Learn How to Fertilize Your Orchid

Orchids need nutrients just like other houseplants, but they can be very sensitive to food and water. Here’s how to safely fertilize your orchids.

To get your orchid to re-blossom, one of the most important things you can do is fertilize it correctly. Like other houseplants, orchids need nutrients for growth, but they can be pretty sensitive to fertilizer applications. Instead of giving them too much plant food, these tender plants will do much better by being slightly underfed.

Why do orchids need fertilization?

In nature, orchids grow attached to trees or logs, not down on the ground with their roots in the soil. Native to tropical jungles and rainforests, the roots pull humidity from the air and absorb nutrients from the bark on the tree or dust that lands in proximity.

Because of their native origins, to cultivate orchids for indoor growth, many types are grown in a medium like bark chips or sphagnum moss. Unlike soil, these growing substrates do not have as much organic matter that breaks down and releases nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium over time. Therefore, you must supplement orchid plants with fertilizer to get essential nutrients for metabolic cellular processes, growth, and flowering.

How often to fertilize orchids

When it comes to fertilizing your orchids, you can break their growth cycle into three periods: active vegetative growth, flowering, and resting or dormancy. The plants have different fertilizer needs during each of those three periods.

Active growth period

During the active growth phase, which occurs just before blossoming, the plant needs the greatest amount of fertilizer. Fertilizing during this period encourages the plant to put up new stems and develop flower buds that will allow the orchid to bloom again. This period is when the plant grows the most and stores energy to put up new stems and to develop flower buds. 

When the plant is actively growing, it can be fertilized weekly or every other week. Many orchid growers follow the “weakly, weekly” approach — giving plants a small dose of fertilizer when they water weekly versus a larger amount once or twice a month.

Flowering period

Active growth slows when the flower buds open, meaning orchids expend less energy during blossoming and need less fertilizer. Therefore, it is recommended you avoid fertilizing plants when they are blooming. In some cases, fertilization can cause premature bloom loss.

Resting period

After the blooms have dropped off your orchid, the plant needs to build up its energy reserves in preparation for the active growth phase that follows. At this same time, autumn or winter temperatures begin to drop, and the day shortens in length. In turn, orchids will considerably slow down their growth to rest and store nutrients.

Fertilize your orchid every two to four weeks during the resting period at a reduced dosage rate.

Choosing a fertilizer

You can purchase a fertilizer specially formulated for orchids, or you can use all-purpose plant food. There are both granular and liquid fertilizers available; liquid fertilizers come in ready-to-use formulas and in concentrated forms that need to be diluted in water.

If you choose an all-purpose plant food, ensure that it contains equal amounts of N-P-K, such as a 20-20-20 product. Nitrogen is needed for leaf growth; phosphorus promotes healthy root growth and bud development; potassium increases plant defenses against environmental stress and helps maintain overall health. It is also essential to choose a product that contains micronutrients too. These trace elements help perform many vital functions in the plant.

Just be careful to avoid any product that contains urea to prevent burning the roots.

Step by step instructions for fertilizing your orchid

These instructions are for fertilizing weekly when the orchid is actively growing, putting on vegetative growth. If you fertilize every two weeks, you can mix the fertilizer solution twice as strong; follow the application dosage recommendations on the product label for monthly fertilization.

Give the excess water time to drain out of the growing substrate. If using a saucer to collect the water, dump the excess solution from the tray, so it isn’t reabsorbed back into the growing medium through the drainage holes.

Tips for fertilizing