• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • Gardening
    • Butterfly Gardens
    • Home Garden Tips
    • Seed Starting
    • Compost and Fertilizer
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Tools & Equipment
    • Pests & Problems
  • Plants
    • Plant Profiles
    • House Plants
    • Vegetables
    • Fruit
    • Herbs
    • Growing Flowers
  • Garden to Table
    • Easy Recipes
    • Canning and Food Preservation
  • Seasonal Living
    • Home for the Holidays
    • Birds and Wildlife
    • Vintage Finds
  • Shop
    • Books for Christian Herbalists
    • Herbalism Classes
    • Books by Jeanne Grunert
  • About
    • Privacy Policy

What Size Pots Are Good for Container Gardens?

April 17, 2017 by Jeanne

Now we get to the question in this container gardening series that so many people ask: What size pots are good for container gardens?

What Size Pots Are Good for Container Gardens?

Pots and containers have three dimensions: height, width, and depth. The soil volume refers to how much soil (dirt) the container can hold.

Soil contains nutrients, minerals, and spaces between the grains of soil that allows water and air to move within the soil. The roots of your plant reach down and out into the soil, growing and searching for water and nutrients.

Shallow Containers Dry Out Quickly

If your container isn’t deep enough, it will dry out quickly. Unless you plant to water your containers several times a day, dry soil on a hot summer’s day can quickly weaken or kill your container vegetable garden.

Root Vegetables Need Deep Containers

Root crops also need deep containers. A root crop is a vegetable that produces its edible portion underground. Carrots are a common root crop. Other root crops include beets, turnips, potatoes, onions, garlic, parsnips, and sweet potatoes.

Tall Vegetables May Need Deep and Wide Containers

A tall vegetable plant can act like a sail in the wind. The branches and leaves catch the wind on a breezy day and the entire plant tumbles over, container and all. This can break or damage branches and vegetables.

Tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant should be planted in containers broad and deep enough so that the soil acts as a weight. You can also brace your container and plant against a wall, deck railing, or another object to keep it from tipping over.

These pots are too small for most vegetables but fine for herbs.

Shallow Containers Can Be Used!

Let’s say you only have a few cut-down milk containers that you are recycling into vegetable garden containers. Or perhaps you have a window box or two. What can you plant in a shallow container?

  • Strawberries can be planted in window boxes, repurposed food containers and similar shallow pots. Their roots grow near the surface and they send out runners to make new plants. These runners can easily tumble over the side of the container without harming the plant.
  • Lettuce and leafy green vegetables don’t mind shallow containers.
  • Many herb plants grow just find in a shallow container! You can use common houseplant sized containers for an herb garden.
  • “Bush” type green beans can also be grown in a shallow container.

Find a Happy Medium

What size pots are good for container gardens varies according to the type of vegetables you are planting, the variety, and much more.

The following resources also provide charts that tell you how big of a container you need to grow specific vegetables:

  • Iowa State University – Container Vegetable Gardens
  • Vegetable Gardening in Containers

Happy gardening! Keep growing!

 

Filed Under: Vegetable Gardening

Previous Post: « Types of Containers for Container Gardening
Next Post: Soil for Container Vegetable Gardens »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Ashley

    January 14, 2019 at

    I’d like to start a container garden this spring… where would I find some of the black containers like you have pictured?

    • Jeanne

      January 14, 2019 at

      Hi Ashley, you can find them at Home Depot, Lowes, or any garden supply store. You can also ask neighbors and friends to save them for you. Many of my pots originally came here when I bought plants. I planted the shrubs and saved the pots.

Footer

a red knockout rose

June Gardening Tips: Everything You Need to Do in Your Garden This Month

I’m sharing these June gardening tips for gardening zone 7B. However, you can easily adapt them to your gardening zone. June is one of those months that feels like there’s so much to do in the garden you don’t know where to start. Fortunately, nature gives you extra-long days and plenty of sunshine! Whether you…

Read More

watering can with plants

Growing Ginger in the Home Garden

Growing ginger is fun. I was surprised to learn that I could grow ginger in Zone 7B, central Virginia. I attended a lecture by Ann Codrington of Nisani Farms several years ago. She discussed growing both ginger and turmeric. Her farm is in Maryland, but I discovered that both plants can be grown in both…

Read More

borage flower

Companion Planting with Herbs: Your Secret Weapon for a Healthier, Happier Garden

Every summer, without fail, I plant basil at the end of the raised beds. These are the beds filled with Roma tomatoes, the ones we harvest by the bushel to make our salt-free organic tomato sauce. My tomatoes thrive. “Did you know that basil repels aphids?” an organic gardener friend mentioned to me casually one…

Read More

a vintage folk art weather house which accurately predicts the weather

The Folk Art Weather House

I’ve loved this little folk art weather house all my life. It still makes me smile. What gardener doesn’t need to know the weather? I grew up with many German relatives. Thank-you notes were written to “Oncle Ludwig” and “Tante Marie.” During visits to their homes, I was fascinated by the little folk art German…

Read More

  • About
  • Plant a Row for the Hungry
  • Awards
  • Privacy Policy

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Substack
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2026 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme