, Kalanchoe, and Sedum.

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Leaf Shape

Primary filter — eliminates ~70% of candidates immediately

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Colour & Texture

Secondary filter — distinguishes within-genus species

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Flower Features

High-accuracy filter when plant is in bloom

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Origin & Habitat

Confirms result for unusual or collector species

EXAMPLE IDENTIFICATION
Rosette shape Blue-green Powdery texture
🌵 Echeveria subsessilis
Best match — 3 features matched
Shape: ✓ Rosette confirmed
Colour: ✓ Blue-green with farina
Texture: ✓ Powdery coating
Water: Every 14–21 days
Light: Bright indirect / Full sun
Also consider: Echeveria elegans (similar but paler) · Pachyveria (hybrid, more upright)
IDENTIFICATION TIPS

5 Tips for Accurate Succulent Identification

The more features you can observe, the more precise your identification. These habits dramatically improve the accuracy of any identification method.

☀️

Check in Natural Light

Indoor lighting — especially warm bulbs — dramatically changes how a succulent's colour appears. Always observe colour in natural daylight before selecting a colour filter. Blue-green succulents look grey indoors; purple-tipped leaves look plain green in dim light.

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Look at Leaf Attachment

How leaves attach to the stem is a key identifier. Leaves that detach cleanly (good for propagation) are typical of Echeveria. Leaves fused tightly to the stem that won't detach indicate Aeonium or Haworthia. This single trait narrows identification enormously.

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Wait for Flowers if Possible

Succulent flowers are among the most reliable identification features — the flower colour, shape, and stalk structure are genus-specific in ways that leaves sometimes aren't. If your plant hasn't flowered yet, photograph it when it does and revisit identification then.

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Measure the Mature Size

Many succulents look identical as juveniles. Mature size is one of the clearest distinguishers between similar-looking species. A rosette that reaches 30cm across is a different species than one that maxes out at 8cm — even if they look identical at 4cm.

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Check the Nursery Label

Many succulents arrive with genus labels but not species names (e.g. "Echeveria" with no variety noted). The genus alone — combined with this identifier — dramatically narrows results. Even a partial label eliminates hundreds of candidates and gets you to a precise result much faster.

COMMON QUESTIONS

Succulent Identifier — Frequently Asked Questions

The questions we get asked most when plant lovers use this tool for the first time.

Try selecting only the 1–2 most distinctive features and leaving others blank — over-filtering can exclude the correct answer if any feature is uncertain. If results are still unclear, try the "By Origin" tab with the region where the plant was purchased or grown. For very unusual species, collector succulents, or rare hybrids, combining this tool's top result with a reverse image search of that species name usually confirms or corrects the identification within minutes.
All cacti are succulents (they store water in fleshy tissue), but not all succulents are cacti. Cacti are defined by having areoles — small circular pads from which spines, flowers, and new growth emerge. If your plant has spines but no areoles, it may be a spiny Euphorbia rather than a true cactus. Both groups can be identified using the "Cactus-like with spines" leaf shape option in the appearance tab.
Yes — use the appearance tab and focus on the leaf shape and texture of the detached leaf. A single flat, smooth, blue-green leaf with a clean detachment point strongly suggests Echeveria. A chunky cylindrical leaf with a slightly dried tip suggests Sedum or Pachyphytum. Leaf shape alone is often enough to identify the genus, and genus-level identification is usually sufficient for care purposes.
Pet safety varies by genus. Haworthia, Echeveria, and Sempervivum are generally considered non-toxic. Euphorbia species produce a milky latex sap that is toxic to both cats and dogs. Aloe vera is mildly toxic to pets. Kalanchoe is toxic and should be kept away from animals. The identifier notes toxicity status for each result — this is one of the most important reasons to correctly identify any plant in a pet household.
Colour loss in succulents is almost always caused by one of three things: insufficient light (the most common cause — the plant is stretching toward light and losing pigment), overwatering (waterlogged roots cause the plant to drop colour as it struggles), or temperature extremes. Correctly identifying your succulent tells you exactly what light level it needs — which is the starting point for correcting colour loss.
Hybrid succulents (like ×Graptoveria, ×Sedeveria, and named Echeveria cultivars) can be more difficult to identify to exact cultivar level. The identifier will typically return the parent genus or the closest pure species — which is usually sufficient for care purposes, since hybrids generally follow the care requirements of their dominant parent genus. For named cultivar identification, a photo-based app or specialist succulent community is more precise for rare hybrids.
WHO THIS IS FOR

Who Uses the Succulent Identifier?

Anyone who has a succulent they can't name — or wants to confirm what they already suspect before starting care.

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Beginner Plant Parents

Just started a succulent collection? Identifying each plant correctly from the start means you water on the right schedule from day one — preventing the overwatering that kills most beginner succulents in the first month.

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Gift Recipients

Received a succulent with no label? This is the most common reason people use the identifier. A succulent as a gift with no care information is almost always identifiable within 30 seconds using the appearance tab.

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Nursery Shoppers

Found a beautiful succulent at a garden centre with only a genus label? Narrow down the species before buying so you know exactly what care it needs, whether it's suitable for your climate, and whether it's safe for your pets.

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Collectors & Enthusiasts

Confirm identifications in your collection, resolve disagreements about species names, or identify plants acquired through swaps and trades. The origin tab is particularly useful for collector species with unusual provenance.

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Pet Owners

Toxicity varies enormously between succulent genera. Identifying your plants correctly lets you check which species are safe to keep in rooms accessible to cats and dogs — and which need to be moved to a closed-off space.

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Interior Designers

Specifying the right succulent for a client's light conditions starts with knowing what each candidate species actually needs. Use the identifier to confirm care requirements before recommending a species for a low-light corner or a sunny south-facing window.

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Outdoor Gardeners

Planning a drought-tolerant garden or rock garden? Frost hardiness is the critical factor for outdoor planting in the UK and Northern Europe. The identifier flags which species are hardy outdoors and which will not survive the first frost.