Abstract Niche theory predicts high specialisation in species‐rich environments such as neotropics, where plant‐herbivore interactions are ubiquitous in all terrestrial systems. However, there is much to be explored on how different insect guilds respond to plant phenology in these specialised environments. Using a Fabaceae‐herbivore community as an ecological model, we evaluated how plant phenology affects the abundance and shapes the temporal distribution of exophytic (folivore chewers) and endophytic (seed chewers) insects. We tested the specialisation hypothesis, predicting insect species on only one or a few host plants, with a seasonal pattern of occurrence, many rare and few abundant species. Additionally, we analysed the relationship between plant phenology and environmental factors (temperature and precipitation). We conducted fieldwork with five species and 97 individuals of Fabaceae in Brazilian Savannah and performed an insect‐rearing study in the laboratory. We found an immediately synchronised relationship between endophytic insects and plant phenology in the dry season, whereas exophytic were throughout the year. Only six species from the exophytic guild, out of a total of 87 species for both guilds, fed on more than one host plant, showing a specialised network. Endophytic herbivores are more abundant, ephemeral and predictable than exophytic ones. We also found a negative relationship between fruiting and precipitation and a positive relationship between new leaves and temperature and precipitation. Our study shows that the temporal distribution of insect‐herbivore guilds responds to plant phenology. In a scenario of global warming with effects on the annual precipitation, endophytic insects are most vulnerable to local extinction due to temporal changes in plant phenology than the exophytic ones.