· SoilSense team

When to Water Your Plants: Reading a Moisture Meter

Water when your moisture meter reads in the lower third of the scale (1–3 on a 1–10 dial) for most plants. Succulents want to dry fully first; tropicals like the mid-range; ferns prefer consistent moisture. Always read at the root zone, not the surface.

The number-one killer of houseplants is overwatering — watering on a calendar instead of watering to the soil. A moisture meter fixes that by showing what's happening around the roots, where it counts.

The simple 1–10 guide

Plant typeWater when dial reads
Succulents & cacti1–2 (bone dry)
Most houseplants (pothos, monstera)3–4
Tropicals & calatheas4–5 (keep slightly moist)
Ferns5–6 (never fully dry)
Outdoor beds & veg3–4, average of 3 spots

How to take a good reading

  1. Push the clean probe two-thirds of the way toward the root ball.
  2. Wait 60 seconds for the needle to settle.
  3. Read the dial, then remove and dry the probe.
  4. For big pots or beds, read in 2–3 spots and average.

Why bother? Moisture near the surface can differ from the root zone by a wide margin just hours after watering — the surface looks dry while roots are still soaked. The meter reads the layer that decides whether roots breathe or rot. How accurate are these meters? →