English Lavender

How to Repot an English Lavender

Lavandula angustifolia
Reviewed by Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Quick Answer

Repot English Lavender every 2 to 3 years into a pot that's 1 to 2 inches wider than the current pot. Use a gritty, fast-draining mix of two parts standard potting soil and one part coarse perlite or pumice. Early spring is the best time, before the summer bloom flush begins.

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How to Know It's Time to Repot

English Lavender is a woody Mediterranean shrub that prefers dry roots, so a too-small pot shows up as fewer blooms and tired-looking growth before it shows up below the soil. Watch for any of these four signals.

  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 or two of a thorough watering.
  4. 4
    Bloom count drops noticeably compared to last year, even with the same care.

One sign on its own isn't enough to act on, but two or more together means it's time. Most English Lavenders need a fresh pot every 2 to 3 years, and the woody base eventually needs replacing with a fresh cutting after about five to seven years.

The Best Time of Year to Repot

English Lavender prefers a repot in early spring, just as fresh growth pushes from the woody base but before the summer bloom flush. The plant has the most energy to heal disturbed roots at this point in the season.

Avoid repotting in midsummer heat or while the plant is in full bloom, since the stress can cause flower drop and slow recovery. Use the map below to find your window.

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

How to Choose a Pot and Soil Mix

Pot Size

Move up to a pot that's 1 to 2 inches wider than the current pot. English Lavender prefers a snug pot with lean soil. Too much wet soil around the roots is the easiest way to rot a lavender, so resist the urge to jump several sizes up.

Pot Material

Terracotta is the best choice for English Lavender. The walls breathe, so the soil dries evenly between waterings, which matches what this Mediterranean shrub wants.

Plastic and glazed ceramic work too, but you'll need to water less often to compensate for the slower drying. Whichever material you pick, make sure the pot has drainage holes. Lavenders rot fast in standing water.

Soil Mix

Mix two parts standard potting soil with one part coarse perlite or pumice for the gritty, fast-draining blend English Lavender wants. A handful of crushed limestone or a small scoop of horticultural lime helps match the alkaline soils of its Mediterranean home.

Skip moisture-control formulas, peat-heavy mixes, and rich compost. All three hold too much water and feed the plant more than it wants.

How to Repot an English Lavender, Step by Step

  1. 1
    Water lightly the day before. Give the plant a light drink the day before repotting. Slightly moist soil holds the root ball together when you slide it out without making the roots water-logged.
  2. 2
    Pick the new pot. Choose a pot that's 1 to 2 inches wider than the current pot, with drainage holes. Layer an inch of fresh gritty 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. Handle the plant by the woody base, never by the soft flowering stems. 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, using clean scissors. Healthy lavender roots are firm and tan.
  5. 5
    Set it in the new pot. Center the plant at the same depth it was growing before. Fill in around the sides with fresh gritty mix, pressing gently as you go to remove air pockets. Topdress with a thin layer of small gravel to keep the woody base dry and reflect heat.
  6. 6
    Water and place in full sun. Water slowly until you see it run out the drainage holes. Set the plant in full sun, since lavender wants at least 6 hours of direct light a day. Hold off on fertilizer for 6 to 8 weeks so the roots can heal.

What to Expect After Repotting

Weeks 1 to 2

A slight wilt or a pause in new growth is normal as the roots settle into their new home. The silvery foliage may look a touch dull while the plant reestablishes.

Let the soil dry between waterings, give the plant full sun, and skip fertilizer for now. A drier-than-usual top inch of soil is exactly what lavender wants.

Weeks 3 to 6

Fresh silvery shoots emerging from the woody base and tips of the stems are the clearest signal that the plant has settled in.

Ease back into your regular watering rhythm, which for lavender means a deep drink only when the top two inches of soil are bone dry. Start half-strength liquid fertilizer once you see clear new growth, and stop feeding by midsummer.

Got More Questions?

Does English Lavender like to be root-bound?
A bit. Lavender prefers lean, snug conditions and blooms best when its roots aren't swimming in soil. But a truly root-bound lavender stops putting on fresh growth and produces fewer flowers, so repot when you see two or more of the signs above.
Can I repot my English Lavender right after I bring it home?
Give it a week or two to adjust to your conditions first, unless it's clearly root-bound when you unbox it. If the plant is currently in bud or bloom, wait until the flowers fade before repotting to avoid flower drop.
Can I keep English Lavender in a pot long-term?
Yes, English Lavender does well in a pot for years as long as it gets full sun, lean soil, and minimal water. A potted lavender does need more frequent repotting than one in the ground since the roots can't stretch out indefinitely. Plan on a fresh pot every 2 to 3 years.
What if my pot doesn't have drainage holes?
Don't repot directly into it. Lavenders 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.
Should I prune my lavender when I repot?
Hold off if you can. Pruning and repotting together stacks two stressors on the plant at once. Repot first in early spring, let the plant push out new growth and bloom through summer, then prune the woody stems back by about a third in late summer once the flowers fade.
My lavender is woody at the base and bare in the middle. Will repotting fix it?
Unfortunately no. Older lavenders develop a woody, bare center that doesn't fill back in, even with a fresh pot. The best long-term fix is to take stem cuttings from healthy outer growth in summer and start a fresh plant. Plan on replacing the original after about five to seven years.
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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 Lavandula angustifolia growth data from Greg's botanical database, cross-referenced with USDA hardiness zone data and published horticultural research.
8,615+ Greg users growing this plant
USDA hardiness zones 5aโ€“9b