Bonsai Watering Schedule Calculator
Find out how often to water your bonsai tree based on species, pot material, pot size, season, and climate.
Bonsai trees need more frequent watering than regular potted plants because their pots are small and shallow. The soil dries out quickly — and bonsai are highly sensitive to both overwatering and underwatering.
How often you water depends on five key factors:
1. Species type
- Tropical species (ficus, jade, schefflera): Like consistently moist soil. Typically water every 1–2 days in summer, every 2–4 days in winter.
- Subtropical species (Chinese elm, serissa, olive): Moderate moisture. Typically every 2–3 days in summer, every 3–5 days in winter.
- Temperate species (juniper, maple, pine): Tolerate drying between waterings. Typically every 2–4 days in summer, less in winter dormancy.
2. Pot material
- Terracotta clay: Porous — water evaporates through the walls. Dries fastest.
- Mica / unglazed ceramic: Similar to terracotta but slightly slower.
- Glazed ceramic: Non-porous — retains moisture longer.
- Plastic: Slowest drying — retains water well.
3. Pot size
Smaller pots hold less soil and dry out much faster. A tiny 4-inch pot may need watering every day in summer. A large 12-inch pot may only need water every 3–4 days.
4. Season
In summer, heat and active growth increase water uptake dramatically. In winter, trees slow down and soil dries more slowly — especially for deciduous trees.
5. Climate / humidity
Dry desert climates or air-conditioned rooms dry out soil much faster. Humid coastal climates or greenhouses retain soil moisture longer.
The fingertip test: Push your finger about 1 cm (1/2 inch) into the soil. If it feels dry or barely moist — water now. If it feels wet — wait another day. Never let bonsai soil dry out completely, and never keep it waterlogged.
Watering technique: Water slowly and thoroughly until water runs from the drainage holes. This ensures the entire root mass gets moisture. Misting the leaves does NOT replace root watering.