How to Grow Snake Plants in Water Without Soil

If there’s one plant I always recommend to friends, especially the I forget to water kind, it’s the snake plant. In fact, some of the healthiest snake plants I’ve grown lately are lounging in nothing but filtered water and a handful of smooth river rocks.

Read more

I started growing mine this way after a friend gave me a jar setup she called her clean plant experiment. No gnats, no dirt on the windowsill, just bright green leaves rising from a vase.

Read more

It looked so stylish I thought, surely it’s just for show. But no, these plants thrive in water, and they grow roots that are surprisingly strong and healthy. Add a few decorative rocks and it suddenly feels like a mini indoor spa for your favorite plant.

Read more

Why Grow Snake Plants in Water?

At first, it feels a little counterintuitive, putting a drought-tolerant, desert-loving plant like a snake plant into water.

Read more

But once you try it, it just makes sense. Snake plants are incredibly resilient and adaptable. When their base is kept just barely touching clean water, they respond by sending out roots. You don’t need to worry about overwatering because the key here is control.

Read more

Read more

In addition, this way makes your plants tidy due to no messy potting mix, no bugs flying around, no risk of compacted soil choking the roots. Instead, you get this calming, minimalistic setup.

Read more

And honestly, for beginners or forgetful waterers, it’s one of the easiest and most rewarding ways to grow a plant indoors.

Read more

What You’ll Need

  • A healthy leaf cutting or young pup from a mature snake plant
  • Sharp, clean scissors
  • A clear jar or vase
  • Decorative stones
  • Filtered, rain, or distilled water
Read more

Make sure the rocks are scrubbed and rinsed. Besides, the water should be free of chlorine or heavy minerals, especially at the beginning when roots are just forming.

Read more

Step-by-Step: Growing Your Snake Plant in Water

Step 1: Select Your Cutting

Read more

You choose a healthy, green leaf or a pup with its own root nub. Avoid any signs of rot or softness.

Read more

If cutting a leaf, slice at an angle and let the base air-dry for 24-48 hours. This allows it to callous over and prevents rotting in water.

Read more

Read more

Step 2: Set Up Your Jar

Place your clean stones or pebbles in the bottom of the glass jar. They’ll serve both as support and as a way to anchor the plant upright.

Read more

Step 3: Add Water

Pour in just enough water to touch the base of the cutting or the roots of your pup. You don’t want the leaf itself submerged, just the very bottom to prevent mushy rot and encourage healthy root development.

Read more

Step 4: Insert the Cutting

Nestle the base into the rocks so it stands upright. If your cutting keeps leaning, add more stones or switch to a narrower jar. That upright posture really helps prevent rotting where the leaf meets the water.

Read more

Step 5: Place in a Bright Spot

Now, you put the jar in a spot with bright, indirect sunlight. Too much sun can lead to algae in the water, while too little will slow root growth.

Read more

Read more

Step 6: Maintain and Refresh

You should change the water every 7-10 days, topping off with fresh, clean water. If you see algae on the glass or rocks, give everything a rinse.

Read more

Once roots appear (usually after 3-6 weeks), you can keep it in the water long-term or transfer it to soil if preferred.

Read more

Helpful Tips and Real-Life Lessons

When I first started growing snake plants in water, I wasn’t expecting much. I figured it was a fun experiment, but I assumed they’d eventually wilt or give up.

Read more

Turns out, I was completely wrong. One of my leaf cuttings sat in a sunny bathroom for nearly two years, growing long roots and even sprouting a baby offshoot without ever touching a speck of soil.

Read more

Clean water and consistency are the ley to success. You’ll want to refresh the water every week or so, especially in the early stages.

Read more

If the water turns cloudy or starts to smell off, don’t wait, rinse the jar and rocks and refill with filtered water. Snake plants may be tough, but stagnant water will still do them in.

Read more

Fertilizing isn’t necessary for the first few months, and if you do feed them later, go very lightly. A tiny drop of liquid houseplant fertilizer every few weeks is enough. Overdoing it can actually damage the new roots.

Read more

Also, be prepared to wait. It’s not a fast-growing method. You may stare at that jar for weeks before seeing any action but when roots finally emerge, it’s a thrill every time.

Read more

And here’s a pro tip, if you ever see algae building up on the glass or around the rocks, switch to a darker container or move it a little farther from direct sun. Snake plants love light, but their water setup doesn’t.

Read more

Read more

Did you like this story?

Please share by clicking this button!

This page was generated by the plugin

Visit our site and see all other available articles!

Garden & Crafty - Garden, DIY, Home