Plant identification · diagnosis · recovery

That plant isn’t dying. It’s asking for help.

Point your camera at a struggling plant. Plant Rescue AI names it, explains what’s wrong in plain language — and walks you through the rescue, day by day, until it’s back.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
Houseplants · lawns · gardens · orchards
9:41
96% match
Identified
Monsteradeliciosa
Also called Swiss Cheese Plant · native to Central America.
First impression
Healthy. Looks ~2 years old with 4 mature leaves. Two new aerial roots visible. Likes bright indirect light.
Quick care
Bright
Indirect
Weekly
When dry
65-80°
60%+ RH
Other matches: Monstera adansonii · 62% · Philodendron hederaceum · 41%
IdentifiedMonstera deliciosa96% match
DiagnosisOverwatering · early root stressRescue plan ready → 14 days
How it works

Scan. Diagnose. Rescue.

Three steps between a plant that’s struggling and a plant that’s recovering.

01

Scan

One photo. The AI identifies the species and immediately flags what looks off — before you ask.

9:41
96% match
Identified
Monsteradeliciosa
Also called Swiss Cheese Plant · native to Central America.
First impression
Healthy. Looks ~2 years old with 4 mature leaves. Two new aerial roots visible. Likes bright indirect light.
Quick care
Bright
Indirect
Weekly
When dry
65-80°
60%+ RH
Other matches: Monstera adansonii · 62% · Philodendron hederaceum · 41%
02

Diagnose

You see the evidence, the reasoning, and a confidence score. When it isn’t sure, it says so — and asks for a better angle.

9:41
Diagnosis · yellow lower leaves
Most likely:
overwatering.
Confidence
72%
8 evidence points
From your photo
Yellowing starts on LOWER leaves
Soil reads wet 5 days post-water
Stem feels soft near soil line
No brown crispy tips (would point to under-water)
Also possible
Low-light stress
18%
Natural leaf shed
7%
Nitrogen deficiency
3%
Add a stem-base photo · would push confidence above 90%
03

Rescue

A day-by-day recovery plan with one action at a time. Check-ins track progress until your plant is officially out of the woods.

9:41
Recovery · day 14 of 30
Doing better.
47% complete
On track
D 0 · May 5D 14 · TODAYD 30 · Jun 4
Weekly photos
Day 0
Day 7
Day 14
Day 21
Day 30
What's happening
+2 new leaves emerging
observed day 9
Yellow spread halted
day 11
Trimmed 2 mushy roots · repotted in pumice
day 12
Brown leaf tips persist
unchanged
Next check-in Sun May 26. I'll prompt you for a photo.
Today
Plants
Sites
Profile
Features

Built to earn your trust, not just your taps.

Most plant apps hand you a species name and a watering timer. This one behaves like a good clinician.

Transparent diagnosis

See why, not just what.

Every diagnosis shows the visual evidence it found, the causes it ruled out, and how confident it is. Low confidence? It asks for another photo instead of bluffing.

92% · root rot31% · pests — ruled out
Evidence: yellowing lower leaves · soil wet 6+ days
Check, don’t water

It measures before it prescribes.

Instead of a fixed schedule, the app has you check the soil and the leaves — then decides. Most rescued plants were being killed by the calendar, not neglect.

Soil moisture · top 5 cmStill damp
Verdict: don’t water. Re-check in 2 days.
Recovery mode

A plan, not a pamphlet.

Rescues run on a timeline — repot day, trim day, observation days — with photo check-ins so the AI can confirm the plant is actually responding, and adjust when it isn’t.

Day 14 of 21 · new growth confirmed
Beyond the windowsill

Lawns, beds, orchards, fields.

The same scan-diagnose-rescue loop works on turf disease, garden-bed pests, fruit-tree care calendars, and crop-scale problems on the AG tier.

HouseplantsLawn careGarden bedsFruit treesAG tier
The app

Quiet, unhurried, and honest.

No streaks, no confetti. An interface designed to feel like advice from a patient expert.

9:41
C
Tue · May 19 · Brooklyn
One plant
needs you today.
Fiddle Leaf Fig
Fig NewtonCheck water
Living room · south window
22%
Moisture
Check before you water.
Soil's been drying ~12% slower this week. A quick finger-test will save Greta from a second over-water.
On track · 11 plantsSee all →
Greta
Monstera
Spike
Snake Plant
Cascade
Pothos
South Bed · outdoorSkip today
Skip outdoor watering
18 mm rain in 48h · more forecast tonight
Today
Plants
Sites
Profile
Today · every plant at a glance
9:41
Skip
Check 3 of 4 · pot weight
Lift the pot.
How does it feel?
A dry pot weighs noticeably less than a freshly-watered one. This catches what a finger-test can miss.
Heavy
Soil still holds water · do not water
Medium
Borderline · context decides
Light
Pot lifts easily · likely thirsty
Can't tell
Skip — go on soil signal only
Your answers so far
Top soil dry No drooping Trending: wait
“Check, don’t water” flow
9:41
Recovery · day 14 of 30
Doing better.
47% complete
On track
D 0 · May 5D 14 · TODAYD 30 · Jun 4
Weekly photos
Day 0
Day 7
Day 14
Day 21
Day 30
What's happening
+2 new leaves emerging
observed day 9
Yellow spread halted
day 11
Trimmed 2 mushy roots · repotted in pumice
day 12
Brown leaf tips persist
unchanged
Next check-in Sun May 26. I'll prompt you for a photo.
Today
Plants
Sites
Profile
Recovery Mode · day 14
9:41
Ask the AI
Describe any plant or lawn problem
My tomato leaves are curling inward on one side and there are tiny white dots on the underside.
Most likely
Spider mites.
Tiny sap-sucking mites that thrive in hot, dry conditions. The stippling and curling pattern is a strong indicator.
Treatment
1
Isolate the plant immediately
2
Spray all leaf surfaces with diluted neem oil — undersides especially
3
Repeat every 3 days for 2 weeks

High confidence · 4 evidence points
Want me to add this to Greta's recovery plan?
Or upload a photo from your library
Describe a problem or ask anything…
Today
Plants
Sites
Profile
Ask the AI anything
9:41
C
Mon · May 19 · Brooklyn
Three things
need you.
Based on your location, forecast, and plant history.
Frost risk Thursday night.
Temperatures dropping to -1°C. Move outdoor containers inside or cover tender plants by Wednesday evening.
Last feed window this week.
Bermuda lawn enters slow-down next month. Apply a balanced fertilizer before Saturday for best uptake.
Greta is unfurling a new leaf.
Reduce watering by 20% during unfurling — the plant redirects energy to the new growth.
Coming up · next 30 days
Jun 2Overseed check
Jun 8Repot Spike
Jun 14Feed tomatoes
Jun 20Mist Calathea
Today
Plants
Sites
Profile
Seasonal coaching feed

The next sick plant doesn’t have to be a goodbye.

Free to scan and identify. Rescue plans, lawn care and the AG tier when you need them.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
iOS 17+ · Android 13+
FAQ

Fair questions.

What can it identify?

Houseplants, garden plants, turf grasses, weeds, fruit trees and common crops — plus the diseases, pests and care problems that affect them. If the AI isn’t confident about a match, it tells you and asks for a closer photo rather than guessing.

How is this different from other plant-ID apps?

Identification is the starting point, not the product. Plant Rescue AI is built around what happens after: a transparent diagnosis with evidence and confidence scores, and a day-by-day recovery plan it adjusts based on your check-in photos.

Is it free?

Scanning and identification are free, always. Rescue plans, Recovery Mode tracking and lawn care are part of the paid tier, and there’s a separate AG tier for orchards and field crops. You’ll never hit a paywall mid-rescue.

What happens to my photos?

Photos are used to identify and diagnose your plant, and to track recovery if you opt into check-ins. They’re never sold or used for advertising, and you can delete your history at any time.

Does it work offline?

You can capture photos offline and they’ll queue for diagnosis when you’re back online. Saved rescue plans and care calendars are available offline in full.

Is the Android app the same?

Yes — iOS and Android ship the same features at the same time, including Recovery Mode, lawn care and the AG tier.