Repot for root health, not just bigger growth.
The right container gives roots more room without leaving a small plant sitting in too much wet media.
Choose the next pot by roots, water, and growth.
Use this as a planning guide, then adjust for the actual plant, media, season, and how quickly the pot dries.
| Current pot | Typical next step | Best for | Repot when |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 inch / liner | 1 gallon | Seedlings, rooted cuttings, small grafts | Roots hold the media together and watering becomes difficult to balance. |
| 1 gallon | 2-3 gallon | Young Eugenia, citrus, miracle fruit, small jaboticaba | Roots circle lightly, growth resumes after watering, and the plant dries quickly. |
| 3 gallon | 5-7 gallon | Most patio fruit trees and collector plants | The plant is stable, actively growing, and needs water too often for the season. |
| 7 gallon | 10-15 gallon | Larger citrus, mango, avocado, banana, mulberry | The canopy is outpacing the root zone or the tree needs anchoring and moisture buffer. |
| 15 gallon+ | Root prune, refresh, or plant | Long-term container trees | Growth stalls, water runs through fast, or roots are dense around the pot wall. |
Slow collector trees
Jaboticaba, miracle fruit, many Eugenias, and Garcinias usually prefer gradual pot increases and moisture-consistent media.
Vigorous growers
Bananas, mulberries, some citrus, and strong mango or avocado trees may need a larger jump when roots and canopy are moving quickly.
Do not repot by calendar only
Look at roots, watering frequency, leaf color, and growth. A stressed tree may need better watering or media before it needs a larger pot.
Repot when the plant is ready to recover.
Repot when the tree is hydrated, shaded from harsh afternoon sun, and ready for a few quiet recovery days. Match the media to the plant group, water thoroughly after repotting, and record the new pot size and date.