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How to Repot a Plant: The Complete Guide to Repotting Houseplants
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How to Repot a Plant: The Complete Guide to Repotting Houseplants

Repotting is the most impactful thing you can do for a houseplant that has stopped growing. This complete guide covers when to repot, how to choose the right pot and soil, step-by-step repotting instructions for every plant type, and how to prevent transplant shock.

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Terakhir diperbarui: May 6, 2026
SG

Sarah Green

Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.

My Garden Journal

Why Repotting Matters

A plant that has stopped growing, started wilting despite regular watering, or has roots escaping through its drainage holes is not sick — it is out of space. Repotting gives it what it needs: fresh soil with available nutrients, room for the root system to expand, and improved drainage.

Most houseplants need repotting every 1–2 years. Vigorous growers like pothos and monstera may need it annually. Slow growers like snake plants can often go 3–4 years. The calendar doesn't decide — the plant does.

This guide tells you exactly what to look for, what to buy, and how to repot without sending your plant into shock.

Quick Reference: Repotting Schedule by Plant

PlantHow OftenBest SeasonPot Up Size
PothosEvery 1–2 yearsSpring1–2 inches
MonsteraEvery 1–2 yearsSpring2 inches
PhilodendronEvery 1–2 yearsSpring1–2 inches
Snake plantEvery 2–3 yearsSpring/Summer1–2 inches
Peace lilyEvery 1–2 yearsSpring1–2 inches
Spider plantEvery 1–2 yearsSpring2 inches
ZZ plantEvery 2–3 yearsSpring1–2 inches
Rubber plantEvery 1–2 yearsSpring2 inches
Fiddle-leaf figEvery 1–2 yearsSpring2 inches
CalatheaEvery 1–2 yearsSpring1 inch
Boston fernEvery yearSpring2 inches
DracaenaEvery 2–3 yearsSpring1–2 inches
HoyaEvery 2–3 yearsSpring1 inch
OrchidsEvery 2 yearsAfter bloomSame size (bark refresh)
Echeveria / succulentsEvery 2 yearsSpring/Summer1 inch
Aloe veraEvery 2–3 yearsSpring/Summer2 inches
Jade plantEvery 2–3 yearsSpring1–2 inches
AlocasiaEvery 1–2 yearsSpring1–2 inches
Bird of paradiseEvery 2–3 yearsSpring2–3 inches
Christmas cactusEvery 3–4 yearsAfter bloom1 inch

5 Signs Your Plant Needs Repotting

For a complete diagnostic checklist — including how to tell rootbound stress from overwatering and which plants prefer being tight in their pots — see our dedicated guide: When to Repot Plants: 8 Signs Your Plant Needs a New Pot.

1. Roots growing through the drainage hole Roots escaping downward are looking for more space. This is the clearest signal.

2. Roots circling the inside of the pot (root bound) When you slip the plant out and see a dense spiral of roots with little visible soil, it is pot-bound. Water runs straight through without being absorbed.

3. The plant lifts itself out of the pot Root pressure from below can physically push the plant upward. You will see the root ball crowning above the soil line.

4. Watering does not help — the plant wilts anyway A severely root-bound plant has replaced so much of its soil volume with roots that there is almost no water-holding capacity left. Wilting right after watering is a key symptom.

5. Growth has stalled despite good light and fertilizer If your plant stopped putting out new leaves in spring or summer, pot size may be limiting it. Roots that have no room to expand send a signal to stop growing.

What You Need Before You Start

  • New pot — 1–2 inches larger in diameter (see pot selection guide below)
  • Fresh potting mix — appropriate for your plant type (see soil guide for mix ratios by plant type)
  • Drainage layer — optional; perlite, gravel, or bark chips
  • Gloves — some plants irritate skin (figs, euphorbias, pothos sap)
  • Trowel or chopstick — for loosening roots and filling soil gaps
  • Newspaper or tray — to contain the mess

How to Repot a Plant: Step-by-Step

Step 1: Water the Plant 24 Hours Before

Repot slightly moist, never bone dry or waterlogged. Moist roots are flexible and less likely to break. Dry roots are brittle; waterlogged roots are vulnerable to tearing and rot. Water the day before, let it drain fully.

Step 2: Prepare the New Pot

Add a small layer of fresh potting mix to the bottom of the new pot — enough so the top of the root ball will sit about 1 inch below the pot rim. This leaves room for watering. Do not fill the pot first and then try to position the plant.

Step 3: Remove the Plant from Its Current Pot

Squeeze the sides of a plastic pot to loosen the root ball. For terracotta or ceramic, run a butter knife around the inside edge. Tip the pot sideways, support the base of the plant, and slide it out. Do not yank by the stem.

If the plant is stuck, try watering it (roots often shrink slightly as they absorb water and pull away from the pot walls). Wait 20 minutes and try again.

Step 4: Inspect and Trim the Roots

Examine the root ball. Look for:

  • Brown, mushy roots — signs of root rot. Trim back to white/cream healthy tissue with clean scissors. Let cut ends dry for 30 minutes before repotting.
  • Hard, tightly coiled roots — gently loosen the outer layer with your fingers or a chopstick. This encourages roots to grow outward into new soil instead of continuing to spiral.
  • Dead soil — shake off as much old depleted potting mix as you can. Fresh soil has available nutrients; old soil is often exhausted.

Step 5: Position the Plant in the New Pot

Set the plant in the new pot so the base of the stem (the soil line) sits about 1 inch below the pot rim. Never bury the stem deeper than it was before — this can cause stem rot, especially in succulents and cacti.

Adjust the depth by adding or removing soil from the bottom layer until the plant sits at the right height.

Step 6: Fill with Fresh Potting Mix

Add fresh soil around the sides of the root ball, working it down with a chopstick or your finger to eliminate air pockets. Air pockets dry out roots and cause die-back. Fill to about 1 inch below the pot rim.

Do not pack the soil tightly — houseplants need aerated soil. Firm it gently to remove gaps without compressing.

Step 7: Water Thoroughly and Aftercare

Water the plant slowly until water drains freely from the bottom. This settles the soil around the roots and eliminates any remaining air pockets.

Place the plant in indirect light for 1–2 weeks while it recovers. Avoid fertilizing for at least 4–6 weeks — fresh potting mix already contains nutrients, and fertilizing stressed roots can burn them.

Choosing the Right Pot

Pot Size: 1–2 Inches Bigger Only

The most common repotting mistake is going too large. A pot much bigger than the root ball retains moisture the roots cannot absorb — leading to overwatering symptoms even when you water correctly.

Rule: Go up 1–2 inches in diameter from the current pot. For a 4-inch pot, move to 6 inches. For a 6-inch, move to 8 inches.

Exception: If you want to control the size of a large plant (fiddle-leaf fig, bird of paradise), pot it back into the same pot after root pruning. Remove up to one-third of the root mass and refresh the soil completely. For stem and leaf pruning during the same session, see our pruning guide.

Pot Material Comparison

MaterialDrainageWeightMoisture RetentionBest For
TerracottaExcellentHeavyLow (wicks moisture)Succulents, cacti, overwater-prone plants
PlasticGoodLightModerateTropicals, high-humidity plants
Ceramic (glazed)ModerateHeavyModerate–highDecorative; add drainage holes if none
Fabric grow bagsExcellentLightVery low (air prunes roots)Vigorous growers, outdoor containers
Self-wateringVariableModerateHigh (reservoir)Vacation-prone households

The rule on drainage holes: always have at least one. Plants without drainage holes are one accidental overwatering away from root rot.

Choosing the Right Soil

Different plant types need fundamentally different soil structures. For a deep dive on amendments (perlite, bark, coco coir) and complete DIY mix recipes, see the houseplant soil guide.

Standard Tropical Houseplant Mix

Use for: pothos, philodendron, monstera, peace lily, calathea, ferns, dracaena

A good quality potting mix (not garden soil, which compacts in containers) plus added drainage:

  • 70% quality potting mix
  • 20% perlite (improves drainage and aeration)
  • 10% orchid bark or coarse sand (optional, adds air pockets)

Avoid mixes with excessive moisture-retaining crystals for these plants — they work against drainage.

Succulent and Cactus Mix

Use for: echeveria, aloe, jade plant, haworthia, sedum, all cacti

Fast-draining soil is essential — succulents store water in their leaves and rot quickly in wet soil:

  • 50% cactus/succulent potting mix
  • 50% coarse perlite or coarse sand

Commercial cactus mixes alone are often still too moisture-retentive. Adding extra perlite is almost always correct.

Orchid Bark Mix

Use for: orchids (phalaenopsis, dendrobium), some hoyas, air plants

Orchids are epiphytes — they grow on trees, not in soil. They need bark, not dirt:

  • 80% medium orchid bark
  • 10% perlite
  • 10% sphagnum moss

When repotting orchids, remove all old bark (it breaks down and retains water as it ages), check roots (silver-green = healthy, brown mushy = trim), and use a clear pot if possible to monitor root health.

Aroid Mix (High-Performance)

Use for: monstera, alocasia, philodendron, anthuriums, pothos (premium setup)

Aroids in the wild grow in fast-draining forest floors with lots of organic matter:

  • 40% potting mix
  • 30% orchid bark
  • 20% perlite
  • 10% worm castings or compost

This mix drains faster than standard mixes, reduces root rot risk, and gives aroids the chunky, aerated substrate they prefer.

Repotting Succulents: Special Considerations

Succulents need extra care around repotting because their fleshy roots are slow to heal:

  1. Delay watering after repotting — wait 7–10 days for succulents and cacti. This allows any root damage to callous before moisture reaches it. Standard tropicals should be watered right away; succulents should not.
  2. Use dry soil when repotting succulents. Moist soil can stick to roots and cause early rot in fast-draining pots.
  3. Handle rosette-types (echeveria) by the pot, not the leaves. Echeveria leaves break off at the slightest pressure. A broken leaf is a free propagation cutting, but it is not ideal during repotting.
  4. Let offsets (pups) dry before potting. When separating aloe vera pups or sempervivum offsets, let the cut end air-dry for 24 hours before planting.

Repotting Orchids: Special Considerations

Phalaenopsis orchids need repotting every 1–2 years when the bark medium breaks down — not because they are root-bound. Signs it is time:

  • Bark has decomposed into fine, soggy particles
  • Roots are mushy or dark brown despite proper watering
  • The plant has finished blooming (best time to repot — no active flowering)

Orchids should be repotted into the same size pot or one size up. Many orchid growers prefer clear plastic pots to monitor root health through the sides.

Preventing Transplant Shock

Transplant shock is real but usually avoidable. Symptoms: wilting, leaf drop, yellowing in the first 1–2 weeks after repotting.

What causes it:

  • Root damage during removal (torn or broken roots)
  • Dramatic change in soil type (roots have adapted to old soil structure)
  • Overexposure to sun or heat immediately after repotting
  • Fertilizing too soon after repotting (burns damaged roots)

How to minimize it:

  • Keep the plant in indirect light for 2 weeks after repotting
  • Do not fertilize for 4–6 weeks
  • Water on the normal schedule — do not compensate with extra water
  • Mist lightly if the plant is in dry air (reduces moisture loss through leaves while roots recover)
  • Accept that 1–2 yellowing leaves are normal — the plant is reallocating energy

Most healthy plants bounce back from shock in 2–4 weeks. If wilting persists past 3 weeks, check if the roots are sitting in wet soil (possible rot) or bone-dry soil (inadequate watering).

Troubleshooting: Common Repotting Problems

ProblemCauseFix
Plant wilts immediately after repottingAir pockets in soil; root damageWater thoroughly; firm soil; check roots
Leaves turn yellow after repottingTransplant shockMove to indirect light; do not fertilize
Plant drops leaves after repottingShock; too much light or heatReduce light; wait 2–3 weeks
Roots were brown and mushyRoot rot was already presentTrim rotted roots; repot in fast-draining mix; reduce watering
Soil seems to repel water (hydrophobic)Old or peat-heavy mix has dried outBottom-water for 30 min; or replace soil entirely
Plant topples in new potRoot ball too small for pot; top-heavyAdd a layer of gravel at the bottom for stability; use terracotta
White crust on soil after repottingMineral buildup from tap water or fertilizerFlush with filtered water; switch to rainwater

FAQ

How do I know if my plant is root bound?

Slip the plant out of its pot — you can usually do this by squeezing a plastic pot or running a knife around the inside of a terracotta one. If you see a dense mass of white or tan roots with very little visible soil, the plant is root bound. Roots spiraling tightly around the outside of the root ball are another clear sign.

Can I repot a plant that is flowering?

Generally, wait until after flowering when possible. Repotting stresses the plant, and stressed plants often drop flowers or buds. Orchids are the classic example — always repot after the blooming cycle ends. For other plants in active flower (peace lily, jasmine), wait if the flowering will end within a few weeks. If the plant is severely root-bound and struggling, repotting is more important than preserving the current blooms.

Do I need to fertilize after repotting?

No — and you should actively avoid it for 4–6 weeks. Fresh potting mix contains nutrients. Adding fertilizer to recently disturbed roots increases the chance of root burn. Resume your normal fertilizing schedule after the plant has had time to settle in and shows new growth.

What happens if I repot into too large a pot?

The excess soil around the root ball stays wet long after the roots have absorbed what they need. This is the leading cause of repotting-induced root rot. Always go only 1–2 inches larger in diameter than the current pot.

Can I repot in winter?

It is best to avoid repotting in winter when most houseplants are in low-light, slow-growth mode. The plant cannot quickly regenerate roots damaged during the move. Spring — when the plant is entering its active growing season — is ideal. If the plant is severely root-bound or showing root rot symptoms, do not wait: repot immediately regardless of season.

Should I use new potting soil or can I reuse old soil?

Always use fresh potting mix. Old potting mix has depleted nutrients, broken-down structure, and may harbor pests, fungus, or pathogens. Fresh mix is inexpensive and gives your plant the best possible start. You can compost old soil in a garden bed, but do not reuse it in containers.

How long does transplant shock last?

Most plants recover within 2–4 weeks. You may see some wilting, leaf drop, or yellowing in the first week — this is normal. By week 3–4, the plant should stabilize and begin putting out new growth. If symptoms persist beyond 4 weeks, inspect the roots for rot or check if the soil is consistently too wet or too dry.

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