Curry Tree

What's Eating Your Curry Tree?

Murraya koenigii
Reviewed by Kiersten Rankel M.S.
Quick Answer

For curry tree, the most likely culprits are mealybugs (white cottony tufts tucked into the joints between leaflets) and scale insects (small brown bumps along the slender central rachis). Spider mites bronze the small leaflets fast in dry winter indoor air. Aphids cluster on spring growth flushes, especially on outdoor trees in warm zones.

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What does the damage look like?

Tap the closest match to jump straight to the fix.

Pests, ranked by impact

Cluster of long-tailed mealybugs (Pseudococcus longispinus) showing the white cottony wax on a leaf

Mealybugs

Damage
High
Removal
Hard
What it looks like

Soft white insects covered in cottony fluff, 2 to 4 mm long. Hide deep in the joints where the small lance-shaped leaflets attach to the central rachis, and where new compound leaves emerge from the trunk. The pinnate leaf shape gives them dozens of hidden nooks per branch.

What the damage looks like

White cottony tufts visible at every leaflet joint along the rachis. A sticky shiny film coats leaves below the cluster, often turning into black sooty mold over weeks. Leaflets yellow and drop. Since you grow curry tree for the leaves, every dropped leaflet is a direct loss to the kitchen.

How to get rid of them
Option 1

Cotton swab and 70% isopropyl alcohol every 3 days

Dab every visible mealybug with a cotton swab dipped in 70% alcohol. The alcohol melts the waxy coating and kills on contact. Run the swab carefully along the central rachis and into each leaflet joint where colonies hide. Repeat every 3 days for 3 weeks to catch newly hatched crawlers.

Option 2

Insecticidal soap and neem oil rotation, 4 weeks

Spray ready-to-use insecticidal soap (Safer Brand, ~$10) on the underside of every leaflet and into the rachis joints at lights-out. Alternate weekly with cold-pressed neem oil. Continue for 4 weeks because eggs hatch in protected pockets over time and need ongoing pressure. Rinse sprayed leaves a day before harvesting any for cooking.

Option 3

Isolate from other houseplants

Move the tree at least 6 feet from other plants. Mealybugs spread by crawling and the pinnate leaflets rest against neighboring foliage easily. Wipe nearby pots, the windowsill, and any tools that touched the infested tree.

Brown soft scale (Coccus hesperidum) clustered on a plant stem

Scale insects

Damage
High
Removal
Hard
What it looks like

Hard or soft brown bumps stuck along the slender central rachis and on the underside of leaflets, 1 to 4 mm wide. Look like tiny barnacles glued to the stem. Don't move because they are fixed in place. Often appear with a glossy sticky film on the leaflets below.

What the damage looks like

A sticky shiny film on leaflets and on the floor or pot rim below. Black sooty mold grows on the residue over weeks. Yellowed leaflets near each cluster, then leaflet drop. Heavy infestations stunt new flushes, which is exactly what you grow this tree for.

How to get rid of them
Option 1

Scrub the rachis and oil weekly for 4 weeks

1

Wet the central rachis and leaflet undersides with horticultural oil (Bonide All Seasons, ~$15).

2

Scrub the rachis gently with a soft toothbrush to dislodge bumps. The slender stem makes them easy to spot and reach.

3

Spray a final coat of oil and leave on. Repeat weekly for 4 weeks to catch newly hatched crawlers.

Option 2

Insecticidal soap on undersides, every 5 days

Spray ready-to-use insecticidal soap on the underside of every leaflet and along the rachis at lights-out. Soap kills the mobile crawler stage before it settles and forms a new bump. Repeat every 5 days for 3 weeks. Rinse leaves the day before harvesting for cooking.

Option 3

Inspect new growth every 2 weeks

Scale crawlers spread to fresh young leaflets first. A 30-second look along each new rachis every 2 weeks catches reinfestation while it is still on one branch. Catching scale on curry tree early is the difference between one pruned shoot and a full tree treatment.

Spider mite infestation on a stem with fine silk webbing and pale speckled leaf damage

Spider mites

Damage
High
Removal
Moderate
What it looks like

Almost invisible without a hand lens. Yellow-green to red-orange specks on the underside of leaflets and at the base of the rachis. Indoor heated air through winter dries the small leaflets fast and triggers a population boom on container curry trees.

What the damage looks like

Tiny pale yellow dots on the small leaflets, then a bronze cast that spreads quickly across the whole compound leaf. Fine webbing strung between leaflets and along the rachis in heavy infestations. Bronzed leaflets lose their aromatic oil, the whole reason for growing the tree.

How to get rid of them
Option 1

Shower the foliage weekly for 3 weeks

Move the tree to the shower or take it outside on a warm day. Spray cool water on the underside of every leaflet and along the rachis for 30 seconds. Mites cannot reattach quickly when knocked off, and the rinse humidity slows survivors. Curry tree tolerates a hard rinse well. Repeat weekly for 3 weeks.

Option 2

Neem oil at lights-out, every 5 days for 3 rounds

1

Mix 2 tablespoons cold-pressed neem oil and 1 teaspoon dish soap per gallon of water.

2

Spray the underside of every leaflet at lights-out, paying attention to the rachis where mites cluster between leaflet joints.

3

Repeat every 5 days for 3 rounds. That covers the full egg-to-adult life cycle. Rinse and wait a day before harvesting leaves for cooking.

Option 3

Raise winter humidity above 50%

Run a humidifier near the tree for 50 to 60% relative humidity through winter. Curry tree is a subtropical native and wants the moisture anyway. Hot dry indoor heating is exactly the climate spider mites need to breed fast on the small leaflets.

Dense colony of aphids clustered on a plant stem

Aphids

Damage
Medium
Removal
Easy
What it looks like

Tiny pear-shaped insects 1 to 3 mm long, in shades of green, brown, or black. Cluster densely on the spring flush of soft new leaflets and along tender new rachis tips. Spring is peak aphid season for outdoor curry trees in zones 9 to 11.

What the damage looks like

New leaflets curl, twist, and yellow as aphids drain sap. A sticky shiny film coats leaves below the affected branch and a few black sooty mold spots follow over a few weeks. Heavy spring infestations stunt the flush you were planning to harvest from.

How to get rid of them
Option 1

Strong water blast every 2 to 3 days for 2 weeks

Hold a hose nozzle 12 inches from the affected new growth and spray at high pressure. Most aphids dislodge and don't make it back to the tree. Repeat every 2 to 3 days for 2 weeks. The fastest, cheapest fix and works without chemicals on a tree you harvest from.

Option 2

Neem oil spray at dusk, every 5 days for 3 rounds

1

Mix 2 tablespoons cold-pressed neem oil with 1 teaspoon dish soap per gallon of water.

2

Spray the underside of every leaflet and along new growth tips at dusk.

3

Repeat every 5 days for 3 rounds. Covers the egg-to-adult cycle. Rinse and wait a day before harvesting leaves for cooking.

Option 3

Companion plant alyssum or yarrow outdoors

For outdoor trees, plant alyssum, dill, or yarrow within 3 feet of the tree. These attract ladybugs and lacewings, which feed on aphids. Established plantings keep aphid pressure low without sprays and last for years.

Stay ahead of all of them

Four habits that keep curry tree pests rare and easy to catch.
1

Inspect every new growth flush

Curry tree pushes its biggest flushes in spring and again in late summer. New soft leaflets are where aphids, scale crawlers, and mites land first. A 30-second check of each new rachis as it expands catches pressure while it is still on one shoot.

2

Wipe leaflets with a damp cloth monthly

Run a damp cloth gently down each compound leaf, top and underside. The wipe catches dust, early spider mites, and scale crawlers along the rachis before they multiply. A clean tree also pushes more aromatic flushes for the kitchen.

3

Quarantine new houseplants for 2 weeks

Most pests come home from the nursery on the plant you bought. Two weeks of isolation away from the curry tree catches mealybugs, scale, and mites before they jump to a tree you have spent years training for harvest.

4

Let the top inch of soil dry between waterings

Curry tree hates wet roots. Letting the top inch dry keeps the root zone aerobic and the foliage tougher, which makes leaves harder for sap-suckers to feed on. It also keeps fungus gnats from establishing in damp soil under an indoor tree.

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About This Article

Kiersten Rankel M.S.
Kiersten Rankel M.S.
Botanical Data Lead at Greg · Plant Scientist
About the Author
Kiersten Rankel holds an M.S. in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology from Tulane University. A certified Louisiana Master Naturalist, she has over a decade of experience in science communication, with research spanning corals, cypress trees, marsh grasses, and more. At Greg, she curates species data and verifies care recommendations against botanical research.
See Kiersten Rankel's full background on LinkedIn.
Editorial Process
Pest identification and treatment guidance verified against Murraya koenigii field reports from Greg's botanical database, cross-referenced with university extension sources and published horticultural research.