Fungal issues on palm fronds are usually caused by excess moisture and stress, not a serious disease. Common triggers include frequent rain or overhead irrigation, poor air circulation, high humidity, recent transplant shock, cold stress, and nutrient imbalances. Fungus often shows up first on older, lower fronds as brown or black spots with yellow halos.
The good news? Most palm fungi are cosmetic and won’t harm the palm long-term. Water early in the morning, keep irrigation off the fronds, improve airflow, and maintain a proper fertilization schedule to prevent future issues.

How to Remove Fungal Spots from Palm Fronds
Fix the water issue (most important)
    •    Water early morning only
    •    Aim irrigation at the soil, not the fronds
    •    Avoid nighttime or overhead watering
Prune correctly
    •    Remove only fully brown or dead fronds
    •    Do not over-trim green fronds (this stresses the palm)
    •    Disinfect tools between palms
Reduce stress
    •    Newly planted or cold-stressed palms are more prone to fungus
    •    Keep watering consistent and avoid sudden changes
Maintain proper nutrition
    •    Use a palm-specific fertilizer with potassium (K) and magnesium  (Mg)
    •  Fungicide (only if spreading)
  •    Use a copper-based or palm-safe fungicide
    •    Spray early morning and repeat as labeled
    •    Fungicides stop spread—they won’t heal existing spots
AFTER (What to Expect With Proper Care)
Once watering is corrected and stress is reduced:
    •    The fungal spots will not disappear on existing fronds
    •    New growth should emerge clean and healthy
    •    The palm will gradually replace affected fronds naturally
Fungus on palms is usually cosmetic, not harmful, as long as conditions improve.