Updated: 2025
Hydroponics 101: A Beginner’s Guide to Growing Without Soil
Quick answer: Hydroponics grows plants in a nutrient-rich water solution instead of soil. Start simple with passive hydroponics (Kratky or LECA “semi-hydro”) or DWC (bucket + air stone). Keep pH around 5.8–6.2, feed with a complete hydro nutrient, and provide bright light. Want the exact nutrient recipe, pH/EC targets, and light schedule for your plant and room? Use the VerdeBotany AI Plant Doctor.
Why Hydroponics?
- Faster growth: Roots get direct access to water and minerals.
- Cleaner & compact: No bags of soil; great for apartments.
- Year-round control: Dial in light, nutrients, and water precisely.
Best first crops: Lettuce, basil, mint, spinach, pak choi, and houseplant cuttings (pothos, philodendron) in semi-hydro.
Hydroponic System Types (Simple → Advanced)
Passive Hydroponics (Kratky & Semi-Hydro with LECA)
- Kratky: Plant sits in a net pot above a still nutrient solution. As water drops, an air gap forms for root oxygen. No pumps.
- Semi-Hydro (LECA): Houseplants in clay pebbles with a small reservoir below; roots wick moisture up.
- Great for beginners: Few parts, low maintenance.
DWC (Deep Water Culture)
- Roots are submerged in aerated nutrient solution.
- Requires air pump + air stone to oxygenate roots.
- Fast growth; ideal for leafy greens and herbs.
Wick System
- Fabric wicks pull nutrient solution up to the roots.
- No electricity; slower but extremely simple.
NFT (Nutrient Film Technique)
- Thin film of nutrient flows along a channel touching root mats.
- Efficient, scalable, but needs even channels and reliable pumps.
Ebb & Flow (Flood & Drain) / Drip / Aeroponics
More advanced options that cycle or mist nutrients on a schedule—powerful, but higher setup complexity.
What You’ll Need (Starter Kit)
- Container/Reservoir: Lightproof tote, jar, or bucket (e.g., 2–5 gal for DWC; glass jar for Kratky).
- Net pots + inert media (LECA, rockwool cubes, perlite).
- Hydro nutrients: Complete A/B or one-part formula for leafy plants.
- pH & EC tools: Liquid test kit or digital meter; pH up/down.
- Air pump + air stone (for DWC).
- Light: Sunny window or full-spectrum LED grow light.
Step-by-Step: Your First Hydro Grow (Kratky or DWC)
- Choose a system: Pick Kratky (no pump) or DWC (with air pump).
- Plant starts: Use rockwool cubes or rinse soil from seedlings/cuttings; seat in net pots with LECA.
- Mix nutrients: Add hydro fertilizer to water per label; target EC 0.8–1.2 mS/cm (leafy greens/herbs) to start.
- Set pH: Adjust to 5.8–6.2 (most crops). Houseplants in semi-hydro do well around 5.8–6.5.
- Aeration (DWC only): Install air stone and run 24/7.
- Light: Provide bright-indirect sun or 10–14 hrs/day under LED.
- Top-ups: Add plain water to maintain level; replenish nutrients weekly or when EC drifts low.
Pro tip: Keep reservoirs lightproof to prevent algae; label your mix date and targets.
Targets & Ranges (Cheat Sheet)
- pH: 5.8–6.2 (greens/herbs), 6.0–6.3 (fruiting), 5.8–6.5 (many houseplants in semi-hydro).
- EC (mS/cm): 0.8–1.2 seedlings/greens; 1.2–1.8 established leafy; 1.8–2.2 heavy feeders (advanced).
- Water temp: 65–72°F (18–22°C) to keep oxygen high and roots happy.
- Air gap (Kratky): 1–2″ below net pot once roots emerge.
- Light: 200–400 PPFD for leafy greens; 12–14 hrs/day as a simple starting schedule.
CTA: The AI Plant Doctor will compute crop-specific pH/EC + light hours for your exact system and season.
Passive Hydroponics for Houseplants (Semi-Hydro with LECA)
- Rinse LECA thoroughly; soak in pH-adjusted water before use.
- Pot plant in LECA with a small reservoir at the bottom (self-watering insert or cache pot with a fill line).
- Feed with diluted hydro nutrients; refresh every 2–4 weeks.
- Great for pothos, philodendron, hoya, peperomia and many aroids.
Note: Always transition plants gently from soil to LECA to avoid shock (wash roots, trim dead tissue).
Troubleshooting (Quick Diagnostics)
- Brown slimy roots: Too warm/low oxygen → lower water temp, add aeration, change solution, clean reservoir.
- Yellow leaves, stalled growth: pH out of range or EC too low/high → test, adjust, and reset with fresh mix.
- Algae on walls: Light leak → opaque container or cover; clean with mild peroxide rinse between runs.
- Tip burn/leaf curl: Nutrients too strong or salts building up → dilute EC, do a full solution change.
- Droop under lights: Heat or too much intensity → raise light or shorten hours.
Real-World Example
Case study (2025): A VerdeBotany reader set up a 5-gal DWC basil bucket. The AI tool recommended EC 1.2, pH 5.9, and 12 hrs/day LED at 12″ height. After a small pH drift fix and weekly solution changes, harvestable basil began in 3 weeks with dense, flavorful growth.
Personalize Your Hydro Setup—Automatically
Skip the guesswork: tell the VerdeBotany AI Plant Doctor your system type, reservoir size, crop, light, and room conditions. Get a nutrient recipe, pH/EC targets, light schedule, and a simple maintenance checklist (top-ups, changeouts, cleaning reminders).
Helpful Internal Links
Hydroponics FAQ (2025)
Do I need special water?
Tap water works in most places. If EC is very high (hard water), consider filtered or mix with distilled. Always adjust pH.
How often do I change the solution?
For small systems, every 1–2 weeks or when EC/pH drifts. Top up with plain water between changes.
Can I grow houseplants hydroponically?
Yes—try semi-hydro with LECA for many popular houseplants. It’s tidy and beginner-friendly.
What’s the easiest first system?
Kratky for a zero-pump start (lettuce, herbs) or a single-bucket DWC with an air stone.
What is passive hydroponics exactly?
Systems that don’t use pumps (e.g., Kratky, wick, LECA semi-hydro). They rely on air gaps or wicking for oxygen and moisture.