
The Chinese Fan Palm is known for the graceful placement of it’s long, ribbon-like leaves. The palm has a single straight trunk, and can reach up to 50-feet in height, but is usually seen at 30 feet. The palm contains small dark fruits that resemble olives, and are hidden by small flowers.
The Chinese Fan Palm is suitable for indoor growth, and is often used in parking lots, sidewalk pits, and near deck or patios. The tree has not proven to be tolerant to urban areas.
Botanical Name: Livistona Chinensis
Pronunciation: liv-iss-TOE-nuh chih-NEN-sis
Common Name(s): Chinese Fan Palm
Family: Arecaceae
USDA Hardiness Zones: 9B through 11
Origin: not native to North America
Uses: suitable for growing indoors; large parking lot
islands (> 200 square feet in size); wide tree lawns (>6
feet wide); medium-sized parking lot islands (100-200
square feet in size); medium-sized tree lawns (4-6 feet
wide); recommended for buffer strips around parking
lots or for median strip plantings in the highway; near
a deck or patio; narrow tree lawns (3-4 feet wide);
specimen; sidewalk cutout (tree pit); residential street
tree; no proven urban tolerance
Availability: generally available in many areas within
its hardiness range
Although Chinese Fan Palm has long been used as
a container palm, its neat leaf habit and interesting
form make it ideal for further landscape uses, such as
in staggered groupings or used as a freestanding
specimen, or street tree. They form a closed canopy
when planted about ten feet apart along a walk or
street. They grow well in confined soil spaces. The
palm is self-cleaning of old leaves and will require
little or no pruning.
Tolerant of full sun, young specimens of Chinese
Fan Palm should be partially shaded. Any reasonably
fertile, well-drained soil, including alkaline, is suitable
and Chinese Fan Palm should be fertilized two or three
times during the year. Plants should be watered
during dry spells and will benefit from an organic
mulch.
Propagation is by seed.

Scales.
It is moderately susceptible to lethal yellowing
disease.