Calamondin

How to Repot a Calamondin

Citrus x microcarpa
Reviewed by Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Quick Answer

Repot a Calamondin every 2 to 3 years into a pot that's 2 to 3 inches wider than the current pot. Use a well-draining citrus or houseplant mix with extra perlite. Late spring through early summer is the best window, after the last frost and before peak bloom.

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How to Know It's Time to Repot

Calamondins are compact citrus trees with vigorous roots, so a pot that fit them last year can feel cramped by the next bloom flush. Watch for these four signals when growth slows or fruit drops more than usual.

  1. 1
    Roots circle the bottom of the pot or push out through the drainage holes.
  2. 2
    The plant has roughly doubled in size since you last potted it up.
  3. 3
    Soil dries out within a day of a thorough watering during active growth.
  4. 4
    Fewer or smaller fruit appear than the year before, even with good light and feeding.

One sign on its own can have other causes, so wait until two or more line up before repotting. Most Calamondins need a fresh pot every 2 to 3 years, with young trees sometimes needing it sooner to keep fruiting well.

The Best Time of Year to Repot

Calamondins repot best when warmth and bright light help the roots heal fast. Late spring through early summer is the sweet spot, after the last frost but before the heaviest bloom and fruit set of the year.

Avoid repotting in fall or winter, when growth slows and freshly disturbed roots are slow to recover. Use the map below to find your window.

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

How to Choose a Pot and Soil Mix

Pot Size

Move up to a pot that's 2 to 3 inches wider than the current pot. Calamondins grow into substantial small trees with deep, vigorous roots, so the wider step keeps the plant stable and gives the roots enough fresh soil for two or three years of growth.

Pot Material

Glazed ceramic and plastic are both good fits for Calamondin. They hold moisture long enough between waterings, which matters for a citrus tree that wilts fast in dry soil.

Terracotta works in humid climates or for growers who like watering more often, since the walls breathe and reduce rot risk. Whichever material you pick, make sure the pot has drainage holes. Citrus roots rot fast in standing water.

Soil Mix

Mix two parts standard potting soil with one part coarse perlite for the well-draining blend Calamondins want. A pre-mixed citrus or cactus blend works just as well, since both are formulated for the fast drainage citrus roots need.

Skip moisture-control formulas and dense peat-heavy mixes. Both hold too much water for citrus roots and lead to rot.

How to Repot a Calamondin, Step by Step

  1. 1
    Water the day before. Give the plant a thorough drink the day before repotting. Moist soil holds the root ball together when you slide it out and keeps the fine feeder roots from tearing.
  2. 2
    Pick the new pot. Choose a pot that's 2 to 3 inches wider than the current pot, with drainage holes. Layer an inch of fresh mix in the bottom so the root ball will sit at the same height it did before.
  3. 3
    Slide the plant out. Tip the pot onto its side and gently work the root ball loose. Avoid pulling on the trunk or branches. If the plant is stuck, run a butter knife around the inside edge of the pot to release it.
  4. 4
    Loosen the roots. Gently untangle any roots that have wound themselves into a tight circle at the bottom. Trim away any sections that are black, mushy, or smell sour. Healthy citrus roots are firm and pale tan or cream-colored.
  5. 5
    Set it in the new pot, graft up. Center the plant at the same depth it was growing before, with the graft union (the swollen knob at the base of the trunk) at least an inch above the soil. Burying the graft can rot it or cause the rootstock to throw its own shoots. Fill in around the sides with fresh mix.
  6. 6
    Water and place in full sun. Water slowly until you see it run out the drainage holes. Set the plant somewhere with bright direct light, ideally a south-facing window or outdoors after acclimation. Hold off on fertilizer for 4 to 6 weeks so the roots can heal.

What to Expect After Repotting

Weeks 1 to 2

Dropped fruit, yellowing lower leaves, or a few dropped leaves are normal as the roots settle into their new pot. The plant is shedding what it can't support while the roots heal.

Keep the soil lightly moist but not soggy, give the plant bright light, and skip fertilizer for now. Resist the urge to move the pot around while the plant is recovering.

Weeks 3 to 6

Fresh leaves unfurling along the branches and new bud formation are the signals that the plant has rooted in. From here, you can move the pot back to its usual spot and ease into your regular watering rhythm.

Start half-strength liquid citrus fertilizer once you see clear new growth, and build up to full strength over the next two or three feedings. Calamondins are heavy feeders during bloom and fruit set.

Got More Questions?

Do Calamondins like to be root-bound?
No. Calamondins fruit best when their roots have room to spread. A pot-bound tree drops fruit, produces smaller harvests, and is more prone to leaf yellowing from nutrient lockout.
Can I repot my Calamondin right after I bring it home?
Give it two to four weeks to adjust to your home's light first, unless it's clearly root-bound when you bring it home. A tree settling into a new environment and a new pot at the same time often drops every fruit and bud.
What if my pot doesn't have drainage holes?
Don't repot directly into it. Calamondins rot fast in standing water, so plant in a nursery pot with drainage and slip that inside the decorative pot. If you want to use the decorative pot directly, drilling works for unglazed terracotta, but glazed ceramic and thin pots tend to shatter. Use a diamond bit with a slow drip of water if you try it.
Why is the graft union important?
Calamondins sold as houseplants are usually grafted onto a hardier rootstock. The graft union is the swollen knob at the base of the trunk. Keep it at least an inch above the soil line, otherwise the upper variety can rot or the rootstock can throw its own shoots and take over the tree.
Should I prune when I repot?
A light pruning right before repotting helps balance the canopy against any roots you trim. Cut back any inward-growing or crossing branches and shape the tree lightly. Avoid hard pruning at the same time as repotting on a stressed plant.
Can I move my Calamondin outside after repotting?
Wait two to four weeks before moving it outdoors, and only once nights are reliably above 50ยฐF. Move it to a shaded outdoor spot for the first week, then gradually shift it into full sun over the next week or two.
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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 Citrus x microcarpa growth data from Greg's botanical database, cross-referenced with USDA hardiness zone data and published horticultural research.
489+ Greg users growing this plant
USDA hardiness zones 9aโ€“11b