15 Best Pothos Climbing Ideas: Transform Your Space with Vibrant Greenery

My first pothos sat in a pot looking sad and droopy for two years. It grew maybe 6 inches total.
I thought pothos were supposed to be these vigorous plants everyone raves about. Mine was pathetic.
Then I learned that pothos are climbers, not trailing plants. Gave mine something to climb and it exploded – growing 3 feet in 6 months.
Let me show you 15 creative ways to let pothos climb and actually thrive.
Why My Pothos Stayed Small and Sad
Two years of disappointment:
- Pothos in regular pot on shelf
- Long vines hanging down
- Leaves stayed tiny (2 inches)
- Slow growth
- Looked straggly
The problem: I was growing it backwards.
Pothos are climbers in nature:
- Climb trees in rainforests
- Get huge mature leaves (up to 3 feet!)
- Vigorous growth when climbing
- Aerial roots grab surfaces
When allowed to trail:
- Leaves stay small
- Growth slows dramatically
- Looks leggy
- Never reaches potential
After giving mine moss pole to climb:
- Leaves doubled in size (4 inches)
- Growth rate tripled
- Looked full and lush
- Became the plant everyone promised
Simple change, dramatic difference.
Understanding Pothos Climbing Behavior
How pothos actually climb:
Aerial roots:
- Small brown roots from stems
- Grab onto surfaces
- Absorb moisture and nutrients
- Need something to attach to
Without support:
- Aerial roots dangle uselessly
- Plant doesn’t know it can climb
- Reverts to survival mode
- Minimal energy
With support:
- Aerial roots attach
- Plant enters growth mode
- Leaves enlarge
- Vigorous vining
I didn’t understand this for two years. Wasted time wondering why mine sucked.
1. Moss Pole (Classic Climbing Support)

Coconut coir or sphagnum moss pole – the standard method.
My setup:
4-foot moss pole:
- Coconut coir wrapped around PVC pipe
- Inserted in pot
- Secured at bottom
- Stays moist
How I train pothos on it:
- Place pole in pot when repotting
- Wrap vines around pole
- Secure with plant ties or bobby pins
- Mist pole to keep damp
- Aerial roots grab and climb
Results:
- Leaves went from 2 inches to 5 inches in one year
- Vine grew 4 feet up the pole
- Plant looks dramatically better
- Worth every penny
Cost: $15-25 for 4-foot pole
Making Your Own Moss Pole
DIY is easy:
Materials:
- PVC pipe (1 inch diameter)
- Sphagnum moss or coir mat
- Fishing line or wire
- Hot glue (optional)
Construction:
- Wrap moss around pipe
- Secure with fishing line spiral
- Hot glue if needed
- Insert in pot
My DIY pole: $8 in materials, 30 minutes to make
Works just as well as store-bought.
2. Wall Trellis (Living Wall Effect)

Small trellis on wall creates green wall look.
My dining room setup:
Trellis specs:
- 3×4 feet wooden grid
- Mounted to wall studs
- Pot on floor below
- Vines trained up
Installation:
- Found studs with stud finder
- Mounted trellis with screws
- Positioned pot directly below
- Began training vines
Training method:
- Gently weave vines through trellis
- Secure with plant velcro
- Check weekly
- Guide new growth
Coverage timeline:
- Month 1: Just starting
- Month 6: 50% covered
- Month 12: Fully covered
- Now: Lush green wall
Looks incredible – like living wallpaper.
Trellis Options
What works:
Bamboo ladder trellis: Natural look, $20 Metal grid panel: Modern, $30 Wooden lattice: Traditional, $25 DIY string grid: Cheapest, $5
I use bamboo – matches my decor.
Avoid:
- Plastic trellis (looks cheap)
- Anything flimsy (vines get heavy)
3. Curtain Rod Vine (Window Treatment)

Pothos trained across curtain rod creates living curtain.
My bedroom window:
Setup:
- Pot on windowsill
- Curtain rod 8 inches above
- Vines draped over rod
- Cascades on both sides
How to establish:
- Let vines grow to curtain rod length
- Drape over rod
- Secure with transparent tape initially
- Aerial roots grab rod
- Remove tape after attachment
Current state:
- 6-foot vines on each side
- Frames window beautifully
- Still lets light in
- Unique window treatment
Watering challenge:
- Need step stool to reach pot
- Water every 2 weeks
Worth the inconvenience – looks stunning.
Window Treatment Tips
Best practices:
- Use tension rod (no wall damage)
- Start when vines 3+ feet
- Guide growth direction
- Trim to maintain symmetry
My mistake:
- Let one side grow faster
- Looked lopsided
- Trimmed back for balance
4. Bookshelf Climber (Vertical Integration)

Pothos climbing up bookshelf integrates plant with furniture.
My living room bookshelf:
5-shelf bookcase:
- Pothos pot on bottom shelf
- Vines trained up back of bookcase
- Emerges at different levels
- Weaves between books
Training approach:
- Used adhesive hooks on bookshelf back
- Guided vines through hooks
- Vines grow vertically
- Spill out at each shelf level
Creates effect:
- Plants growing from shelves
- Green integrated with books
- Living furniture piece
- Unique display
Maintenance:
- Trim to keep from blocking books
- Guide growth monthly
- Water at bottom
Guests always ask how I have plants on every shelf with one pot.
5. Room Divider Trellis (Space Separator)

Freestanding trellis with climbing pothos divides open space.
My studio apartment solution:
Setup:
- 6-foot freestanding trellis
- Pot at base
- Separates sleeping/living areas
- Semi-private screen
Trellis type:
- Wooden ladder style
- Freestanding (doesn’t need wall)
- Both sides accessible
- Stable base
Planting:
- Large pot (14 inches)
- 3 pothos plants
- Trained up both sides
- Creates dense screen
After 18 months:
- Full coverage
- Provides privacy
- Still lets light through
- Better than curtain divider
Cost: $45 for trellis, already had plants
6. Hanging Basket to Shelf (Reverse Climb)

Hanging basket above, vines climb DOWN then UP to shelf below.
My creative setup:
Configuration:
- Hanging basket at ceiling
- Vines trail down 6 feet
- Meet shelf below
- Climb UP shelf-mounted pole
Creates:
- Cascading then ascending effect
- Unusual growth pattern
- Visual interest
- Two-directional display
How I achieved it:
- Hung basket with long trailing vines
- Positioned shelf below
- Attached moss pole to shelf
- Guided vines from basket to pole
- Secured with velcro plant ties
Looks like plant defying gravity.
7. Pole in Corner (Floor-to-Ceiling Drama)

Single tall pole in corner with pothos climbing full height.
My corner installation:
8-foot moss pole:
- Floor to ceiling
- Wedged between floor and ceiling
- Pot at base
- Maximum vertical growing
Installation:
- Measured ceiling height exactly
- Cut pole 1/8 inch longer
- Wedged into place (friction holds)
- No screws in ceiling needed
Two pothos plants:
- One pot at base
- Both climbing same pole
- Creates fuller coverage
- Racing to the top
Current state:
- Vines reached ceiling (8 months)
- Now cascading down from top
- Full column of green
- Dramatic corner feature
Cost: $35 for tall pole
Floor-to-Ceiling Tips
What works:
- Measure precisely
- Slightly longer pole (friction holds)
- Start with decent-size plants
- Consider two plants for density
I used one plant initially:
- Looked sparse
- Added second plant
- Much better
8. Wall-Mounted Planters (Staggered Climbing)

Multiple wall planters at different heights with vines connecting them.
My hallway design:
3 wall planters:
- Bottom: 2 feet from floor
- Middle: 4 feet from floor
- Top: 6 feet from floor
- Staggered horizontally
One continuous vine:
- Starts in bottom planter
- Grows to middle planter
- Soil in middle catches it
- Continues to top planter
- One root system, three heights
Creates:
- Cascading connected display
- Living art installation
- Narrow hallway greenery
- Unique conversation piece
Watering:
- Water only bottom planter
- Vine feeds all three points
- Easy maintenance
My favorite design of all climbing setups.
9. Shower Curtain Rod (Bathroom Jungle)

Pothos climbing bathroom shower rod creates spa atmosphere.
My bathroom setup:
Placement:
- Pot on toilet tank
- Vines trained to shower rod
- Drapes over rod
- Hangs behind curtain
Why bathroom works:
- High humidity (pothos loves)
- Shower steam benefits plant
- Low light tolerant
- Creates tropical vibe
Current state:
- 8-foot vines both sides of shower
- Thriving in humidity
- Grows faster than other rooms
- Zero pest problems (humidity deters)
Maintenance:
- Water every 2-3 weeks (humidity helps)
- Trim occasionally
- That’s it
Guests love it – unexpected plant location.
Bathroom Growing Benefits
Why pothos loves bathrooms:
- Humidity 50-70% (natural habitat)
- Shower steam like rainforest
- Usually has window (some light)
- Perfect conditions
My bathroom pothos grows 2× faster than living room one.
10. Macramé Hanger with Upward Training

Hanging macramé planter with vine trained UP the hanging cord.
My creative twist:
Setup:
- Macramé hanger (3 feet long)
- Pothos in basket
- Vines growing UP the macramé cords
- Then cascading from ceiling hook
Training method:
- Wrapped young vines around macramé cord
- Secured with clear tape
- Aerial roots grabbed cord
- Tape removed after attachment
- Now climbs naturally
Effect:
- Vines climb up, then cascade down
- Double the visual length
- Uses vertical space twice
- Unique presentation
Total vine length: 8 feet (4 up, 4 down) Space used: Minimal
11. Ladder Plant Stand (Multi-Level Climbing)

Decorative ladder with pothos at each level climbing to next.
My ladder setup:
5-foot decorative ladder:
- Leans against wall
- Plant on each of 4 rungs
- Different varieties pothos
- All climbing upward
Varieties used:
- Bottom: Golden pothos
- Rung 2: Marble queen
- Rung 3: Neon pothos
- Top: Jade pothos
Vines trained:
- Each plant climbs to next rung
- Creates continuous green
- Color variation throughout
- Living ladder sculpture
Looks like cascading waterfall of different greens.
Cost: $40 for ladder, already had plants
12. Picture Frame Trellis (Living Art)

Empty picture frame becomes trellis for climbing pothos.
My creative project:
Large ornate frame:
- 3×4 feet
- Mounted on wall
- Fishing line grid inside
- Pothos trained through
Construction:
- Removed glass and backing
- Strung fishing line across frame
- Created 4-inch grid
- Hung frame on wall
- Positioned pot below
Training:
- Weave vines through fishing line
- Secure with small clips
- Fills in over time
- Creates living picture
Current state:
- Fully filled in (took 10 months)
- Looks like green painting
- Unique wall art
- DIY cost: $15 (thrift store frame)
13. Totems and Natural Wood (Rustic Climb)

Driftwood or branch creates natural climbing structure.
My natural setup:
Found driftwood piece:
- 5 feet tall
- Interesting shape
- Multiple branches
- Stuck in pot
Pothos climbing it:
- More natural than moss pole
- Rustic aesthetic
- Unique character
- No two alike
Where I got wood:
- Beach driftwood (free)
- Soaked and cleaned
- Dried completely
- Planted in pot
Looks like:
- Plant in natural habitat
- Less contrived than trellis
- Organic and wild
- Conversation piece
Finding Natural Wood
Good sources:
- Beaches (driftwood)
- Woods (fallen branches)
- Craft stores (decorative)
- Garden centers (grapewood)
Treatment:
- Soak in water 24 hours
- Scrub clean
- Let dry completely
- Optional: seal with linseed oil
My driftwood cost: $0
14. Cabinet Top to Ceiling (Utilizing Dead Space)

Pothos on top of kitchen cabinets climbing to ceiling.
My kitchen solution:
Setup:
- Pot on top of upper cabinets
- Moss pole extends to ceiling
- Not visible from below
- Just see lush greenery
Benefits:
- Uses dead space (cabinet tops collect dust anyway)
- High up out of way
- Adds green to kitchen
- Hidden pot (just see plant)
Watering challenge:
- Need step ladder
- Water every 3 weeks
- Humidity from cooking helps
Effect:
- Green growing from top of cabinets
- Softens kitchen hard edges
- Unexpected plant location
- Makes ceilings feel lower (cozier)
Perfect for: High ceilings, unused cabinet tops
15. Aquarium Trellis (Water Feature Integration)

Pothos climbing structure behind fish tank creates aquatic jungle.
My friend’s setup (I’m copying it):
Arrangement:
- 40-gallon aquarium
- Trellis behind tank
- Pothos climbing trellis
- Creates backdrop
Benefits:
- Humidity from tank helps pothos
- Pothos roots can grow in tank water (filters it!)
- Looks like aquatic environment
- Plants and fish together
Advanced technique:
- Let some pothos roots grow into aquarium
- Absorbs nitrates from fish waste
- Natural filtration
- Plants thrive on fish water nutrients
Creates:
- Ecosystem feel
- Lush jungle behind fish
- Beautiful integration
- Healthier tank and plants
I’m trying this next month with my new tank.
Training Techniques That Work
How to actually get pothos to climb:
Initial Attachment
My method:
- Position vine against support
- Secure with plant velcro or bobby pins
- Keep support moist (mist moss poles)
- Wait 2-3 weeks
- Aerial roots attach naturally
- Remove temporary supports
Patience required – doesn’t happen overnight.
Encouraging Upward Growth
Tricks I use:
Trim trailing growth:
- Forces energy upward
- Encourages climbing
- Denser growth on support
Keep support damp:
- Aerial roots seek moisture
- Mist moss poles weekly
- Helps attachment
Secure initially:
- Plant velcro (reusable)
- Bobby pins (cheap)
- Twist ties (works but visible)
Avoid:
- Tape (damages leaves when removing)
- String (cuts into stems)
- Glue (ridiculous but I’ve seen it)
Maintaining Climbing Pothos
Different care than trailing:
Watering Climbing Pothos
My schedule:
In pots with poles:
- Water every 10-14 days
- Top inch dry = water
- Mist pole weekly
- Poles hold moisture
Wall-mounted climbers:
- Every 7-10 days
- Dry faster (more exposed)
- Check frequently
I use moisture meter – takes guesswork out ($10 investment).
Fertilizing for Growth
To support vigorous climbing:
My fertilizing:
- Liquid fertilizer monthly
- Half strength
- During growing season (spring/summer)
- Skip winter
I over-fertilized once:
- Salt buildup
- Leaf burn
- Flushed soil with water
- Now stick to schedule
Pruning and Directing
Monthly maintenance:
- Trim wayward vines
- Direct growth where wanted
- Remove yellow leaves
- Shape for aesthetic
My approach:
- Trim to encourage bushiness
- Cut just above node
- Propagate cuttings (free plants!)
Best Pothos Varieties for Climbing
Different varieties perform differently:
Golden Pothos (What I Started With)
Characteristics:
- Yellow and green variegation
- Most vigorous grower
- Easiest to find
- Best for beginners
My golden pothos on moss pole grows 6+ inches monthly.
Marble Queen (Slower But Beautiful)
Characteristics:
- White and green variegation
- Slower growth (more white = less chlorophyll)
- Needs more light
- Stunning appearance
I have one on trellis:
- Grows half the speed of golden
- Worth it for beauty
- Requires patience
Neon Pothos (Bright Chartreuse)
Characteristics:
- Bright lime green
- Solid color (no variegation)
- Moderate growth
- Eye-catching
My neon on bathroom curtain rod glows in morning light.
Manjula and Other Varieties
I also grow:
- Manjula (cream, white, green variegation)
- N’Joy (white patches)
- Jade (solid green, fastest grower)
All climb well with proper support.
Common Climbing Problems
Issues I’ve encountered:
Aerial Roots Not Attaching
Causes:
- Support too dry
- Wrong material (smooth plastic)
- Impatient (needs time)
Solutions:
- Mist support daily
- Use textured materials (moss, wood)
- Wait 3-4 weeks before assuming failure
Vines Growing Away from Support
My problem with trellis:
- New growth shot away from wall
- Didn’t want to climb
Fix:
- Tied growth to trellis
- Positioned pot closer to wall
- Trimmed outward growth
Leaves Staying Small
Despite climbing, leaves stayed small:
Reasons:
- Insufficient light
- Need higher support
- Young plant (give time)
My solution:
- Moved to brighter location
- Extended moss pole height
- Waited (patience paid off)
Support Falling Over
My 6-foot pole tipped:
- Top-heavy with growth
- Pot too small
- Not secured
Fixes:
- Repotted in larger, heavier pot
- Added rocks to pot bottom for weight
- Secured pole to pot with wire
DIY Support Ideas on Budget
You don’t need expensive moss poles:
PVC Pipe with Rope
What I made:
- 1-inch PVC pipe
- Wrapped in natural rope
- Hot glued rope in place
- Textured surface for grip
Cost: $5 Time: 30 minutes
Branch from Yard
Free option:
- Find interesting branch
- Clean and dry
- Insert in pot
- Natural and free
Works great and looks better than manufactured.
Bamboo Stakes Grid
Simple trellis:
- Bamboo stakes in pot
- String creates grid
- Plants weave through
- $3 for stakes, have string
Not beautiful but functional.
Styling Tips for Aesthetic Climbing
Making it look designed not random:
Match Support to Decor
I learned this late:
Modern space: Metal grid, minimalist Rustic space: Driftwood, natural materials
Traditional space: Wooden trellis, classic Boho space: Macramé, textured
My modern apartment looks best with simple bamboo or metal – not ornate.
Pot Selection Matters
Coordinate pot with support:
Moss pole: Natural ceramic or terracotta Metal trellis: Modern ceramic or concrete Wood support: Woven basket or terracotta
I use:
- White ceramic (goes with everything)
- Terracotta (natural look)
- Woven baskets (boho vibe)
Avoid: Plastic pots (look cheap, especially with nice support)
Creating Balance
Visual weight matters:
Tall support = larger pot (visual balance) Small support = smaller pot (proportional)
My mistake:
- Huge 6-foot pole in tiny 4-inch pot
- Looked ridiculous
- Repotted in 10-inch pot
- Much better proportions
My Favorite Climbing Setup
After trying all 15 methods:
Wall trellis in dining room wins for:
- Most dramatic impact
- Constant visibility (use room daily)
- Perfect growth conditions (bright indirect light)
- Easiest maintenance (accessible)
- Gets most compliments
Current stats:
- Bamboo trellis (3×4 feet)
- 2 golden pothos in 12-inch pot
- Fully covered in 14 months
- Leaves up to 6 inches
- Grows 8+ inches monthly
Investment:
- Trellis: $20
- Pot: $15
- Plants: $12 (2 small)
- Soil: $8
- Total: $55
Worth every penny – transformed my dining room.
Getting Started with Climbing Pothos
Weekend project:
Saturday:
- Choose climbing method from this list
- Buy support structure
- Get larger pot if needed
- Gather supplies
Sunday:
- Repot if necessary
- Install support
- Train vines onto support
- Secure with ties
- Water well
Following weeks:
- Monitor attachment
- Mist support (if moss)
- Guide growth
- Watch transformation
My recommendation for beginners:
Start with simple moss pole in existing pot:
- $15-20 investment
- Easiest method
- Immediate results
- Always works
Once comfortable, try more creative methods.
Now go give your pothos something to climb and watch it thrive!
Quick Summary:
Why climbing matters:
- Pothos are natural climbers (not trailers)
- Leaves grow 2-3× larger when climbing
- Faster, more vigorous growth
- Fuller, lusher appearance
- Healthier overall plant
Easiest climbing methods:
- Moss pole (classic, always works)
- Wall trellis (dramatic impact)
- Bookshelf climbing (uses existing furniture)
- Curtain rod (creative, easy)
Most impressive displays:
- Wall-mounted staggered planters (living art)
- Floor-to-ceiling pole (maximum drama)
- Room divider trellis (functional beauty)
- Picture frame trellis (unique conversation piece)
Budget-friendly options:
- DIY rope-wrapped PVC ($5)
- Branch from yard (free)
- Bamboo stake grid ($3)
- String trellis (under $5)
Training techniques:
Initial attachment:
- Position vine against support
- Secure with plant velcro
- Keep support moist
- Wait 2-3 weeks for aerial roots
- Remove temporary ties
Encouraging climbing:
- Trim trailing growth (forces upward)
- Mist moss poles weekly
- Keep support textured (not smooth)
- Be patient (attachment takes time)
Best pothos varieties for climbing:
Fastest growers:
- Golden pothos (most vigorous)
- Jade pothos (solid green, quick)
- Neon pothos (bright chartreuse)
Slower but beautiful:
- Marble Queen (white variegation)
- Manjula (cream and white)
- N’Joy (compact with white)
Maintenance requirements:
Watering:
- Every 10-14 days (moss pole setups)
- Every 7-10 days (wall-mounted)
- Mist poles weekly
Fertilizing:
- Monthly spring/summer
- Half-strength liquid fertilizer
- Skip winter months
Pruning:
- Monthly shaping
- Remove wayward vines
- Trim for bushiness
- Propagate cuttings
Common problems solved:
Aerial roots won’t attach:
- Keep support moist
- Use textured materials
- Wait longer (3-4 weeks)
Leaves stay small:
- Needs more light
- Support too short
- Give it time
Growth shoots away:
- Secure to support
- Position pot closer
- Trim outward growth
Support tips over:
- Use heavier pot
- Add weight to pot bottom
- Secure pole to pot
Room-specific ideas:
Living room: Wall trellis, bookshelf climber Bedroom: Curtain rod vine, corner pole Bathroom: Shower rod, high humidity spot Kitchen: Cabinet top to ceiling Office: Desk trellis, vertical pole
Space requirements:
Minimal space:
- Moss pole in existing pot (1 sq ft)
- Wall-mounted (no floor space)
- Hanging with upward training (overhead)
Medium space:
- Trellis (2-3 sq ft)
- Bookshelf integration (existing furniture)
- Corner pole (corner space)
Investment ranges:
Minimal: $5-15 (DIY supports) Standard: $15-40 (moss poles, small trellises) Premium: $40-100 (large trellises, specialty supports)
Timeline expectations:
Week 1-3: Initial attachment period Month 1-3: Visible upward growth begins Month 3-6: Noticeable leaf size increase Month 6-12: Dramatic transformation Year 1+: Mature climbing plant
Success indicators:
- Aerial roots grabbing support
- New growth reaching upward
- Larger leaves appearing
- Vigorous vine growth
- Plant looks fuller
Styling considerations:
Match support to decor:
- Modern: Metal, minimalist
- Rustic: Wood, natural materials
- Traditional: Ornate trellises
- Boho: Macramé, textured
Pot coordination:
- Support height = pot size balance
- Natural supports = terracotta/baskets
- Modern supports = ceramic/concrete
Quick wins:
- Add moss pole to existing pothos (instant improvement)
- Train curtain rod vine (unique, easy)
- Bookshelf integration (uses existing furniture)
- Wall trellis (maximum impact)






