{"title":"How to Start Seeds Indoors (Beginner's Complete Guide)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/gardening/how-to-start-seeds-indoors","category":{"slug":"gardening","name":"Gardening"},"creator":{"name":"The Millennial Gardener","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAXUwGU47XVY-0lH9qhUr1Q","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IX3PxMbHUyM"},"tldr":"Start vegetable seeds indoors step by step. Trays, mix, sowing depth, heat mats, watering, and moving seedlings under light. Beginner-friendly.","totalDurationSeconds":1105,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["72-cell seedling tray with humidity dome","drip tray for bottom watering","seedling heat mat","heat mat thermostat","full-spectrum LED grow light","spray bottle or small watering can","plant labels","oil-based paint pen","chopstick","small seedling pots for transplant"],"materials":["seed-starting mix","vegetable or herb seeds (cabbage, broccoli, mustard, parsley, tomatoes, peppers)","diluted fertilizer at 1/4 strength (for after germination)","vermiculite (optional, for top-dressing)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Gather Your Seed-Starting Supplies","text":"Before you open the seed packets, lay everything out so you only have to dig in once. You need a seedling tray with cells, a clear humidity dome, plant labels and an oil-based paint pen, a chopstick, your seeds, a bag of seed-starting mix, a heat mat, and a thermostat for the mat.The mix is the part beginners often skip. Regular potting soil is too dense and holds too much water for tiny seeds. Seed-starting mix is light and fluffy, mostly peat or coco coir with a little vermiculite. The oil-based pen matters too. Permanent marker fades off plant tags in a few weeks under sun and water; the oil pen lasts the whole season."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Fill the Tray with Seed-Starting Mix","text":"Fluff up the bag of mix with your hand, then start scooping it into the cells. The mix is light and powdery, so let it fall in loose - don't compress yet. Mound each cell so the mix sits a little above the rim.Once the whole tray is mounded, run a flat hand or a piece of cardboard across the top to level it. Sweep the spillover back into the bag. You'll lose surprisingly little if you work over the bag itself instead of a counter."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Press the Mix Down to Make Room for Seeds","text":"Use your fingertips to press each cell down gently. You want the mix to compact about a quarter to a half inch below the rim. That sunken space is what holds the seed and a thin cover of mix on top.Press lightly, not firmly. The mix should still feel springy when you let go. If you mash it down hard, water won't move through it and roots won't push down through it. Think of patting a pillow flat, not pressing dough."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Pre-Moisten the Mix with Water","text":"Dribble a small splash of water into each cell. Don't soak it. The mix is hydrophobic when dry, which means water beads up on top and refuses to absorb. A small amount of water primes the cells so the next round soaks in easily.Walk away for 20 to 30 minutes. The water will slowly wick down through each cell. When you come back, the surface will look damp but not wet. That's the texture you want before you drop any seeds in."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Add Plant Labels Before You Sow","text":"Write your variety names on the plant labels with the oil-based pen and push one label into the corner of each row you're about to plant. If you're sowing the whole tray with one crop, you only need a label or two. Mixed trays need a label per row at minimum.Labeling now beats labeling later. Two trays of brassica seedlings look identical for the first three weeks. By the time the true leaves show up, you'll have completely forgotten which row was broccoli and which was cabbage."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Sow Two Seeds Per Cell with a Chopstick","text":"Pour a small pile of seeds into your palm. Lick the tip of the chopstick (yes, really) and touch it to a seed. The damp tip picks the seed up cleanly. Drop it into a cell. Pick up a second, drop it in the same cell. Move on.Two seeds per cell is called overseeding. It's insurance against the 80-percent germination rate of most seed - if only one sprouts, you still have a seedling. If both sprout, you'll snip the weaker one out later with scissors."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Cover the Seeds with About a Quarter Inch of Mix","text":"Refill each cell loosely with more seed-starting mix until it mounds slightly above the rim. Level it off with a flat hand. Then press down lightly one more time. That brings you back to flush with the rim, with seeds buried about a quarter inch deep.A quarter inch is the right depth for most small vegetable seeds. Tomato, pepper, brassica, lettuce, onion - all go in around there. Larger seeds like beans or squash need an inch or so, but you won't be starting those indoors anyway."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Water the Top Layer Lightly","text":"The bottom of each cell is already damp from the pre-moisten step, but the new dry mix on top needs water too. Use a fine watering can spout or a spray bottle. Drizzle slowly, side to side, until the surface looks wet but not pooled.Don't blast it with a hard stream. You'll wash the seeds out of position or pile them at the low corner of the cell. Light and slow is the rule for the rest of the seedlings' first weeks too."},{"number":9,"title":"Step 9: Set Up the Heat Mat and Thermostat","text":"Put the heat mat on a flat surface where you can leave it for the next few weeks. Set the seed tray on top. Slide the thermostat probe under the tray so it sits against the bottom of one of the cells. Plug the mat into the thermostat, plug the thermostat into the wall, and set the target to 73 degrees Fahrenheit.Most vegetable seeds germinate fastest in soil around 70 to 75 degrees. Without a heat mat, your basement or spare room might be in the 60s, and germination drags out to two or three weeks. With the mat, expect sprouts in two to seven days."},{"number":10,"title":"Step 10: Cover with the Humidity Dome (Vent It Slightly)","text":"Snap the clear humidity dome over the tray. The dome traps moisture and keeps the surface from drying out before the seeds can sprout. That's the whole reason seeds in a dome germinate so much better than seeds left open.Most domes have a small adjustable vent on top. Crack it open about halfway. You want some fresh air moving through; a sealed dome breeds mold and a fungal disease called damping-off that kills seedlings at the base."},{"number":11,"title":"Step 11: Move Seedlings Under Light as Soon as They Sprout","text":"Check the tray every day. The surface should stay barely damp. If it dries out, drizzle on more water. If it looks soggy, vent the dome more.The moment you see green breaking through the soil, turn the heat mat off and move the tray under a grow light or to a south-facing window. Seedlings left on warm soil with weak light shoot up tall and floppy in 24 hours. Strong light from above is what builds short, thick stems that can survive the move outside."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-30T23:59:52.974Z","published":"2026-05-30T23:59:00.477Z","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."}