{"title":"How to Grow Herbs Indoors","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/gardening/how-to-grow-herbs-indoors","category":{"slug":"gardening","name":"Gardening"},"creator":{"name":"The Ripe Tomato Farms","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGwHWxpp7vxEZ3jgsOuD0Xg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHLChW4R5vw"},"tldr":"Grow fresh basil, cilantro, rosemary and more indoors year-round. Covers soil, containers, light, watering, harvesting, and the 8 best herbs to start with.","totalDurationSeconds":1637,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["watering can","scissors or pruning shears","grow light (optional)","drill with quarter-inch bit"],"materials":["herb seeds or seedlings","quality potting mix for containers","containers with drainage holes","seed-starting mix","plug trays or small starter pots","slow-release fertilizer pellets or liquid organic fertilizer"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Choose the Right Potting Mix","text":"Grab a quality potting mix designed for indoor container gardening - not garden soil or compost from outside. You want something loose and airy that drains well but still holds some moisture. Bringing outdoor soil inside is a bad idea because it can carry aphids, fungus gnats, or spider mites that have no natural predators indoors and can quickly become a real problem. A good commercial mix is inexpensive and gives you a clean, pest-free starting point."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Pick Containers With Drainage","text":"This one is non-negotiable - your containers must drain. Without drainage holes, roots sit in water and the plants will die. Even garden centers sometimes sell beautiful pots with no holes in the bottom, which is mind-boggling. If you fall in love with a container that lacks them, grab a drill and make quarter-inch holes spaced about 3-4 inches apart. For size, herbs have surprisingly efficient fibrous root systems and do fine in small pots. Go larger only if you plan to mix several varieties together in one planter."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Set Up Your Lighting","text":"Herbs need at least six hours of full-spectrum light per day to taste their best. A bright south- or west-facing window often does the job on its own. If your space is short on natural light - or you want to grow year-round regardless of season - an LED grow light is the answer. Advances in LED technology have made these affordable and effective, and they come in every size from clip-on desk lamps to full shelf panels. You do not need anything industrial; a basic full-spectrum LED will keep most kitchen herbs thriving."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Start Seeds in Starter Trays","text":"Fill plug trays or small starter pots with a seed-starting mix - it's finer-textured than regular potting mix and better for germination. Most herb seeds are planted very shallow, usually half an inch or less. Make a small depression, drop the seed in, and cover with a thin skim coat of mix. Keep the soil at around 80 degrees Fahrenheit for best germination rates. One useful trick: lay a piece of damp paper towel over the soil surface after seeding. It keeps moisture in during those first vulnerable days and prevents the seeds from drying out before the roots get established."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Transplant Into Your Main Containers","text":"Once your seedlings are well established, it's time to move them into their permanent home. Fill your container with potting mix and pre-soak the soil before planting - just let it absorb water for a couple of hours until it's fully saturated. This lets you go two weeks without watering after planting, giving the plants a chance to settle in without stress. For a shared planter, give each herb roughly 16 square inches of space (about 4 inches in all directions). For individual pots, one herb per container makes it easy to swap out plants as needed without disturbing the others. Keep the whole setup at around 70 degrees Fahrenheit for steady growth."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Water Correctly","text":"Overwatering is the single biggest reason indoor herb gardens fail. It's easy to do - the plants are right in front of you, always in sight, and it feels like you should be doing something for them. Scale back watering to once a week or even less. Stick a finger an inch into the soil before you water; if it still feels damp, leave it alone. The rule is moist but never soggy. When you do water, water thoroughly until it drains from the bottom, then leave the pot to dry out before the next watering. This approach keeps roots healthy and prevents the root rot that kills so many container plants."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Harvest Regularly to Keep Plants Producing","text":"Once your plants have at least three sets of true leaves, start harvesting. The key rule: take no more than one-third of the plant at a time. For basil, clip the stem just above a leaf node and the plant responds by pushing out two new shoots in its place - multiply this over several harvests and you end up with a massive, bushy plant. Regular pruning also delays bolting, which is when the plant goes to flower and the leaves either stop growing or change flavor. The more you harvest, the longer your plants stay productive. Continual, gentle harvesting is better for the plant than letting it grow wild and cutting back hard all at once."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Fertilize After Each Harvest","text":"Herbs in small containers need regular feeding - they produce a lot of foliage in a small volume of soil, so nutrients deplete faster than you might expect. Use a low-dose liquid organic fertilizer, slightly higher in nitrogen than phosphorus, after each harvest. Nitrogen supports leaf growth without triggering the flowering that signals the end of the plant's productive life. Feeding right after harvest also doubles as a watering session, which is a handy way to simplify your routine. You don't need much - a light dose every harvest cycle keeps plants producing abundantly all season."},{"number":9,"title":"Step 9: Know the Best Herbs to Grow Indoors","text":"Some herbs thrive indoors better than others. Basil is the top pick - it grows fast, branches aggressively when you harvest, and handles indoor conditions well as long as you don't overwater. Cilantro needs cooler temperatures once established (around 65 degrees is ideal) to stay leafy and delay bolting. Chives are the quickest payoff: they sprout in about 5 days and you cut them all the way down, and they regrow. Rosemary needs a dwarf variety indoors and doesn't like wet feet at all. Thyme is very tolerant and keeps its flavor even dried. Oregano wants the sunniest windowsill you have. Dill is excellent but needs its own pot - it's a single-stem plant that gets crowded quickly. Arugula rounds out the list, growing fast and performing best when kept cool."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-06-11T15:40:52.829Z","published":"2026-06-11T15:39:01.219Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}