Root rot is the most common killer of houseplants — but it is usually fixable if caught in time. Learn the warning signs, how to diagnose root rot, and the step-by-step treatment to save your plant.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
My Garden Journal
What Is Root Rot?
Root rot is a fungal disease that destroys plant roots when they sit in waterlogged soil for too long. Without oxygen, roots suffocate and die. Opportunistic fungi — primarily Pythium, Phytophthora, and Fusarium species — then colonize the dead tissue and spread rapidly through the root system.
The cruel irony: root rot makes plants wilt and look thirsty, so owners water more — which makes root rot worse.
Warning Signs of Root Rot
Root rot hides underground, so you need to read the above-ground symptoms carefully.
Above-Ground Symptoms
| Symptom | What It Looks Like |
|---|---|
| Wilting despite wet soil | Plant droops even though soil is soggy |
| Yellow leaves | Multiple leaves turning yellow at once |
| Mushy soft stems | Base of stem feels soft or squishy |
| Leaf drop | Both yellow and green leaves falling |
| No new growth | Plant stops producing new leaves entirely |
| Musty smell | Soil smells like rot or mildew |
| Fungus gnats | Small flies hovering over soil surface — overwatered soil is their breeding ground |
The Definitive Test: Check the Roots
The only way to confirm root rot is to look at the roots. Gently remove the plant from its pot and examine the root system.
Healthy roots:
- White or light tan
- Firm when you touch them
- Smell neutral or earthy
Rotted roots:
- Brown, gray, or black
- Soft and mushy — they collapse when touched
- May slide off easily like wet cardboard
- Smell sour, rotten, or musty
What Causes Root Rot?
Primary Cause: Overwatering
Root rot almost always starts with too much water. When soil stays wet for extended periods, air pockets in the soil fill with water, cutting off oxygen to the roots.
Contributing Factors
No drainage holes: Water pools at the bottom with nowhere to go. This is the fastest route to root rot — never use a decorative pot without drainage as your main planter.
Wrong soil: Dense potting mixes or garden soil compacts and holds water instead of draining. Succulents and cacti in regular potting mix are especially vulnerable.
Oversized pot: A large pot holds far more soil than the roots can use. The excess soil stays wet long after watering.
Low light: Plants in low light photosynthesize slowly, using less water. Soil stays wet longer. Root rot risk increases.
Cold temperatures: Soil dries more slowly in cool conditions. A plant that needs water weekly in summer may only need it monthly in winter.
Poor air circulation: Stagnant air slows evaporation from the soil surface.
Step-by-Step Root Rot Treatment
What You Need
- Clean scissors or pruning shears
- Isopropyl alcohol (70%) to sterilize tools
- Fresh potting mix appropriate for your plant
- Hydrogen peroxide (3%) — optional but helpful
- A new pot with drainage holes (or clean the current one)
- Activated charcoal — optional, helps prevent recurrence
Step 1: Remove the Plant
Take the plant out of its pot and gently shake off as much wet soil as possible. You do not need to wash the roots — just remove the bulk of the old soil.
Step 2: Assess the Damage
Hold the root ball and examine it carefully.
- Less than 30% rotted: Excellent prognosis — your plant will likely recover fully.
- 30–60% rotted: Good prognosis with proper treatment. The plant may lose some leaves but should stabilize.
- More than 60% rotted: Difficult but possible. Consider taking stem cuttings as insurance before attempting treatment.
- 100% rotted (no firm roots left): Propagate from cuttings if possible. The root system cannot be saved.
Step 3: Cut Away Rotted Roots
Using your sterilized scissors, cut away every root that is brown, mushy, or smells bad. Cut back into white, healthy tissue — you want a clean cut, not a mushy edge.
Sterilize your scissors between cuts if the rot looks severe (wipe blade with isopropyl alcohol).
Do not be afraid to remove a lot. Leaving even a small piece of rotted root can spread the fungus back to the healthy roots you just saved.
Step 4: Treat the Roots (Optional but Recommended)
Hydrogen peroxide treatment: Mix 1 part 3% hydrogen peroxide with 2 parts water. Dip the remaining roots in this solution for 30 seconds. This kills any remaining fungal spores on the root surfaces.
Activated charcoal: If you have it, dust the cut ends with powdered activated charcoal. It helps prevent reinfection and absorbs toxins.
Air drying: Let the roots air dry for 30–60 minutes before repotting. This helps the cut surfaces callous slightly.
Step 5: Repot in Fresh, Dry Soil
Choose the right soil for your plant:
- Houseplants (pothos, philodendron, monstera): Standard potting mix + 20–30% perlite for drainage
- Succulents and cacti: Succulent/cactus mix, or standard mix + 50% perlite or coarse sand
- Snake plant, ZZ plant: Well-draining mix with extra perlite
- Orchids: Orchid bark mix only — never regular potting soil
Use a pot that is appropriately sized — roots should fit comfortably with 1–2 inches of space around them, not floating in excess soil.
Make sure the pot has drainage holes. No exceptions.
Step 6: First Watering After Repotting
Wait 3–5 days before watering after repotting. Let the plant settle and any cut roots begin to heal.
When you do water, water sparingly — the goal is moist, not wet. Do not water again until the top 1–2 inches of soil are dry.
Step 7: Aftercare
Place the recovering plant in bright indirect light — not direct sun, which stresses a plant with a compromised root system.
Avoid fertilizing for 4–6 weeks. A recovering plant cannot uptake nutrients efficiently, and fertilizer on damaged roots can cause chemical burn.
Be patient — recovery takes 2–6 weeks depending on severity.
How Long Does Recovery Take?
| Damage Level | Expected Recovery Time |
|---|---|
| Mild (< 30% affected) | 2–3 weeks for stabilization, new growth in 4–6 weeks |
| Moderate (30–60% affected) | 4–6 weeks for stabilization, new growth in 6–10 weeks |
| Severe (60%+ affected) | 6–12 weeks if it survives; take cuttings as backup |
Signs of successful recovery:
- Soil is no longer staying wet for days at a time
- Wilting stops — leaves firm up
- New root growth appears (you may see white roots at drainage holes)
- New leaves emerge
Preventing Root Rot
The Non-Negotiables
Always use pots with drainage holes. Decorative pots without holes are for display only — keep your plant in a nursery pot inside and lift it out to water, or use a pot saucer and empty it after 30 minutes.
Choose the right soil. Dense, moisture-retaining soil is the wrong choice for most houseplants. Add perlite to improve drainage.
Water only when the soil tells you to. Check the soil before every watering. The finger test — stick your finger 1–2 inches into the soil — is the most reliable method.
Seasonal Adjustments
| Season | Watering Frequency | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Spring/Summer | As needed (weekly for most) | Active growth, faster evaporation |
| Fall | Reduce by 25–30% | Growth slows |
| Winter | Reduce by 40–50% | Dormancy, low light, slow evaporation |
Environmental Tips
- Increase light: More light = faster photosynthesis = faster water use = lower root rot risk
- Improve airflow: A small fan on low keeps soil surface drying evenly
- Lift pots: Pot feet or risers allow air under the pot, improving drainage
- Skip the saucer water: Never leave saucers full of standing water for more than 30 minutes
Root Rot by Plant Type
High-Risk Plants (Root Rot Prone)
| Plant | Why It Is Prone | Special Care |
|---|---|---|
| Peace lily | Loves moisture, frequently overwatered | Let soil approach dryness between waterings |
| African violet | Dense roots, frequently misted or overwatered | Bottom-water only; never wet the leaves |
| Aloe vera | Succulent in too-moist soil | Water only when soil is bone dry |
| Pothos | Often kept in water or soggy soil | Let top inch dry between waterings |
| Ficus | Sensitive to root disturbance + overwatering | Consistent watering schedule, excellent drainage |
Lower-Risk Plants
| Plant | Why It Is Resilient |
|---|---|
| Snake plant (Sansevieria) | Extremely drought tolerant, rots slowly |
| ZZ plant | Rhizomes store water, very forgiving |
| Cast iron plant | Near-indestructible, tolerates neglect |
| Cactus | Native to dry environments, roots handle drought |
| Dracaena | Robust root system, forgiving of irregular watering |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can root rot spread to other plants?
Yes, but only through direct soil contact or if you use contaminated tools. The fungi that cause root rot (Pythium, Phytophthora) live in soil and water — they can spread if you reuse infected potting mix or fail to sterilize tools between plants. Dispose of infected soil rather than composting it.
Can I save a plant with 100% root rot?
It is unlikely, but you can try propagating from healthy stem cuttings before the rot reaches the foliage. Take cuttings, allow them to root in fresh water or moist propagation mix, and you have effectively started a new plant genetically identical to the original.
Should I add hydrogen peroxide to the watering can as a preventative?
A mild hydrogen peroxide solution (1 part 3% H2O2 to 4 parts water) can help oxygenate soil and kill anaerobic pathogens on contact. Some growers use this occasionally as a preventative flush. It is not necessary if you are already managing moisture correctly.
Should I repot again after my plant recovers from root rot?
Not immediately. Give the plant one full growing season in the fresh soil before considering another repot. Repotting too often stresses roots.
How is root rot different from overwatering?
Root rot is a consequence of overwatering. Overwatering is the cause (too much water, not enough oxygen); root rot is the disease that results (fungal infection of suffocated roots). Not every overwatered plant develops root rot, but extended overwatering almost always leads there eventually.
Should I repot if the soil smells musty but roots look OK?
Yes. A musty smell indicates fungal activity in the soil. Repot into fresh mix now, before the fungi have a chance to infect the roots. Proactive repotting is much easier than treating established root rot.
Related guides: Overwatering vs. Underwatering · Why Are My Plant Leaves Turning Yellow? · Is My Plant Rootbound? · How to Repot a Plant · How to Revive a Dying Plant
مواضيع ذات صلة
مشاركة هذا الدليل
أدلة ذات صلة
واصل التعلم مع هذه الأدلة ذات الصلة
أيضاً في Indoor Plants
How to Propagate Pothos: Water & Soil Methods (Step-by-Step)
How to Get Rid of Whiteflies on Houseplants: Complete Treatment Guide
How to Get Rid of Thrips on Houseplants: Complete Treatment Guide
How to Get Rid of Scale Insects on Houseplants (Complete Treatment Guide)