Plant Watering Interval Calculator

Calculate how often to water based on plant type, pot, and climate

Select your plant type, pot size, soil mix and typical daily temperature to estimate a recommended watering interval in days. A practical, rule-based guide for houseplant and garden enthusiasts to avoid over- and under-watering. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

How does the calculator decide the interval?

It starts from a baseline interval for the plant type — a few days for thirsty tropicals, two weeks or more for succulents. It then applies multipliers: larger pots and water-retentive soil lengthen the interval, while small pots, fast-draining mixes and high temperatures shorten it. The result is a practical estimate, not a fixed rule.

The Plant Watering Interval Calculator estimates how many days to leave between waterings for a given plant, based on the factors that actually control how fast soil dries: the plant’s water needs, the pot size, the soil mix, and the temperature. It is a practical planning aid for houseplant and garden enthusiasts who want to stop guessing — and stop killing plants by over-watering.

How it works

There is no exact formula for watering, so the calculator uses a transparent rule-based model. Each plant type has a baseline interval reflecting its water demand, which is then scaled by multipliers for the other conditions:

interval (days) = baseline × pot factor × soil factor × temperature factor

Typical baselines:

Tropical / thirsty (ferns, calathea)  — 3 days
Average houseplant (pothos, monstera) — 6 days
Herbs / vegetables in pots            — 4 days
Cacti / succulents                    — 14 days

Factors push the interval up or down:

  • Pot size: small pots dry fast (factor below 1), large pots hold water (factor above 1).
  • Soil mix: fast-draining cactus/sandy mix shortens the interval; moisture-retentive peat or compost lengthens it.
  • Temperature: hot rooms (factor below 1) dry plants faster; cool rooms (factor above 1) slow water use.

The result is rounded to a sensible whole number of days.

Tips and notes

  • Always check the soil before watering. Push a finger 2-3 cm into the soil — water only if it is dry at that depth. The interval is a plan, not a rule.
  • Overwatering kills more plants than drought. Soggy soil suffocates roots and causes rot. When in doubt, wait a day.
  • Terracotta dries faster than plastic or glazed pots because it breathes — treat unglazed clay as one pot-size smaller.
  • Cut watering in winter. Short days and cool temperatures slow growth; many houseplants need roughly half their summer water. Re-run the calculator with the cooler winter temperature.