Why Indian Homes with Plants Still Feel Stuffy: Greenery Can't Filter Air Like You Think
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Indoor Air Quality

Why Indian Homes with Plants Still Feel Stuffy: Greenery Can't Filter Air Like You Think

3 min read

Why Indian Homes with Plants Still Feel Stuffy: Greenery Can't Filter Air Like You Think

You've got money plants and snake plants everywhere. But your Indian home still feels stuffy. Why?

Indoor plants remove small amounts of VOCs, but the rate is so slow you'd need hundreds of plants in one room to match ventilation or an air purifier. A 2020 review warned you'd need hundreds of plants to replicate NASA's clean air study results.

Crucially, plants do not remove smoke, dust, PM2.5, or PM10. These are exactly the pollutants flooding Indian homes from cooking fumes, traffic, construction dust, and incense.

Indoor air can be 2โ€“5 times more polluted than outdoor air. Indian apartments face closed windows, humidity, VOCs from furniture, and poor ventilation.

The Real Solution

Think of plants as supportive companions, not air-cleaning machines. For health-relevant pollution, you need ventilation and filtration. A realistic recommendation is 10โ€“15 plants across the home for aesthetics and stress reduction, but no amount of houseplants can replace ventilation or filtration when serious pollution is concerned.