🇬🇧 UK Growing Guide · Updated April 2026

Growing Cardamom in the UK:
Windowsill, Conservatory & Greenhouse

The honest UK guide — what actually works, what does not, and how to get flowers and pods in Britain’s climate.

🌿
Written by
BSc Horticulture · Spice Plant Specialist
Reviewed by
Nutrition & Culinary Specialist
📅 April 19, 2026  ·  ⏱️ 11 min read
← Back to Complete Cardamom Growing Guide
⚡ Quick Answer

Yes — you can grow cardamom in the UK, but not outdoors year-round. The UK is USDA zones 7–9, too cold for outdoor cardamom in winter. The three methods that work: south-facing windowsill (foliage, low chance of pods), heated conservatory (good chance of flowers and pods), or heated greenhouse (best results, most reliable pods). Bring plants indoors before October every year without fail.

The Honest Truth About Growing Cardamom in the UK

Most guides about growing cardamom in the UK fall into two unhelpful camps — either they say “it’s basically impossible” and leave you there, or they copy-paste generic tropical plant advice that ignores UK reality entirely.

The truth is more nuanced. Cardamom can be grown in the UK, and it can be grown well. But it requires understanding what the UK climate actually offers and what it does not — and matching your setup to your ambitions. If you want a lush, tropical foliage plant, a south-facing windowsill is enough. If you want flowers and pods, you need heat and light beyond what a UK winter window provides.

This guide covers exactly what each UK setup achieves, with no sugarcoating.

🌿 UK Climate Reality: The UK sits in USDA hardiness zones 7–9 depending on region. Cardamom needs USDA zone 10–12 to grow outdoors year-round. UK winters (average low of 2–7°C) will kill an unprotected cardamom plant. The solution is controlled indoor growing — not fighting the climate, but working around it.

UK Climate Zones — What This Means for Cardamom

Different parts of the UK offer meaningfully different growing conditions. Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly sit in USDA zone 9–10 — the warmest in Britain. Northern Scotland sits in zone 7. Understanding your region helps you choose the right growing method.

UK RegionUSDA ZoneWinter LowOutdoor Cardamom?Best Method
Cornwall / SW EnglandZone 9–100–4°CMarginal (pots, sheltered)Conservatory or sheltered patio May–Oct
London / SE EnglandZone 9-1–4°CNoSouth windowsill or conservatory
Midlands / E EnglandZone 8–9-3–2°CNoSouth windowsill or heated greenhouse
Wales / NW EnglandZone 8-4–1°CNoHeated conservatory or greenhouse
Scotland / N EnglandZone 7–8-6–0°CNoHeated greenhouse only
Northern IrelandZone 8–9-3–2°CNoSouth windowsill or conservatory
⚠️ The 10°C Rule: Cardamom drops leaves and stops growing below 15°C. Below 10°C it suffers serious damage. Below 5°C it will die. Never let a UK-grown cardamom plant experience temperatures below 15°C during winter — this means bringing it indoors by late September at the latest.

The Three UK Growing Methods — Compared

Choose your method based on what result you want and what space you have. Each method is achievable — they just deliver different outcomes.

🪟

South-Facing Windowsill

Pods possible?Unlikely
Flowers?Possible (year 3+)
CostFree
DifficultyEasy
Best forFoliage & fragrance
Min temp15°C winter
🏆 Best for Pods
🏡

Heated Conservatory

Pods possible?Yes
Flowers?Yes (year 2–3)
CostModerate heating
DifficultyModerate
Best forFull growing experience
Min temp18°C year-round
🌱

Heated Greenhouse

Pods possible?Yes — most reliable
Flowers?Yes (year 2–3)
CostGreenhouse + heating
DifficultyModerate
Best forMaximum yield
Min temp18°C year-round

Setup Guide for Each UK Method

🪟

South-Facing Windowsill

★★
LightSouth or SW facing window — 4–6 hrs filtered light. Sheer curtain in summer to prevent scorching.
TempKeep above 18°C in growing season. Never below 15°C in winter. Keep away from cold glass on freezing nights.
HumidityPlace on a pebble tray filled with water. UK homes in winter drop to 30% humidity — too low. Mist leaves every 2 days.
WinterMove away from window on nights below 5°C outside. Cold radiates through glass. A 5cm gap from glass is enough.
Grow lightOptional but helpful October–February. A 20W full-spectrum LED for 6 hrs daily extends the growing season significantly.
🏡

Heated Conservatory

LightSouth or west-facing conservatory is ideal. Glass lets in more light than a window, extending the growing season.
TempMaintain 18–25°C year-round with a thermostatically controlled heater. This is the critical factor for flowering.
HumidityGroup tropical plants together. Use humidifier or pebble trays. Conservatories can get very dry in winter with heating running.
SummerVentilate in hot weather — conservatories can exceed 40°C in UK summers, which stresses cardamom. Open vents and shade cloth.
Pod tipsHand-pollinate with a paintbrush when flowers appear. Maintain 70%+ humidity during flowering for best pod set.
🌱

Heated Greenhouse

LightGlass greenhouse gives cardamom the most light of any UK option. Use 30% shade cloth in peak summer to prevent leaf scorch.
HeatingParaffin, electric or gas heater maintaining minimum 18°C. Install a min/max thermometer to track overnight lows.
HumidityDamp the floor in morning (damping down) to raise humidity. Target 65–75%. A small fan improves air circulation and prevents fungal issues.
CompanionCardamom grows well alongside ginger, turmeric and lemongrass in a tropical greenhouse — all have similar requirements.
PodsMost reliable UK method for pod production. Stable warmth and high light year-round mimics Kerala conditions more closely than any alternative.

🛠️ UK Monthly Care Checker

Select your UK growing month and setup to get a personalised care checklist. What to do, what to watch for, and what to avoid — month by month.

📅
UK Cardamom Monthly Care Checker
Personalised tasks for your setup, right now

UK Seasonal Care Calendar

A full year of UK-specific cardamom care — what changes with each season and why.

🌷
Spring (Mar–May)
Resume monthly feeding with balanced NPK
Repot if root-bound — best time of year
Increase watering gradually
Move conservatory plants away from heater
Watch for new shoots emerging from soil
☀️
Summer (Jun–Aug)
Water every 2–3 days — check soil daily in heat
Move windowsill plants outside from late May (warm spots only)
Shade conservatory with blinds above 30°C
Hand-pollinate if flowers appear
Mist leaves in the morning
🍂
Autumn (Sep–Oct)
Bring all outdoor pots inside by end of September
Stop feeding by mid-October
Reduce watering frequency
Check for pests before bringing plants in
Start greenhouse heating when nights drop below 12°C
❄️
Winter (Nov–Feb)
Water every 5–7 days only — soil stays moist longer
No feeding until March
Keep minimum 15°C at all times
Move pots away from cold window glass on frosty nights
Add grow light 6 hrs daily if window light is low

UK Tap Water — A Hidden Problem

This is the one issue almost no UK cardamom guide mentions, yet it affects plant health significantly. UK tap water in many regions is hard water — high in calcium and magnesium carbonates, with a pH of 7.5–8.5. Cardamom needs pH 5.5–6.5. Watering repeatedly with hard tap water raises soil pH over time, locking out nutrients and causing yellowing leaves that appear to be deficiency but are actually pH-induced.

UK Water TypeRegionpHImpact on CardamomSolution
Hard waterSE England, East Anglia, Midlands7.5–8.5Raises soil pH over monthsUse rainwater or filtered water
Moderately hardLondon, SW England7.0–7.5Gradual pH driftMix 50/50 with rainwater
Soft waterScotland, Wales, NW England6.5–7.0Near acceptable rangeTap water is fine — check annually
✅ Best practice for UK growers: Collect rainwater in a water butt and use it for your cardamom. Rainwater is naturally slightly acidic (pH 5.5–6.5) and soft — perfectly matched to cardamom’s requirements. This single change can visibly improve leaf colour and growth rate within 4–6 weeks.

Where to Buy Cardamom Plants in the UK

Cardamom plants are not stocked in most mainstream UK garden centres, but they are reliably available from specialist sources. Here is what to look for and where to find it.

What to Buy

For UK growers, a starter plant or young rhizome is always better than seeds. Seeds have a low germination rate and take 4–5 years to produce pods. A starter plant or fresh rhizome gives you a 2–3 year head start. Always look for Elettaria cardamomum — the true green cardamom. Avoid Amomum subulatum (black cardamom) — a different species with different requirements.

SourceWhat’s AvailableTypical PriceReliability
Etsy UK (search: Elettaria cardamomum)Starter plants, occasionally rhizomes£8–£20Good — check seller reviews
Specialist herb nurseriesStarter plants£10–£25Excellent — plants well established
Tropical plant specialistsPlants, rhizomes£12–£30Excellent quality
Large garden centres (exotic section)Starter plants (seasonal)£12–£18Inconsistent stock
Online seed suppliersSeeds only£2–£6Low germination rate — be patient
💡 What to look for when buying: Choose a plant with dark green, undamaged leaves and no signs of pests (check leaf undersides). The pot should smell faintly of cardamom when you brush the leaves — this confirms it is the correct species. Avoid plants with yellowing leaves or visibly circling roots — these are stressed plants that will take months to recover.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — but not outdoors year-round. The UK is USDA zones 7–9, which is too cold for outdoor cardamom in winter. The best methods are: south-facing windowsill (foliage), heated conservatory (flowers and pods possible), or heated greenhouse (most reliable pods).
Yes, with the right setup. A heated conservatory or greenhouse maintaining 18–25°C year-round can trigger flowering and pod production. On a standard windowsill without supplemental heating in winter, the plant grows beautifully as foliage but is unlikely to flower consistently. The RHS confirms cardamom can flower under glass in the UK.
Etsy UK (search Elettaria cardamomum), specialist herb nurseries, and tropical plant specialists. Avoid mainstream garden centres unless they have a dedicated exotic/tropical section. Always buy starter plants or rhizomes — not dried seeds — for UK growing.
A south-facing or south-west-facing window is ideal. The plant needs 4–6 hours of bright indirect light daily. Avoid north-facing windows — insufficient light causes leggy growth. A heated conservatory with south or west-facing glass is the best single location for UK growers wanting flowers and pods.
Indoors yes — maintain minimum 15°C through winter. Outdoors no — cardamom cannot survive UK frosts. Bring all pots inside by late September at the latest. Reduce watering in winter and stop feeding until March.
Yes — a heated greenhouse is actually the best environment for UK cardamom growers. Maintain 18–25°C year-round with a greenhouse heater. The combination of high light, stable warmth and humidity allows cardamom to flower and produce pods reliably — better than any windowsill setup.
UK tap water in hard water areas (SE England, Midlands, East Anglia) has a pH of 7.5–8.5 — too alkaline for cardamom’s ideal pH of 5.5–6.5. Repeated tap water use raises soil pH and causes nutrient lockout, which appears as yellowing leaves. Rainwater is naturally pH 5.5–6.5 and perfectly matched to cardamom’s needs.
Three most common UK winter causes: (1) Temperature too low — the plant is too close to cold window glass on frosty nights. Move 5cm away from the glass. (2) Overwatering in winter — soil takes much longer to dry in low light. Water every 5–7 days only. (3) Hard tap water raising soil pH — switch to collected rainwater.

About the Authors

Every CardamomNectar guide is written and reviewed by specialists — not generic content writers.

🌿
Olivia Turner
Writer · Gardening Specialist

Olivia holds a BSc in Horticulture from Oregon State University and specialises in growing spice plants and aromatic herbs across different climates. She has tested cardamom growing methods in both temperate and tropical environments, with specific focus on what actually works for UK and European growers.

→ Full profile & all articles by Olivia
Emily Rhodes
Reviewer · Nutrition & Culinary Specialist

Emily is a nutrition and culinary herb specialist with expertise in Ayurvedic spices. She reviews all CardamomNectar growing content for accuracy, ensuring guides correctly connect cultivation to the spice’s culinary and medicinal uses. Emily also authors all recipe and health content on the site.

→ Full profile & all articles by Emily

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