Skip to content
Free Delivery above Rs. 449 | Cash on Delivery Available!
Free Delivery above Rs. 449 | Monsoon SALE is Live! | Upto 30% OFF | Cash on Delivery Available!
Best potting mix for grow bags in India — cocopeat vermicompost perlite combination for terrace garden — Anandi Greens

Best Potting Mix for Grow Bags in India: Ratios, Ingredients & Tips (2026)

You can have the best grow bags for plants in India — premium geo fabric, correct size, perfect placement — and still get disappointing yields if your potting mix is wrong. The mix is the root environment. Get it wrong and no amount of fertilizer, watering, or sunlight compensates.

This sub-blog is part of our main guide: Grow Bags for Plants: Complete Indian Buyer's Guide.

Why Garden Soil Fails in Grow Bags

Garden soil compacts in the enclosed space of a grow bag — especially when wet. This compaction blocks drainage, suffocates roots, and creates anaerobic conditions that favour root rot. The structure of a good grow bag potting mix must be loose enough to drain freely, retain enough moisture between waterings, and provide adequate anchorage for plant roots.

The Base Formula: 60-30-10

60% Cocopeat: The structural backbone of the mix. Cocopeat holds water and air simultaneously, has a neutral pH, and doesn't compact over time. It is the ideal base for Indian terrace gardens.

30% Vermicompost: Provides a full nutrient profile, beneficial soil microbes, and humus that improves moisture retention. This is your primary nutrition source for the first 6–8 weeks.

10% Perlite or Coarse Sand: Improves drainage in the lower portion of the bag, preventing waterlogging in the root zone. Perlite is preferred — coarse river sand is a budget alternative.

Before filling your grow bags, add neem cake fertilizer at 50g per 10L of the above mix. This adds slow-release nitrogen and protects roots from nematodes and soil fungi from day one.

Adjustments by Crop Type

Leafy greens: Increase vermicompost to 40% and reduce perlite to 5%. Leafy plants are heavy nitrogen feeders and don't need aggressive drainage.

Root vegetables (radish, carrot): Replace 10% perlite with coarse sand for a looser texture that allows root expansion.

Gourds and climbing vegetables: Add 10% coco husk chips to the 60-30-10 base for additional structure in large 24×24 inch bags.

Fruit plants (lemon, guava): Use 50% cocopeat, 30% vermicompost, 15% perlite, and 5% neem cake — the perlite percentage is higher to support larger root systems.

When to Refresh the Potting Mix

After one full growing season, the potting mix in grow bags begins to deplete. Signs it's time to refresh: slower plant growth despite fertilizer, water pooling on the surface (compaction), or visible root matting through the bag wall.

To refresh: remove 30–40% of the old mix from the top and sides of the bag, and replace with fresh 60-30-10 mix. Add a fresh dose of neem cake and vermicompost. This extends bag life and restores productivity.

Quick Links

← Back to Main Blog: Grow Bags for Plants: Complete Indian Buyer's Guide

→ Related: How Long Do Grow Bags Last? Lifespan Guide

→ External: Cocopeat Benefits for Container Gardening — Gardening Know How

FAQs: Potting Mix for Grow Bags

Can I reuse old potting mix from grow bags?

Yes, with refreshing. Remove 30–40% of old mix, replace with fresh cocopeat and vermicompost, and add a fresh round of neem cake. Do not reuse mix that had fungal disease — dispose of it in open ground.

Do I need to add fertilizer if I'm using vermicompost?

Yes. Vermicompost provides nutrition for 6–8 weeks. After that, supplement with neem cake top-dressing or liquid fertilizers (seaweed extract, neem cake tea) to maintain plant health.

Is cocopeat available in India at a reasonable price?

Yes. Cocopeat bricks are widely available online and in local garden centres. A 5kg brick (which expands to approximately 75L of material) typically costs ₹150–200 and is the most economical grow bag base material.

 

Previous article Geo Fabric vs HDPE Grow Bags: Which One Is Better for Your Indian Terrace?
Next article Neem Cake for Chillies: How to Get More Fruit with Zero Chemicals