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Panther Chameleon Temperature & Humidity Guide

By The Easy Chameleon Team  |  Reviewed May 2026

Panther chameleons (Furcifer pardalis) are native to the humid coastal regions and highland interiors of Madagascar — one of the wettest environments any commonly kept pet chameleon comes from. Getting the right panther chameleon temp and humidity makes all the difference: they need more moisture than veiled chameleons, a somewhat cooler basking zone, and a proper panther chameleon temperature range cycling through the day. Get these parameters right and panther chameleons are among the most rewarding and long-lived chameleons in captivity.

This guide provides exact numbers for every climate parameter, explains the reasoning behind each target, and tells you what equipment to use and how to verify you are hitting the marks.

Temperature Requirements

Temperature Zones — Adult Panthers

ZoneTarget (°F)Target (°C)Purpose
Basking spot (surface)85–90°F29–32°CThermoregulation, digestion, UVB absorption
Ambient warm side (air)78–82°F26–28°CUpper gradient mid-zone
Ambient cool side (air)72–76°F22–24°CCooling zone for thermoregulation
Nighttime (all zones)65–70°F18–21°CImmune support, metabolic rest

Temperature Zones — Juvenile Panthers (under 6 months)

ZoneTarget (°F)Notes
Basking spot (surface)82–87°FCooler than adults; juveniles overheat faster
Ambient warm side76–80°FSmaller body loses heat faster; slightly warmer ambient needed
Ambient cool side70–74°FStandard cool zone
Nighttime65–70°FSame as adults
Panthers run cooler than veileds. A common mistake is using the same basking wattage for panthers as for veiled chameleons. Panthers max out at 90°F basking surface — sustained temperatures above 93°F will cause heat stress. If you are converting a veiled chameleon setup for a panther, you will almost certainly need to reduce basking bulb wattage or raise the fixture.

Locale Variation in Temperature Preference

Panther chameleons are sold by collection locale — the region of Madagascar they (or their captive-bred ancestors) come from. Different locales have slightly different natural climate conditions, though the variation is small enough that the standard parameters work for all of them in captivity.

LocaleOrigin ClimateBasking PreferenceNight Temp Tolerance
AmbilobeWarm, dry northwest interior87–90°F65–70°F
AmbanjaHot coastal northwest87–92°F66–72°F
Nosy BeHumid tropical island85–90°F65–70°F
TamataveHot, very humid east coast88–92°F68–72°F
SambavaWarm northeast coast86–90°F65–70°F
Nosy FalyWarm northwest island87–91°F66–70°F

In practice, if you maintain a 85–90°F basking spot and 65–70°F nighttime temperature, every commonly kept panther locale will thrive. The locale differences matter more for humidity than temperature.

Humidity Requirements

Panther chameleons need substantially higher ambient humidity than veiled chameleons. They evolved in Madagascar's lush coastal and highland forests where humidity rarely drops below 60% even in the dry season. Sustained low humidity (below 40%) causes chronic dehydration and respiratory issues in this species.

Humidity Targets by Time of Day

PeriodTarget HumidityNotes
Morning misting (lights-on)80–100%Primary drinking window; first misting session
Mid-morning50–70%Natural dry-out — less aggressive than for veileds
Midday40–60%Lower period but never as dry as veiled requirements
Afternoon misting80–100%Second drinking window; afternoon misting session
Evening60–80%Humidity rises naturally as temps cool
Night (lights-off)80–100%Highest nighttime humidity of common pet species
Panthers need wetter nights than veileds. While veiled chameleons do fine with 70–80% night humidity, panther chameleons benefit from 80–100% overnight. An overnight fogger or ultrasonic humidifier running on a timer is the easiest way to achieve this without increasing nighttime misting (which keeps the enclosure too wet and risks bacterial growth).

Equipment Setup

Heating Equipment

EquipmentNotes for Panthers
Basking bulb (incandescent or halogen)Typically 40–60W for room temps of 68–74°F; use temp gun to verify; adjust by room temp
T5 HO UVB 5.0 / 6% linear tubeEssential; 12 inches minimum above the basking spot; replace every 12 months regardless of visible output
Ceramic heat emitter (CHE)Only needed if room drops below 62°F at night; no light output

Humidity Equipment

EquipmentRoleSetting for Panthers
Automated misting systemPrimary hydration and daytime humidity2–3 sessions daily: 5–8 minutes each
Drip systemContinuous drinking opportunityRun 2–4 hours daily; particularly useful for shy drinkers
Ultrasonic fogger / cool mist humidifierOvernight humidity maintenanceRun overnight (10pm–7am); keep reservoir clean to prevent bacterial growth in mist
Digital hygrometer x2Monitor top and bottom of enclosureOne near basking zone, one at lower mid-level; check both morning and evening

Screen Cage Humidity Challenge

Standard aluminum screen cages lose humidity extremely fast. In a dry climate (below 40% room humidity), a screen cage with a single daily misting session will not maintain adequate daytime humidity for a panther chameleon. Solutions:

  • Cover 2–3 sides and the back of the screen cage with clear plastic sheeting or shower liner (leave the top and one front panel open)
  • Increase misting sessions to 3–4 per day
  • Run an overnight fogger inside the enclosure
  • Place a room humidifier near the enclosure
  • Consider switching to a PVC enclosure with screen top for better humidity retention in dry climates

Monitoring Checklist

CheckFrequencyToolTarget
Basking spot surface temperatureWeekly + any time bulb changedInfrared temp gun85–90°F
Cool-side ambient temperatureDaily glanceDigital thermometer probe72–76°F
Mid-enclosure daytime humidityDaily (mid-morning check)Digital hygrometer50–70%
Nighttime humidityWeekly (check in the morning)Digital hygrometer with memory80–100%
Urate colorEvery droppingVisual observationWhite / off-white
Morning basking behaviorDailyVisual observationBright colors, active basking within 1 hour of lights-on

Troubleshooting

SymptomLikely CauseFix
Gaping mouth at basking spotSurface temp too high (>93°F)Raise fixture; reduce wattage; check with temp gun on branch surface
Won't bask; stays lowToo hot overall OR cool zone too coldMap full gradient; check all zones
Wheezing / mucus around mouthRespiratory infection — often caused by sustained high humidity + low tempsEnsure nighttime temps don't drop below 62°F; vet visit required for RI
Yellow / orange uratesDehydration — misting insufficient or temps too highAdd misting sessions; add drip system; lower basking temp; see dehydration guide
Dull colors; not displayingStress, wrong temps, illness, or sheddingCheck all parameters; observe for other illness signs
Not eatingOften temp-related (too cool to digest) or illnessVerify basking temp; offer feeders only during basking window
Sources & Further Reading