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Leaf check
Tomato Plant Curling Leaves
Curling Leaves on Tomato Plant usually means one of a few common care issues.
The practical answer: Check light, pests, humidity, and recent stress first. One symptom alone rarely proves the cause.
Decision snapshot
| Best read | Watering, light, pest, root, or stress clue |
|---|---|
| Main variable | Soil feel plus recent care changes |
| Action | Change one variable at a time |
Check first
- Is the soil wet, dry, compacted, or sour-smelling?
- Did light, temperature, or watering change recently?
- Look under leaves and near stems for pests.
Small fix
Make one change at a time, then wait for new growth before judging the result.
When to cut back
Remove leaves that are fully dead, mushy, or spreading disease. Do not strip every imperfect leaf at once.
Why this answer can change
Plant symptoms overlap. Yellow leaves can come from too much water, too little water, low light, pests, old leaves, or transplant stress.
The best troubleshooting move is to inspect soil and roots before adding fertilizer. Fertilizer rarely fixes a stressed root system.
Small checklist before you act
- Confirm the exact wording or item version, not only the broad category.
- Check whether condition, size, timing, or location changes the answer.
- Use the low-risk first step before trying a stronger or irreversible fix.