9 Plants That Look Like Snake Plants

The snake plant is often the first that inexperienced indoor gardeners searching for plants fall in love with, and with good reason. It is considered a genuinely stunning and eye-catching indoor plant. These striking succulents are low maintenance and provide lovely green and yellow tones to your home’s interior design.

Sansevieria has roughly 70 different species. These are blooming plants from the Asparagaceae plant family of the genus Sansevieria. Because of their lengthy leaves and tapering ends, Sansevieria types are known as snake plants.

However, the various Sansevieria snake plants, formerly classified under Sansevieria, have now been moved to the genus Dracaena. Mother-in-law’s tongue is another name for the snake plant. These hardy succulents are incredibly easy to grow and are native to southern Asia, Madagascar, and Africa.

Snake plants have a wide range of hues, heights, leaf types, and shapes. In addition to the commonly seen varieties with long, slender leaves, there are also twisty, dwarf, cylindrical, etc., varieties that add a pop of color to the indoors and act as air purifiers.

This specific plant is special because it is among the few that can change carbon dioxide into oxygen during nighttime.

Because of their nearly indestructible nature, snake plants are becoming an ever more common house companion. It could surprise both inexperienced and seasoned houseplant collectors to realize that a variety of snake plant lookalikes can be added to their collection. Here are some snake plant lookalikes.

1. Corn plant (Dracaena Fragrans)

Dracaena Fragrans
Forest and Kim Starr Dracaena Fragrans

The corn plant, scientifically known as Dracaena Fragrans, is a popular houseplant referred to as a broadleaf evergreen tree. Dracaena Fragrans is a kind of flowering plant native to tropical Africa.

This resilient Dracaena looks like a tree and has sword-shaped arching leaves. Its dark-green leaves are long and wide, with a creamy or yellow stripe along the center. The color scheme of the leaves is similar to that of a snake plant called Futura Superba.

Although the snake plant does not have a tree-like look, this plant bears a similar silhouette to the snake plant because of its leave shape. The Corn plant will occasionally produce strongly fragrant blossoms when grown in its natural habitat.

Related: 4 Dracaena Plant Benefits

2. Zebra Plant (Cryptanthus Zonatus)

Cryptanthus Zonatus
Alejandro Bayer Tamayo Cryptanthus Zonatus

The Zebra Plant, also known as Cryptanthus Zonatus, is an evergreen perennial unique to the Brazilian tropics. The name Zebra refers to the strikingly striped foliage. White lines that resemble zebra stripes are patterned across the leaves.

The plant is also known as the Zebra aloe plant. The dark green leaves with white stripes make it one of the snake plant lookalikes. The leaves have a triangular shape that ends in pointed ends, much like the snake plant.

This plant also has leaves that arch out slightly from the center, just like a snake plant. Interestingly, this type of Zebra plant also has the same care requirements as the snake plant, making it a great alternative for snake plant lovers.

Related: 10 Plants That Look Like Zebra Plants

3. African Spear Plant (Sansevieria Cylindrica)

Sansevieria Cylindrica
Scott Zona Sansevieria Cylindrica

Sansevieria Cylindrica, popularly known as the African Spear, may cause confusion when you first see it because it greatly resembles a snake plant. This cylindrical snake plant, commonly known as the African spear plant, is a succulent with vertical, dark green, faintly striped leaves.

The shape of the leaves is somewhat spear-like, as their tips are pointed. Unlike the snake plant, a long flower spike covered in tiny, delicate white blossoms may emerge from the heart of an African spear plant.

These are hardy plants, like many succulents, that rarely encounter problems. African spear plants often require very little upkeep.

4. Silver Squill: Ledebouria Socialis

Ledebouria Socialis
Forest and Kim Starr Ledebouria Socialis

Silver Squill, botanical name Ledebouria Socialis, is a Hyacinthaceae subfamily succulent. South Africa is the natural home of this kind of perennial bulbous plant. Silver squill, frequently called Wood Hyacinth, features clusters of tiny green blooms with white borders and mottled, lance-shaped leaves.

This plant is highly similar to the Dracaena Hyacinthoides snake plant as this particular snake plant also has broad, mottled, dark and light green leaves that are thinner at the base and also the tip and broaden in the center, giving them a very similar appearance.

This snake plant is renowned for its blossoms and white to light green buds.

5. Mauritius Hemp (Furcraea Foetida)

Mauritius Hemp
Forest and Kim Starr Mauritius Hemp

Mauritius hemp is a well-known evergreen perennial subshrub with wide, sword-shaped green leaves with a yellow vertical stripe in the center. The scientific name for Mauritius hemp is Furcraea Foetida, although it is commonly known as false agave or green aloe.

Furcraea Foetida is a blooming plant that is native to the Caribbean. Its flowers are white, long, and fragrant. Like the snake plant, this plant has no stem or, in some cases, a very short stem.

This plant resembles the snake plant Futura Superba, which has vertical leaves arranged in a rosette formation and dark green leaves with yellow edges.

6. Ox Tongue (Gasteria)

Gasteria
PINKE Gasteria

Ox Tongue, also called Gasteria, is a tiny succulent native to South Africa with thick stemless leaves that cluster into a rosette. The leaves are a rich green and have white spots all over them. They frequently have a rough texture as a result of these white spots.

Flowers from the Ox Tongue plant appear in groups at the tip of a long stem. This plant is similar to the Ceylon Bowstring Hemp as this snake plant has similar looking rich green leaves with white spots on them.

This plant is a smaller version of the snake plant. This extremely well-liked houseplant requires little water to survive and is not difficult to grow.

7. Century Plant (Agave Americana)

Agave Americana
Yay Agave Americana

Agave Americana, popularly known as the Century Plant, is an incredibly huge, herbaceous perennial with blue-green leaves and thick, pointed leaf tip spines. The Century plant is an incredibly attractive and magnificent plant of the Agave species.

Century is a flowering plant in the Asparagaceae family. It is sometimes known as American aloe. This plant makes the list as it has a basal rosette formation, much like a snake plant.

It also has leaves that are close in color to the snake plant. The Century plant is what some consider the bigger version of a snake plant with narrow, tough leaves.

Related: 6 Plants That Look Like Agave

8. Spineless Yucca (Yucca Elephantipes)

Yucca Elephantipes
Dan Kristiansen Yucca Elephantipes

The Yucca Elephantipes, often the Spineless Yucca or yucca cane, is an incredibly versatile evergreen plant. It is indigenous to Mexico and also Central America and is a type of flowering plant belonging to the Asparagus family.

The lance-shaped, dark green leaves of the spineless yucca taper off to a pointed tip. They are leathery and robust leaves that arch and grow in a rosette formation from the very top of a trunk.

The leaves of this kind of Yucca lack spines compared to other Yucca. This plant looks like the snake plant due to its sword-like leaves and dark green color.

7 Plants That Look Like Yucca | Are Yucca Plants Poisonous?

9. The Silver Vase (Aechmea Fasciata)

Aechmea Fasciata
Damià Vinent Olives Aechmea Fasciata

Aechmea Fasciata is a flowering plant species in the Bromeliaceae family. This plant has strong leathery arched leaves with silver and sea green blotches that overlap into a basal rosette to form a watertight vase, funnel-shaped or urn. Hence the name.

The urn plant is the common name for this evergreen perennial epiphyte native to Brazil. This stunning bromeliad looks a lot like the Black Coral snake plant, which has long, glossy, dark-green leaves with sporadic bands of gray and olive-green coloring extending to the margins.

Although the Silver Vase plant’s leaves droop a little, they have a form comparable to the snake plant.