
Full Specimen Plate
Anthurium 'Red Hot'
Red Hot Flamingo Flower
Quick Facts
Morphology
About
Anthurium 'Red Hot' is a flowering cultivar bred from the classic Flamingo Flower, Anthurium andraeanum, selected for its glossy, intensely saturated scarlet-red spathe and matching straight yellow spadix. Beneath the long-lasting blooms sit broad, heart-shaped, deep green leaves with a waxy sheen. Unlike the foliage-focused velvet-leaf Anthuriums prized by specialist collectors, 'Red Hot' is grown primarily for near-continuous flowering and reliability in average home conditions, making it one of the most widely available and accessible Anthuriums on the market.
Native Range
Colombia
Collector Popularity Review
Aroid Atlas Collector Review: Anthurium andraeanum 'Red Hot' (Red Hot Flamingo Flower) is ranked as Common rarity on the market. Rating is calculated based on overall cultivation difficulty, aesthetic appeal, and search popularity among active collectors.
Market Analysis
Auction History & Retail Data
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Before You Buy
Shared checklist for Anthurium andraeanum and its cultivated forms
- Check the spathe (flower) is firm and unblemished — bruised or browning spathes indicate rough handling in transit
- Look for firm, pale roots visible at drainage holes — dark, mushy roots suggest rot
- This species and its common flowering cultivars should be inexpensive — be cautious of pricing that suggests rarity for a genuinely common plant
- New leaves should emerge glossy and unblemished; thrips damage shows as silvery streaking on the newest growth
Propagation Guide
Growing More Plants
Shared across every form of Anthurium andraeanum — see this form's own Morphology for variegation-specific propagation notes.
2-4 months
Cultivar character is preserved through vegetative cuttings
Flowering Anthuriums are far more forgiving to propagate than velvet-leaf species — basal offsets and stem cuttings root readily in a warm, humid environment. Named flowering cultivars are stable and propagate true from division.
Care Guide
Growing Conditions
General care shared across all forms of Anthurium andraeanum — cultivated forms may need brighter light or higher humidity than the plain species; check this form's Quick Facts above.
Chunky, well-aerated mix: 40% orchid bark, 30% perlite, 20% potting compost, 10% sphagnum moss — good drainage prevents root rot.
Water when the top few centimetres of substrate are dry. Consistent moisture supports continuous flowering, but avoid waterlogging.
50-70%. Tolerates average household humidity far better than velvet-leaf Anthurium species, making it a good entry point into the genus.
Balanced liquid fertiliser at half strength every 3-4 weeks; a phosphorus-leaning feed can encourage more prolific flowering.
Every 12-18 months, or when roots fill the pot. Prefers being slightly snug rather than heavily over-potted.
Common Problems
Reduced flowering
Insufficient light or lack of feeding
Move to a brighter spot with indirect light and resume a regular feeding schedule during the growing season
Yellowing leaves
Overwatering or poor drainage
Check roots for rot, repot into fresh chunky substrate if needed, and reduce watering frequency
Bacterial blight (leaf spotting)
High humidity combined with poor air circulation and wet foliage
Avoid overhead watering, improve airflow, and remove affected leaves promptly