Florist Kalanchoe

When to Repot a Florist Kalanchoe

Kalanchoe blossfeldiana
Reviewed by Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Quick Answer

Most Florist Kalanchoes want a fresh pot every three to four years. Move into a container only one to two inches wider than the current one in spring, right after the flowers fade, and use a fast-draining cactus or succulent mix with extra perlite.

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How to Know It's Time to Repot

Florist Kalanchoe is a slow-growing flowering succulent that handles a snug pot just fine, so the three-to-four-year cadence is a starting point rather than a strict rule. The plant itself gives you a few clear signals when the roots have truly run out of room.

  1. 1
    Roots are visible at the drainage holes or have started lifting the plant out of the pot.
  2. 2
    The plant has roughly doubled in size since you last potted it up.
  3. 3
    Soil dries out within a day of watering, even in cool weather.
  4. 4
    Lower leaves drop more often than usual and stems have started to look woody and bare at the base.

Acting on even one or two of these signs is enough to know the pot is too small, since a slow grower like this rarely shows more than a couple at once. The best moment to actually do the repot is right after the last flower fades, which gives the plant fresh energy for new leaves and stems before the next bloom cycle kicks in.

The Best Time of Year to Repot

Spring through early summer is the sweet spot for repotting Florist Kalanchoe, ideally just after the late winter and early spring bloom cycle has finished. Longer days mean stronger indoor light, which helps the plant recover quickly and push out fresh leaves. Avoid repotting during active flowering or the peak of summer heat, since both stress the plant more than the move itself. The ideal window shifts a bit depending on your latitude, so use the map below to find yours.

Repotting window by US latitude
North
Apr โ€“ Aug
Mid
Mar โ€“ Sep
South
Feb โ€“ Sep

How to Choose a Pot and Soil Mix

Pot Size

Move up by one to two inches in diameter, no more than that. Florist Kalanchoe has a shallow, modest root system relative to its bushy top, and any extra wet soil around small roots is the leading cause of rot in this plant. A 5-inch pot suits a young Kalanchoe nicely, while an 8-inch pot fits a mature plant comfortably for years. Width matters more than depth here, since the roots stay close to the surface rather than diving down.

Pot Material

Terracotta is the most forgiving choice for Florist Kalanchoe. Its porous walls wick moisture outward, so the soil dries evenly between waterings and the rot-prone roots get a chance to breathe. Glazed ceramic and plastic also work as long as you let the soil dry fully between drinks, but they're less forgiving for anyone who tends to overwater. Whichever you pick, the pot needs at least one drainage hole.

Soil Mix

A simple recipe of equal parts cactus mix, coarse perlite, and a handful of pumice or fine gravel works beautifully. Florist Kalanchoe evolved in the rocky highlands of Madagascar, so its roots want a gritty, fast-draining mix that mimics the lean, well-aerated soil of its native habitat. Skip moisture-control and standard potting formulas, since both stay wetter than this succulent can handle and are the main cause of root rot.

How to Repot a Florist Kalanchoe, Step by Step

  1. 1
    Water two to three days before. Give the plant a light drink a few days ahead of the repot so the root ball holds together instead of crumbling apart. You want the soil lightly moist but the leaves and stems on the dry side, since the thick succulent leaves bruise easily when they're plump with water.
  2. 2
    Squeeze, tip, slide. Squeeze the sides of the pot to loosen the root ball, tip it sideways, and ease the plant out by holding the base of the main stem. Never pull by the flower stalks or the top leaves, since Florist Kalanchoe stems bruise and snap right at the soil line.
  3. 3
    Inspect and trim. Shake off the old soil so you can see the roots clearly, then trim away anything dark or mushy with clean scissors. Healthy roots are pale, firm, and stringy. If you spot any rotten lower stem tissue, cut back to firm green stem and let the cut surface dry in the air for an hour or two before going any further.
  4. 4
    Set at the same depth. Add an inch or two of fresh mix to the bottom of the new pot, then settle the plant in so the soil line sits right where it was before. Keep the lower leaves and any woody base above the soil, since burying the stem is the single most common cause of rot in this plant.
  5. 5
    Fill, firm, hold off on water. Add more mix around the roots, press gently to remove air pockets, and resist the urge to water right away. The roots need a few days to heal any nicks before they meet moisture, so a deep drink straight after repotting often turns small wounds into rot. Return the plant to its usual bright indirect spot to recover.

What to Expect After Repotting

Days 1 to 7

Keep the plant in bright indirect light and hold off on water entirely for the first three to four days. A little leaf droop is normal as the roots resettle into their new home. If you trimmed any roots or stem during the repot, keep the soil dry for the full week so the cuts can callus over properly.

Weeks 2 to 6

Move the plant back to its usual sunny spot gradually over several days, since a sudden jump from indirect to direct sun can scorch the leaves while the roots are still settling. Resume normal watering once the top inch of soil dries fully between drinks. A balanced liquid fertilizer at half strength once a month supports steady new growth. Pinch off any leftover spent flower stalks to redirect energy into fresh leaves and stems.

Got More Questions?

How often should I repot a Florist Kalanchoe?
Plan on every three to four years for most plants, but use it as a rough guide rather than a calendar rule. Florist Kalanchoe is a slow-growing succulent that tolerates a snug pot well, and a plant in lower light can easily stretch to four or five years between repots. Watching the signs above is more reliable than counting years.
Do Florist Kalanchoe plants like to be root-bound?
They tolerate it better than most houseplants, but they don't thrive in it. A slightly snug pot actually helps trigger flowering, so resist the urge to size up just because a few roots peek through the drainage hole. Repot when the root ball has fully filled the pot and the plant shows two or more of the signs above, not before.
Can I repot a Florist Kalanchoe I just bought?
Wait at least two to three weeks, and longer if it's still in full bloom. Most florist Kalanchoes are sold in tight nursery pots in peak flower, and repotting while the plant is blooming often drops the open flowers and shortens the rest. Once the last flowers fade, that's the green light to move it into a fresh pot.
Can I repot a Florist Kalanchoe in full bloom?
Avoid it if you can. The disturbance to the roots is usually enough to make the plant drop most of its open blooms and cut the rest short. Wait until the last flower fades, pinch off the spent flower stalks, then repot to set the plant up for its next bloom cycle.
What if my pot doesn't have drainage holes?
Drill a hole in the bottom if the pot allows for it. Florist Kalanchoe in a sealed pot rots at the roots within weeks because the bottom soil stays soggy long after the surface looks dry. If drilling isn't an option, treat the decorative pot as a cachepot and slip a plain nursery pot inside instead.
Can I use regular potting soil for Florist Kalanchoe?
Not on its own. Standard potting soil holds far more water than this succulent can handle, and wet feet are the fastest way to lose the plant to root rot. A reliable mix in a pinch is one part standard potting soil to two parts coarse perlite with a handful of pumice or fine gravel, but a dedicated cactus or succulent mix is simpler and drains more reliably.
Can I propagate Florist Kalanchoe from a leaf or stem cutting?
Yes, both methods are easy and a great use of any pieces you trim during the repot. For stem cuttings, snip a healthy four to six inch section, strip the lower leaves, and let the cut end dry on the counter for one to two days until a thin callus forms. For leaf cuttings, twist off a healthy whole leaf and let the base callus the same way. Press either piece gently into a small pot of cactus mix, water sparingly, and roots form within three to six weeks.
Should I pinch the plant back after it finishes blooming?
Yes, and this is one of the most important things you can do for a Florist Kalanchoe long-term. After the last flowers fade, snip back each flowering stem by about a third just above a pair of healthy leaves. This redirects energy from finished blooms into new branching, keeps the plant compact instead of leggy, and sets up more flower stems for the next bloom cycle.
Why did my Florist Kalanchoe stop blooming?
Almost always because it didn't get the long dark nights it needs to set new buds. Florist Kalanchoe is a short-day plant, which means it forms flower buds in response to roughly six weeks of fourteen-hour-long nights in fall or late winter. Tuck the plant into a closet or cover it with a box from early evening to morning for six weeks, then return it to bright light and you should see buds form within a few weeks.
When can I water after repotting?
Wait three to four days for a clean repot with no root trimming, and a full seven days if you cut back any roots or stem tissue. The pause gives any nicks on the roots time to callus over before they meet wet soil, which is the same principle behind callusing succulent cuttings before planting. Once the wait is up, water lightly the first time, then return to your normal dry-between-drinks routine.
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About This Article

Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Botanical Data Lead at Greg ยท Plant Scientist
About the Author
Kiersten Rankel holds an M.S. in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology from Tulane University. A certified Louisiana Master Naturalist, she has over a decade of experience in science communication, with research spanning corals, cypress trees, marsh grasses, and more. At Greg, she curates species data and verifies care recommendations against botanical research.
See Kiersten Rankel's full background on LinkedIn.
Editorial Process
Repotting guidance verified against Kalanchoe blossfeldiana growth data from Greg's botanical database, cross-referenced with USDA hardiness zone data and published horticultural research.
39,666+ Greg users growing this plant
USDA hardiness zones 10aโ€“11b