🌿 Care Guide · Fact Checked · April 2026

Cardamom Plant Care:
The Complete Year-Round Guide

Everything you need to keep your cardamom plant thriving — watering schedules, feeding plans, pruning technique, repotting, winter care, and a month-by-month care calendar.

✍️Written byOlivia Turner
Fact checkedEmily Rhodes
📅PublishedApril 2026
⏱️Read time14 min
🔬SourcesKAU · ICAR · RHS · Spices Board India
Olivia Turner
Written by
BSc Horticulture · Spice Plant Specialist
Emily Rhodes
Reviewed by
Nutrition & Culinary Specialist
📅 April 2026  ·  ⏱️ 14 min
⚡ Quick Answer — Featured Snippet

Cardamom plant care: bright indirect light (6–8 hrs), 18–30°C year-round, 60–80% humidity, water when top 2–3cm of soil dries (every 3–5 days in summer), balanced NPK monthly April–September, repot every 12–18 months into loam/coco coir/perlite mix at pH 5.5–6.5. Prune dead canes at the base. Stop feeding October–March and reduce watering by 40% in winter.

Cardamom Care — Key Numbers

These are the non-negotiable parameters. Get all four right and most other care decisions become much easier.

18–30°C
64–86°F ideal temperature range year-round
60–80%
Relative humidity required — humidifier essential indoors
5.5–6.5
Ideal soil pH — slightly acidic
6–8 hrs
Bright indirect light daily — no direct sun
Care FactorRequirementCommon Mistake
LightBright indirect, 6–8 hrs/dayDirect sun scorches leaves
Temperature18–30°C / 64–86°FCold drafts below 15°C damage roots
Humidity60–80% RH (humidifier)Misting alone not sufficient
WateringTop 2–3cm dry between wateringsOverwatering causes root rot
SoilLoam + coco coir + perlite, pH 5.5–6.5Heavy compost retains too much water
FertiliserBalanced NPK monthly, Apr–SepFeeding in winter causes root burn
RepottingEvery 12–18 months, springToo large a pot causes waterlogging
PruningRemove dead/yellow canes at baseNever prune green healthy canes

The 6 Pillars of Cardamom Plant Care

Master these six areas and your cardamom will thrive long-term — whether it’s a houseplant, greenhouse specimen, or outdoor tropical garden plant.

Correct watering technique for cardamom plant
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Watering

Cardamom needs consistently moist soil — not wet, not dry. The test: push your finger 2–3cm into the soil. If it feels dry at that depth, water thoroughly until it drains from the bottom. If still moist, wait another day and test again. Always water at the base — overhead watering encourages fungal leaf spots.

Summer: every 3–5 days Winter: every 7–10 days · Reduce by 40% Oct–Mar Never leave in standing water
Cardamom plant with humidifier maintaining ideal humidity
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Humidity

This is the most underestimated care factor for indoor cardamom. The plant needs 60–80% relative humidity. Average UK homes run at 30–50% and US homes with central heating at 25–40%. Only a dedicated humidifier reliably reaches 60%+. Misting provides temporary relief but cannot maintain the sustained humidity level cardamom requires for healthy growth and flowering.

Target: 60–80% RH minimum Use a hygrometer to verify actual levels Pebble trays alone are insufficient
Cardamom plant in bright indirect light from east-facing window
☀️

Light

Cardamom is a forest understory plant that evolved beneath the canopy of the Western Ghats. It needs bright, diffused light — not direct sun. East or west-facing windows are ideal. South-facing windows in summer often provide too much direct sun through glass, which amplifies heat and can burn leaves within days. In winter, a full-spectrum LED grow light at 14 hours daily compensates for reduced natural light.

6–8 hours bright indirect light daily East or west window preferred LED grow light in winter: 14 hrs/day
Applying liquid fertiliser to cardamom plant during growing season
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Fertilising

Feed monthly from April to September with a balanced liquid NPK fertiliser (10:10:10). From June onwards (or when flower panicles appear), switch to or add a potassium-rich supplement — tomato feed or a 5:10:15 NPK — to support flowering and pod formation. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds which push lush leaf growth at the expense of flowers. Stop feeding entirely October to March.

Apr–May: balanced NPK monthly Jun–Sep: balanced + potassium supplement Oct–Mar: no feeding — root burn risk
Pruning cardamom plant — removing old yellow cane at base level
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Pruning

Cardamom requires minimal pruning — only remove dead, yellow, or damaged canes. Cut at the very base of the cane at soil level using clean, sharp secateurs sterilised with isopropyl alcohol between cuts. Never prune green, healthy canes as this reduces the plant’s ability to photosynthesise and can set back growth significantly. After harvesting pods, the spent panicle stem can be cut back to encourage new panicle growth.

When: as needed, year-round Remove yellow/dead canes at base Sterilise tools between cuts
Repotting cardamom plant into larger terracotta container
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Repotting

Repot every 12–18 months or when roots circle the drainage holes. Spring is the optimal time — the plant recovers fastest in active growth. Move into a pot 5cm larger in diameter (not bigger — over-potting causes waterlogging). Use a fresh mix of 40% loam, 30% coco coir and 30% perlite. Water in with diluted seaweed fertiliser. Keep in reduced light for one week after repotting to minimise transplant stress.

Every 12–18 months in spring 5cm larger diameter only Mix: 40% loam · 30% coco coir · 30% perlite

Cardamom Care Health Checker

Answer 6 questions about your current setup — get a full care health score, identify your weakest area, and receive a personalised improvement plan.

🌿 Care Health Checker

Diagnoses your care routine and tells you exactly what to improve first for a healthier, happier cardamom plant.

Your Cardamom Care Health Report

Year-Round Care Calendar

A month-by-month reference for cardamom care in temperate climates (UK, northern USA, Canada). Tropical growers can skip the winter dormancy steps.

January
No feeding — roots dormant
Water sparingly (every 8–10 days)
Keep above 15°C minimum
Run humidifier daily
Check for pests (warm indoor air ideal for bugs)
February
No feeding yet
Reduce watering slightly (pre-monsoon mimicry)
Check roots — repot if circling drainage holes
Clean leaves with damp cloth
Order fresh potting mix if repot needed
March
Repot if needed (ideal month)
Begin watching for new cane growth
Move to warmer brighter spot
Still no feeding (wait until April)
Increase watering slightly
April
Start balanced NPK feeding (monthly)
Resume normal watering schedule
Boost humidity to 65%+
Move outdoors if frost risk gone (zone 9+)
Inspect ground level for panicle tips
May
Feed balanced NPK
Water every 3–4 days (check soil)
Move outdoors in sheltered shade
Watch for aphids & spider mites
Remove any dead lower canes
June
Switch to balanced NPK + K supplement
Water every 2–3 days in heat
Hand-pollinate any open flowers
Monitor for thrips on panicles
Apply neem oil if pests detected
July
Peak flowering — hand-pollinate daily
Continue K-rich feeding monthly
Check for young pod development
Water frequently in hot weather
Shade from afternoon direct sun
August
Continue pollinating later flowers
Watch pods swelling — do not pick yet
K-rich feeding continues
Ensure drainage — late summer rains risk
First harvest checks (base of panicle)
September
First pods ready — touch-and-drop test
Final K-rich feed of the season
Begin planning indoor move (zone 8–9)
Reduce watering slightly
Check for mealybugs before bringing in
October
Stop feeding completely
Move indoors before first frost
Harvest remaining pods
Reduce watering to every 7–8 days
Inspect for pests before winter quarters
November
No feeding
Water every 8–10 days only
Maintain 60%+ humidity (heating dries air)
Keep away from radiators
Some leaf drop is normal — don’t panic
December
No feeding
Minimal watering
Run humidifier — indoor heating is very drying
Check temperature near windows at night
Plan spring repotting if needed

Cardamom Winter Care — Indoors & Out

Winter is the most dangerous season for cardamom in temperate climates. Get these five things right and your plant will come back stronger in spring.

Cardamom plant overwintering indoors away from radiator
⚠️ Radiator danger: Central heating radiators create a pocket of very hot, extremely dry air directly around them. Cardamom placed near a radiator will suffer leaf tip burn, rapid moisture loss, and stress within days. Keep your plant at least 1.5m from any heat source — then run a humidifier to compensate for the dry heated air in the rest of the room.

Winter care checklist

  • Stop feeding completely from October to March. Roots are semi-dormant and cannot process nutrients — winter feeding causes root burn and salt build-up.
  • Reduce watering by 40%. Water only when the top 3–4cm is dry — in winter this is typically every 8–10 days indoors.
  • Maintain 15°C minimum at all times. Even brief dips below this damage roots. Use a min/max thermometer where the plant sits — window areas can be much colder than the room average.
  • Run the humidifier daily. Central heating dramatically drops indoor humidity — this is the most common cause of winter stress. Target 60% RH minimum.
  • Check for pests weekly. Warm, dry indoor conditions in winter are ideal for mealybugs, spider mites and scale insects. Catch infestations early — they multiply rapidly indoors.
  • Some leaf drop is normal. Older lower leaves and canes naturally die back in winter as the plant conserves energy. This is not a sign of failure as long as green canes remain.

Common Cardamom Care Problems & Fixes

Most cardamom problems trace back to one of four causes: overwatering, low humidity, wrong light, or temperature stress. Here is how to diagnose and fix each.

SymptomMost Likely CauseFix
Yellow leaves across multiple canesOverwatering / root rot, or nutrient deficiencyCheck soil moisture — if soggy, let dry and improve drainage. If dry and unfed, give balanced liquid feed.
Brown leaf tipsLow humidity or radiator proximityMove away from heat sources, increase humidifier output, verify humidity with hygrometer.
Wilting despite moist soilRoot rot (Phytophthora nicotianae)Check roots — brown/mushy = root rot. Repot into fresh dry mix, treat with copper fungicide if severe. Improve drainage immediately.
Pale, washed-out leavesToo much direct sunlightMove to filtered indirect light position. Symptoms usually reverse within 2–3 weeks once light corrected.
Leggy, thin new growthInsufficient lightMove closer to window or add full-spectrum grow light at 14 hrs/day.
White cottony patches on leaves/stemsMealybug infestationWipe with isopropyl alcohol on cotton swab. Spray neem oil solution weekly for 3 weeks. Isolate from other plants.
Fine webbing on underside of leavesSpider mites (common in dry indoor conditions)Increase humidity immediately — spider mites hate high humidity. Shower leaves weekly. Apply neem oil spray.
Healthy plant but no flowers after 3+ yearsLow humidity / temperature / root-bound / excess nitrogenSee flowering guide — address humidity first, then check pot size and fertiliser type. See full flowering guide.
Slow or no new growthTemperature too low or root-boundVerify temperature above 18°C. Check if repotting is overdue. Resume feeding in growing season.

Cardamom Plant Care — Expert Answers

The most common cardamom care questions answered with specific, actionable guidance.

Cardamom needs: bright indirect light (6–8 hrs daily), consistent 18–30°C temperature, 60–80% humidity via a humidifier, moist but never waterlogged soil (pH 5.5–6.5), monthly balanced NPK feeding April–September with added potassium when flowering, and repotting every 12–18 months into a loam/coco coir/perlite mix. Prune dead or yellow canes at the base only. Stop feeding and reduce watering from October to March. Avoid cold drafts, direct sun, and overwatering — root rot is the most common killer of container cardamom.
Water when the top 2–3cm of soil feels dry — don’t use a fixed schedule. In summer this typically means every 3–5 days; in winter every 7–10 days. Always water thoroughly until it drains from the bottom, then empty the saucer after 30 minutes. Never allow the plant to sit in standing water. Reduce watering by approximately 40% from October to March when the plant is semi-dormant. The most common watering mistake is overwatering — when in doubt, wait another day.
Feed with a balanced liquid NPK fertiliser (10:10:10) once monthly from April to September. When flowering begins (or from June onwards as a precaution), add a potassium-rich supplement such as tomato feed or a 5:10:15 NPK blend — potassium directly supports flowering and pod formation. Never use high-nitrogen feeds which push leaf growth at the expense of flowers. Stop all feeding completely from October to March — the root system is semi-dormant and cannot process nutrients, leading to root burn and salt accumulation.
Cardamom requires 60–80% relative humidity. This is significantly higher than average domestic environments — UK homes typically run at 30–50% and US homes with central heating at 25–40%. Only a dedicated humidifier can reliably and consistently achieve 60%+ humidity. Misting, pebble trays, and grouping plants together all provide temporary or marginal improvements but cannot maintain the sustained humidity level cardamom requires. Always verify your actual humidity level with a hygrometer — many growers discover their “humid bathroom” is actually at 45%.
Repot cardamom every 12–18 months, or when roots are visibly circling the drainage holes. Spring (March–April) is the ideal time as the plant recovers fastest during active growth. Choose a pot 5cm larger in diameter — going too large causes waterlogging as soil stays wet too long. Use a fresh mix of 40% loam, 30% coco coir, and 30% perlite. Water in with diluted seaweed solution. Keep in reduced light for 7 days after repotting to minimise transplant stress. Do not feed for 3–4 weeks post-repot.
Yellowing cardamom leaves have several causes: (1) Overwatering / root rot — check if soil is consistently soggy; roots should be white and firm, not brown and mushy; (2) Underwatering — soil bone dry and plant wilting; (3) Low humidity causing drought stress — brown tips often accompany this; (4) Nutrient deficiency — if unfed for more than 6–8 weeks in growing season, yellow-green colouration across leaves; (5) Natural ageing — older lower canes and leaves naturally yellow and die, which is completely normal. If yellowing is spreading across multiple young canes, check for root rot first as it is the most serious cause.
Yes — cardamom grows well as a long-term houseplant in temperate climates. It is primarily grown indoors for its striking tropical foliage rather than pod production (flowering is rare indoors without specific conditions). As a houseplant it needs: a bright east or west-facing window, a dedicated humidifier at 60%+, temperatures consistently above 18°C, and monthly feeding April–September. With good care, a container cardamom can live 15+ years and grow to 1.5–2m tall indoors. It is non-toxic to pets and humans.
Cardamom does not fully go dormant the way deciduous plants do, but it enters a period of significantly reduced growth in winter — particularly in temperate climates where light levels drop and temperatures are lower. During this semi-dormant period, the plant absorbs far less water and nutrients. This is why winter care requires reducing watering by 40% and stopping feeding entirely — the plant cannot process them and both watering and feeding at summer rates during winter leads to root rot or root burn respectively. Some leaf drop is normal; green healthy canes should remain.

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