An Easter lily can look perfect on day one, then droop by day three if it lands in the wrong spot. If you want to know how to take care of an Easter lily, start with three basics: bright indirect light, cool temperatures around 60 to 65°F, and water only when the top inch of soil feels dry.
Get those right and your lily will usually hold its shape and color well past the holiday. The steps below walk through the full timeline, from the first hour at home to what to do after the flowers fade.
Your Easter Lily’s First Days at Home
The first 48 to 72 hours matter most. Your plant is moving from greenhouse conditions into your home, so even small shifts in heat, light, and moisture can show up fast.
If your lily arrives wrapped in decorative foil or a plastic sleeve, remove that right away. Those covers trap extra water and cut down airflow around the pot.
For more first-day flower habits, see our fresh cut flower care guide.
Finding the Right Spot
Easter lilies like bright light, but harsh direct sun can scorch leaves and petals. A spot near an east-facing window is ideal because it gives gentle morning light without too much heat later in the day.
If you do not have that setup, place the plant a few feet back from a bright window or soften the light with a sheer curtain. A soft, blurry hand shadow usually means the light is right. A dark, sharp shadow means it is too strong.
Temperature and Humidity Basics
Cool air helps the blooms last longer. Aim for a steady range of 60 to 65°F, and keep the pot away from heaters, vents, ovens, and drafty doors.
The simplest way to stretch bloom life is steady, cool temperature. Heat speeds up both opening and fading.
Average indoor humidity is usually fine. Just avoid extremely dry corners or spots right next to forced air.
Watering, The Step That Matters Most
If there is one part of how to take care of an Easter lily that causes trouble, it is watering. Most problems come from too much water, not too little.
A good rule is drench and dry. Water thoroughly, let the excess drain away, then wait until the top inch of soil dries before watering again.
How to Check Soil Moisture
Do not judge by the surface alone. Push your finger about an inch into the soil. If it feels dry there, water. If it still feels damp, wait a day or two and check again.
Drainage holes matter. If the nursery pot sits inside a decorative cover, lift it out for watering, let it drain fully, then place it back inside.
Only When It Blooms
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The Right Way to Water
- Move the pot to a sink or another place where drainage is easy.
- Water evenly until water runs from the bottom.
- Let it drain for about 10 to 15 minutes.
- Empty the saucer before returning the plant.
Key rule: Never let an Easter lily sit in standing water. Wet roots lose air quickly, and rot can follow.
Do You Need Fertilizer
While the plant is blooming, skip fertilizer. The bulb already stored what it needs for that first flush of flowers.
If you want to keep the plant after bloom, wait about a month after the last flower fades. Then feed with a balanced houseplant fertilizer at half strength every two to three weeks until the foliage begins to yellow on its own.
What to Do After the Flowers Fade
Once the last trumpet flower wilts, your Easter lily is not finished. It is moving into a recharge phase, and that stage helps decide whether the bulb has a real chance to bloom again later.
Deadhead Spent Flowers
Remove each faded flower where it meets the main stem. That keeps the plant from wasting energy on seed production.
If you are also caring for cut blooms around the house, our tips to make flowers last longer cover a few easy habits that help across flower types.
Keep the Leaves Until They Yellow
Do not cut the green stem and leaves right away. Those leaves are still feeding the bulb through photosynthesis.
Keep giving the plant bright indirect light and careful watering. Your goal is to keep the foliage healthy into late spring.
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When to Cut It Back
As the season warms, the leaves will begin to yellow and dry. That is normal. Once the foliage is fully brown, cut the stalk down to about 3 to 6 inches above the soil.
Your Easter lily is not failing when it goes yellow after bloom. It is entering dormancy, which is part of the bulb’s normal cycle.
Replanting Your Easter Lily Outdoors
You can give your Easter lily a second life outside. Holiday lilies are forced to bloom on a special schedule indoors, but once planted in the ground they usually return to their natural timing.
Choose a Sunny, Well-Drained Spot
Outdoors, Easter lilies do best with at least six hours of sun each day. Morning sun is ideal.
Well-drained soil matters just as much as light. If your soil stays heavy or soggy, mix in compost and a drainage helper such as coarse sand or perlite before planting.
Best Time to Transplant
Wait until frost risk has passed and the plant is nearing dormancy. Plant the bulb about six inches deep, water once to settle the soil, then let the remaining foliage die back naturally.
Do not expect it to bloom at Easter again next year. Most bulbs return to a more natural summer bloom cycle once they are outside.
If you want the growing side of the story, this Easter lily production guide shows how growers time and manage the crop.
Common Easter Lily Problems
Yellow Leaves and Wilting
A few lower yellow leaves are normal. Widespread yellowing usually points to overwatering.
Check the soil first. If it is wet, pause watering and let it dry more before the next soak. If the soil is dry and the plant still looks weak, it may need brighter light.
Aphids and Fungus Gnats
Aphids tend to gather on tender new growth. Wipe them away with a damp cloth or rinse the plant gently, then follow with mild soapy water if needed.
Fungus gnats usually show up when the soil stays too wet. Let the top two inches dry a bit more between waterings, and they often fade on their own.
Gray Mold
Gray mold can show up as soft brown spots with fuzzy growth on leaves or petals. It spreads most easily in cool, damp air with poor circulation.
Keep leaves dry when watering, remove damaged growth, and give the plant a little breathing room.
Pet Safety
Easter lilies are extremely toxic to cats. Every part of the plant is dangerous, including pollen.
If you want the same clean spring feel in a pet-aware home, a neutral white and green arrangement is a better floral direction than bringing a true lily indoors. For a broader overview, read our guide to poisonous flowers.
Need Flowers That Last Beyond the Holiday?
If you love having fresh flowers at home after Easter, our residential floral services bring seasonal arrangements into your space on a consistent schedule. If you have a question about plant care or what to send instead of lilies, you can also contact our studio.









