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Haworthia Aloe Variegata Tiger Aloe Plant 7cm Pot

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Original price Rs. 0.00 - Original price Rs. 0.00
Original price
Rs. 0.00
Rs. 0.00 - Rs. 0.00
Current price Rs. 0.00
SKU HAWO12131

If you've ever wanted a succulent that looks hand-painted, the Tiger Aloe is it — long, slender leaves arranged in a tight rosette, each one dark green and dotted with rows of white spots that give the plant its wild, striped appearance. What sets Haworthia 'Aloe Variegata' apart from other haworthias is precisely this bold, mottled patterning: no two leaves look identical, and the slightly glossy surface catches light beautifully on any desk or windowsill. Native to the rocky landscapes of South Africa and Namibia, it's built for Indian homes — tolerant of partial shade, low-maintenance, and perfectly sized in a 7cm pot for compact spaces. At maturity it grows to around 30cm tall, but right now it's exactly the kind of small, striking plant you can start a succulent collection with.

Water when the top layer of soil is dry.

Always check your plants before watering, the topsoil should be dry to touch. For succulents allow the potting mix to dry completely before watering again.

☀️ Needs bright indirect sunlight

Place your plants on window sills where it can get the brightest possible indirect light. Bright indirect light is when the plant is within a couple of feet of a natural source of light.Thrives in bright, indirect light — an east or north-facing windowsill is ideal in most Indian homes. Unlike most succulents, it tolerates partial shade well, but avoid prolonged exposure to harsh afternoon sun, which can scorch the spotted leaves.

🐾 Keep out of pet reach

This plant and your furry friends cannot become the best buds.

🪴 Needs Gardening experience

The plant needs a knowing eye of a gardener to understand what it needs. Fairly easy to grow if you take care of their set of requirements.

🌱 Fertilizer

The plant needs a knowing eye of a gardener to understand what it needs. Fairly easy to grow if you take care of their set of requirements.

Color may appear slightly different in person due to photographic lighting and monitor settings.

Those neat rows of white spots running along each dark green leaf aren't markings — they're the plant's identity. The Tiger Aloe arrives in a tight rosette formation, its fleshy, pointed leaves fanning outward with a subtly glossy finish that makes the patterning pop even in low indoor light.

About Haworthia 'Aloe Variegata (Tiger Aloe)' — Origin & Botany

Indigenous to the arid regions of South Africa and Namibia, Haworthia 'Aloe Variegata' has evolved to thrive in rocky, semi-shaded terrain — which is precisely why it does so well tucked onto a shaded windowsill or a work desk in an Indian home. It belongs to the Asphodelaceae family and is closely related to aloes, sharing the same fleshy, succulent leaf structure but staying far more compact. At full maturity, the plant reaches approximately 30cm tall and 23cm wide — meaning what you're getting right now in its 7cm nursery pot is a young, already-characterful plant with plenty of growth ahead. When it flowers — which it occasionally does even indoors — the blooms emerge on a tall spike in soft shades of orange to pink, a lovely seasonal surprise against all that dark green.

Why the Tiger Aloe Works as a Succulent Plant for Indian Homes

Shade-Tolerant in a Way Most Succulents Are Not

Most succulent plants demand full sun, which makes them tricky for Indian apartments with north-facing rooms or deep balconies. The Tiger Aloe is a genuine exception — it tolerates partial shade comfortably without losing its patterning or becoming leggy. A bright spot away from direct afternoon sun is all it needs to stay healthy and compact.

A Living Desk Accessory

Its slow growth rate and naturally tidy rosette shape mean it stays neat without pruning or intervention. Place it next to your laptop or on a study shelf and it holds its form for months, requiring almost no intervention beyond the occasional watering. The white-spotted, dark green leaves add visual contrast that pairs well with both minimal and richly decorated interiors.

Low Water, High Character

As a true succulent, the Tiger Aloe stores water in its thick, fleshy leaves — making it an ideal plant for people who travel frequently or simply forget to water. Its South African origins mean it's adapted to dry spells, and overwatering is a far greater risk than underwatering. Water when the top layer of soil is dry, and this plant will reward you with steady, unfussy growth.

Starter-Friendly Without Being Boring

This isn't a plain green beginner plant. The mottled, spotted leaf pattern gives it the visual complexity of a collector's specimen while being as easy to keep alive as any haworthia. It's the ideal entry point for someone stepping into the world of haworthia varieties — striking enough to display proudly, forgiving enough to thrive through learning curves.

Haworthia Varieties — What Makes Tiger Aloe Stand Apart

Within the wide world of haworthia varieties, 'Aloe Variegata' is one of the most visually distinctive. Unlike the translucent windowed leaves of Haworthia cooperi or the lime-green rosettes of Haworthia fasciata, the Tiger Aloe is defined by its darker base color and the precise, repetitive banding of white or light green spots across every leaf — a pattern so consistent it genuinely looks intentional. It's also larger-growing than many haworthias, eventually reaching 30cm tall, giving it more presence on a shelf as it matures.

Also Known As: Tiger Aloe, Variegated Aloe, Partridge Breast Aloe

Why Buy from Chhajed Garden

Every Tiger Aloe we dispatch is grown in-house at Sanjay Nursery, potted in well-draining cocopeat mix, and backed by our 7-day replacement guarantee — because 40+ years of growing plants has taught us that the condition it arrives in matters as much as the plant itself. You're not getting a plant pulled off a wholesale trolley; you're getting something we've personally tended.

A plant this precise in its patterning feels less like something you bought and more like something you discovered.

Frequently Asked Questions

Find answers to common questions

Haworthia brown tips are almost always caused by one of two things: overwatering or too much direct harsh sun. Keep the Tiger Aloe in bright but indirect light — a north or east-facing windowsill in most Indian homes works well — and water only when the top layer of soil feels completely dry. Unlike most small succulent plants, it doesn't need to dry out fully between waterings, just avoid letting it sit in soggy soil.

It's a genuinely thoughtful housewarming gift — compact, low-maintenance, and visually striking enough to feel special rather than generic. The spotted rosette looks beautiful in a ceramic or terracotta pot upgrade, making it easy to present well. For Diwali gifting, pair it with a decorative pot and it becomes a lasting green gift that outlives the festival season.

Succulents like the Tiger Aloe are generally considered positive Vastu plants when placed in the east or north zones of a home, areas associated with new energy and opportunity. Avoid placing it in the bedroom or bathroom according to traditional Vastu guidance. A study desk or entrance table in a well-lit area is an excellent placement choice.

The Tiger Aloe's defining feature is its dark green leaves patterned with rows of light green or white spots — a bolder, more graphic look than the translucent windowed leaves of Haworthia cooperi or the white-striped ridges of Haworthia fasciata. It also grows larger than most haworthia varieties, eventually reaching around 30cm tall, and occasionally produces orange-to-pink flower spikes — something most desk haworthias rarely do.

Your plant arrives in a 7cm nursery pot, rooted in cocopeat, and is typically 8–12cm tall at this starter stage. It may have some soil displaced during transit — simply settle it back and place it in indirect light for a few days before resuming any watering. It's covered by our 7-day replacement guarantee, so if anything arrives damaged, just reach out with a photo.

The easiest way to propagate haworthia is through offsets — small pups that appear at the base of the mother plant as it matures. Once a pup is a few centimetres tall and has its own root structure, carefully separate it during repotting and pot it into fresh, well-draining succulent mix. Leaf propagation is possible but slow and less reliable for this variety, so offset division is the recommended method.

Starting in a 7cm pot, your Tiger Aloe will grow gradually — it's a slow-growing succulent that won't need repotting for 12–18 months in most cases. At full maturity it reaches approximately 30cm tall and 23cm wide, so you'll step up pot sizes incrementally over several years. Repot in spring using a well-draining succulent or cactus mix, and choose a pot only slightly larger than the current one to avoid excess moisture retention.