• HOME
  • Container Gardens
  • Houseplants
  • Edible Gardening
  • Garden Design
  • Caring for Your Yard
  • Flowers
  • Pest & Problem Fixes
  • Trees, Shrubs & Vines
  • Landscaping
  • Garden Plans
  • Gardening Routine
  • Terms of Use
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
radiantecho.netradiantecho.net
  • HOME
  • Container Gardens
  • Houseplants
  • Edible Gardening
  • Garden Design
  • Caring for Your Yard
  • Flowers
  • Pest & Problem Fixes
  • Trees, Shrubs & Vines
  • Landscaping
  • Garden Plans
  • Gardening Routine
radiantecho.net radiantecho.net
radiantecho.net » Gardening Routine » Baking Soda for Plants? Here’s Why That’s Not a Good Idea
Gardening Routine

Baking Soda for Plants? Here’s Why That’s Not a Good Idea

Baking Soda for Plants? Here’s Why That’s Not a Good Idea

Baking soda can work wonders around the house and kitchen, such as adding airiness to a quick bread recipe, tenderizing meat, or freshening laundry. But baking soda for plants in your garden can do more harm than good, despite the claims you may have come across on social media. Here's why, and what to use instead to help your garden thrive.

What Is Baking Soda?

Sodium bicarbonate, aka baking soda, is essentially a salt with a wide range of uses, including baking, odor elimination, and cleaning. Naturally gritty, slightly alkaline, and relatively safe for consumption in small amounts, baking soda is also touted as a natural alternative ingredient for many garden remedies.

Baking soda is manufactured from sodium carbonate (soda ash) and mined from the ground in the form of nahcolite or trona. Both minerals occur in large deposits throughout the world, with the largest known deposits located in the state of Wyoming.

Why Do People Use Baking Soda for Plants?

Baking soda’s supposed anti-fungal properties have been spread around for many years as a natural home remedy to treat fungal infections, including black spot, powdery mildew, and a multitude of other fungi. When applied to plant leaves and stems, baking soda does slow or stop the growth of fungi. However, the benefits are fleeting at best.

Studies have shown that while baking soda impacts the growth of fungal spores, the spores and actively growing fungi are not killed. This is because baking soda acts on fungi by raising the pH around the plant, creating a more alkaline, somewhat inhospitable environment where fungal spores are unable to continue to grow. However, once the baking soda is washed off the plant, the pH levels return to normal, necessitating additional applications to keep fungal growth in check.

Other claims around using baking soda for plants and gardens include boosting blooms, killing weeds, and controlling insect pests. None of these are scientifically backed and aren't effective ways of achieving any of these aims.

The Risks of Using Baking Soda for Plants

While stopping the growth of fungal spores might sound like a great idea on the surface, let's take a deeper look into using baking social in your garden.

Baking soda is a salt, and all salts—along with other minerals in excess—can be detrimental to plant growth. Salt acts as a desiccant on plants and causes wilted foliage, stunted growth, and eventually, death. Healthy plants can quickly go downhill from an excess of salts. And if you've ever seen what happens to plants in the path of de-icing salt applied in winter, you know just how detrimental high salt levels can be to plants.

Another issue with baking soda is that it can dramatically change the pH of the soil. Most plants have a preferred soil pH range in which they grow. Outside of their preferred range, they begin to have trouble absorbing certain key nutrients such as phosphorus properly and can become nutrient deficient even when fertilizer is added. 

Alternatives to Baking Soda

While baking soda might be touted as a safer alternative to other fungicides, it doesn’t eradicate fungal spores and has the potential to alter soil pH levels negatively. Instead of using baking soda, check out these organic alternatives.

Neem Oil

Neem oil is extracted from the neem tree native to the Old World. It works as an organic pesticide and miticide, and is an excellent fungicide. Use neem oil to treat a range of fungal infections, including powdery mildew, black spot, and rust, to name a few. Neem oil is typically mixed with water and sprayed liberally onto the leaves and stems of plants. Neem can be used on most plants and is best applied after sunset or otherwise out of direct sunlight to avoid burning plants.

Copper Spray

While copper is essential in small quantities, concentrated copper sprays fight fungal infections by destroying fungal cells on contact. Use a copper spray to prevent the spread of fungi—especially while plants are dormant. For example, copper sprays are commonly used on dormant roses and fruit trees to prevent future outbreaks. 

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Does baking soda kill weeds?

    Baking soda is a salt and a high enough concentration of salt in soil will kill weeds, along with any other nearby plant, so it is not recommended for weed control.

  • Can baking soda sweeten tomatoes on the vine?

    Baking soda has no effect on the flavor of tomatoes. The variety of tomato and other environmental factors such as watering frequency affect tomato flavor.

Related Posts

How to Plant a Container Garden in 6 Easy Steps

How to Build a DIY Gabion Plant Stand

How to Get Rid of Clover Mites and Keep the Pests Away from Your Home

Embrace Outdoor Spring Living with These 11 Chic and Functional Outdoor Dining Set Deals Starting at 6

How to Plant a Water Lily in a Container to Brighten Up Your Pond

10 Smart Money-Saving Strategies When Shopping for Plants

Baking Soda for Plants? Here’s Why That’s Not a Good Idea

How to Make Compost Tea That Will Give Your Plants a Natural Boost

Keyhole Gardening Will Super-Charge Your Raised Beds

How to Grow and Care for Nerve Plant

5 Expert Tips for Helping Hummingbirds During Heat Waves

15 Hardy Types of Agave Plants That Can Handle the Cold

How to Grow and Care for Cordyline Plants in Your Garden or Home

How to Plant a Cut Flower Garden for Filling Your Vases All Season

How to Propagate Hydrangeas with 3 Easy Techniques

7 Easy-to-Grow Bonsai Tree Types Perfect for Beginners

15 No-Fuss Garden Plans Filled with Plants That Thrive in Full Sun

This Easy-Care Butterfly Garden Plan Will Attract Tons of Pollinators

New to Gardening? Use This Beginner Garden for Shade Plan to Get Started

This Tough-as-Nails Perennial Garden Plan Has Fuss-Free Plants

How to Plant a Container Garden in 6 Easy Steps
How to Build a DIY Gabion Plant Stand
How to Get Rid of Clover Mites and Keep the Pests Away from Your Home
Embrace Outdoor Spring Living with These 11 Chic and Functional Outdoor Dining Set Deals Starting at 6
How to Plant a Water Lily in a Container to Brighten Up Your Pond
10 Smart Money-Saving Strategies When Shopping for Plants
Baking Soda for Plants? Here’s Why That’s Not a Good Idea
How to Make Compost Tea That Will Give Your Plants a Natural Boost
Keyhole Gardening Will Super-Charge Your Raised Beds
How to Grow and Care for Nerve Plant
5 Expert Tips for Helping Hummingbirds During Heat Waves
15 Hardy Types of Agave Plants That Can Handle the Cold
How to Grow and Care for Cordyline Plants in Your Garden or Home
How to Plant a Cut Flower Garden for Filling Your Vases All Season
How to Propagate Hydrangeas with 3 Easy Techniques
7 Easy-to-Grow Bonsai Tree Types Perfect for Beginners
15 No-Fuss Garden Plans Filled with Plants That Thrive in Full Sun
This Easy-Care Butterfly Garden Plan Will Attract Tons of Pollinators
New to Gardening? Use This Beginner Garden for Shade Plan to Get Started
This Tough-as-Nails Perennial Garden Plan Has Fuss-Free Plants
radiantecho.net © 2025
  • Terms of Use
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy