golden pothos epipremnum aureum Epipremnum aureum 'HiColor' – Yellow-Splashed Pothos
SKU: 66545498121
golden pothos epipremnum aureum

golden pothos epipremnum aureum Epipremnum aureum 'HiColor' – Yellow-Splashed Pothos

Sale price$22.76 Regular price$25.29
Save 10%

Pay in installments of $6.32 with ShopPay, AfterPay and Klarna

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 2 - Jul 7

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

golden pothos epipremnum aureum Epipremnum aureum 'HiColor' – Yellow-Splashed PothosEpipremnum aureum 'HiColor' bright yellow lime marbling on a vigorous indoor vine Epipremnum aureum 'HiColor' is grown for high contrast foliage in bright yellow green, lime, and softer green tones. Instead of the broad cream marbling seen in white variegated forms, this selection stays in a warmer, greener range and gives off a more saturated look overall. The leaves are glossy, heart shaped, and lively without looking as flatly coloured as 'Neon' or

Epipremnum aureum 'HiColor' – bright yellow-lime marbling on a vigorous indoor vine

Epipremnum aureum 'HiColor' is grown for high-contrast foliage in bright yellow-green, lime, and softer green tones. Instead of the broad cream marbling seen in white-variegated forms, this selection stays in a warmer, greener range and gives off a more saturated look overall. The leaves are glossy, heart-shaped, and lively without looking as flatly coloured as 'Neon' or as heavily marbled as 'Marble Queen'.

That makes it a useful middle ground within Epipremnum aureum cultivars. It has more colour impact than plain green or standard golden forms, but it keeps the easy growth and flexibility that make pothos so reliable indoors. Left alone, it trails freely. Given support, it climbs and gradually puts on stronger, better-sized foliage.

Where Epipremnum 'HiColor' stands out most

  • Colour range: Leaves usually show bright yellow-lime and green in irregular marbling rather than solid colour or sharp white patterning.
  • Leaf shape: Juvenile leaves are heart-shaped, smooth-edged, and slightly glossy, with a clean, even surface.
  • Overall look: The pattern feels brighter and warmer than standard golden pothos, but more varied than a solid yellow-green cultivar such as 'Neon'.
  • Growth style: Flexible stems can trail, hang, scramble, or climb depending on how the plant is grown.
  • Indoor scale: With time, vines can grow well past 1 m indoors; supported plants usually build stronger growth than unsupported trailing ones.
  • Texture: Foliage is smooth and lightly leathery rather than thin or delicate.

What is known about Epipremnum aureum behind the trade name 'HiColor'

  • Accepted species: Epipremnum aureum, a member of Araceae
  • Native origin of species: Mo'orea in French Polynesia
  • Natural habit: Root-climbing tropical vine that uses aerial roots to move across trunks and other surfaces.
  • Indoor character: In cultivation, most plants remain juvenile unless they are given height, support, and time to mature.
  • Flowering: Indoors it is grown for foliage; flowering is extremely uncommon.
  • Toxicity: Plant tissue contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals and is not safe for pets or people to chew.

Indoor care that keeps 'HiColor' looking clean and strong

  • Light: Bright, indirect light gives the best balance of compact growth and clear colour contrast. It will tolerate slightly dimmer placement, but stems tend to stretch more and the overall pattern reads less crisply.
  • Watering: Drench the substrate, then wait until roughly the upper third has dried before watering again. Constant moisture around the roots leads to more trouble than a short dry pause.
  • Substrate: Use a loose, breathable mix that drains fast but does not become bone dry immediately. A blend based on potting mix or coco coir with bark and perlite works well.
  • Humidity: Ordinary indoor humidity is usually enough. Around 40–60% supports smoother leaf unfurling and tidier edges.
  • Temperature: Keep it in a stable range of about 18–29°C and avoid cold drafts, chilled windowsills, or a wet root zone in cool conditions.
  • Feeding: During active growth, a balanced liquid feed at low to moderate strength every 4–6 weeks is enough. More is not better; excess fertilizer often shows up as rough edges or dull foliage.
  • Repotting: Repot when roots have filled the pot heavily or when the substrate has broken down and no longer dries evenly. Go only one pot size up.

How 'HiColor' behaves when trailing, climbing, or being cut back

  • Trailing growth: In a hanging pot or on a shelf, stems lengthen into loose cascading vines that show off the marbling well.
  • Climbing growth: On a pole, plank, or trellis, aerial roots can attach and the plant often responds with stronger upward growth and gradually larger leaves.
  • Pruning: Cutting just above a node helps keep the plant denser and prevents long bare stretches from building up.
  • Propagation: Stem cuttings with at least one node root easily in water or lightly moist substrate when kept warm.
  • Water culture and mineral substrates: This form can be transitioned to water culture or inert mineral substrates if the change is gradual and nutrients remain consistent.
  • Routine upkeep: Dust on bright foliage shows quickly, so wiping the leaves now and then keeps the colour looking clear rather than dull.

When Epipremnum 'HiColor' starts looking off

  • Yellow leaves: Most often point to roots staying wet too long, poor drainage, or substrate that has become too dense.
  • Brown tips or margins: Usually linked to prolonged dryness, irregular watering, fertilizer salts, or very dry air.
  • Long, sparse vines: Most often a sign of weaker light, delayed pruning, or a plant that has been allowed to stretch too far without being cut back.
  • Small, tired-looking new leaves: Commonly caused by low light, exhausted substrate, strong root congestion, or missed feeding over a long period.
  • Soft stems or darkened nodes: Usually indicate rot after cold, wet conditions around the root zone.
  • Pests: Mealybugs, spider mites, thrips, and scale can all appear, especially on stressed plants. Check nodes and leaf undersides first.

Why the name 'HiColor' makes sense

Epipremnum comes from Greek and refers to growth upon a trunk, which matches the species’ natural climbing habit. aureum means “golden,” pointing to the yellow-marked wild type. The trade name 'HiColor' suits this form because the foliage reads brighter and more saturated than standard golden pothos without shifting into cream-white variegation.

Epipremnum 'HiColor' for brighter foliage without fussy care

If you want an easy indoor climber with stronger yellow-lime marbling than standard golden pothos and a livelier look than plain green forms, Epipremnum aureum 'HiColor' is a strong option. Give it good indirect light, a free-draining mix, and a sensible watering rhythm, and it will reward you with fast, flexible growth and bright foliage that stays useful in many setups.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 66545498121

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell golden pothos epipremnum aureum

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.7 ★★★★★
Based on 2124 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
J
Verified Purchase
James Pease
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Works just like original parts
Size: 26 Pack
Bought for my euify robot vacuum. The replacement parts fit perfectly. They are exactly like the original one parts. They are long lasting. I have dogs and they get used every day.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2025
F
Verified Purchase
Franklin
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Great price
Size: 23 Pack
it comes with all the parts.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2026
Y
Verified Purchase
Yourmofc
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
Finally somebody got it right!
Size: 26 Pack
FINALLY there's a parts replacement kit for my Eufy 30C robotic with quality parts that actually fit! And a roller brush that's substantial and bristles that aren't too short to actually reach the floor! After being disappointed in so many others, this is the perfect one!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2025
J
Verified Purchase
JLacNeal
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent!
Size: 23 Pack
Great 👍🏻! Running like it’s brand new!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2026
M
Verified Purchase
Mike
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent receiver next to the competition
Style: AVR-X2800H
Amazon has had some really good prices on the Amazon days so I bought a new receiver. Now I recently bought a AVR-S960H in 2022 which was excellent but I was needing another receiver. I originally reviewed the S960H comparing against an Onkyo back in 2022. I mistakenly stated the Onkyo was a TX-NR6100, which it was a TX-NR6050. Very similar with the NR6100 having THX and 10 more watts of power. This year I bought the Onkyo TX-NR6100 hoping it was better than the TX-NR6050 which it was in sound quality only, equaling the Denon AVR-S960H and Denon AVR-X2800H. However the Onkyo TX-NR6100 just doesn't compare with missing features, weird on-line manuals that have numerous inaccuracies, and weird, none standard Dolby decoding that is mentioned in the manuals. The biggest problem that I was hoping was corrected with a firmware update for the 2 years that passed with the TX-NR6050 was the incorrect speakers, playing the wrong dolby discrete channels. As I stated this is even mentioned in the manual as Onkyo thinks this is alright. I have a 7.1 speaker setup and listen to discrete 5.1 Dolby soundtracks of Concert Music Videos. I want to listen to the soundtrack discrete with no up mixing with a 5.1 speaker 'output'. The Onkyo's surround channel signals will only play out of the 'back' surround speakers leaving the surround speakers quiet. This is by design and acknowledged in the manual! This made the sound inferior and unacceptable to me. My Denon receivers play the surround channels correctly through the surround speakers. Then the above goes one step further in displaying the incorrect number of channels output in the on-screen display on your tv. It will say a 5.1 signal input to 7.1 speakers output. This is wrong and should say 5.1 signal input to 5.1 speakers output. Since the "back" speakers are playing, it somehow thinks that the output is 7.1 speakers when only 5.1 speakers are playing, even if it is the wrong speakers. Also the Onkyo has no HDR10+ for it's 3 inputs that aren't 8K compatible. Not good IMO. So with the quirks in the Onkyo TX-NR6100, I sent it back. I replaced it with a Denon AVR-X2800H. I could had replaced the Onkyo with a Denon AVR-S970H but I wanted the added room correction upgrade with the X2800 which is Audyssey MultiEQ XT, S970 has standard MultiEQ, no XT. Plus the X2800 in a 5.1 speaker setup will allow Speakers B to be assigned to the back surround speaker outputs or BIAMP if you have the need with your speakers. The S970 will not do that. The X2800 also has Zone 2 preamp outputs that the S970 does not. Also the X2800 has one year longer warranty than the S970. The X2800 also has 5 more watts/channel than the S970. At the time I bought during Amazon days, the X2800 was less than $200 more than the S970, so I bought the X2800. The X2800 steers the correct surround channels to the correct surround speakers unlike the Onkyo and sounds just as good if not better. I have more features and a long warranty with the Denon AVR-X2800H as well over the Onkyo. Also the Denon has HDMI 2.1 inputs for all 6 inputs and will play HDR10+ on all 6 HDMI inputs, that the Onkyo can not! I honestly have nothing to complain about the Denon. It does everything right and sounds great! It's also compatible with 8K60p(A) "UNCOMPRESSED" and 4K120p unlike some. I didn't look at the Yamaha RX-V6A/RX-A2A twins as they were not compatible with 8K60p(A) "UNCOMPRESSED" , just 8K60p(B) "COMPRESSED". They were the same price as the Denon AVR-S970H and AVR-X2800H models. That being Yamaha RX-V6A price about same as Denon AVR-S970H, and Yamaha RX-A2A about same as Denon AVR-X2800H. The Yamaha model compatible with 8K60p (A) "UNCOMPRESSED" is the more expensive RX-A4A but I seen no comparable pricing around what the Denon AVR-X2880H was selling at. Very similar to the Denon but more power with pre-amp outputs. I didn't need either for the hundreds more it was selling at. The Denon AVR-X2800H is the best bang for your buck 7.1 receiver right now IMO.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2024

recommand products