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Cactus & Succulent Care Guide

How to Fertilise Cactus and Succulents Without Overfeeding

Cactus and succulents do need fertiliser, but they need the right type. These plants are naturally slower growing, drought-tolerant, and easy to overfeed. The best cactus and succulent fertiliser should be low in nitrogen, higher in phosphorus and potassium, and gentle enough to support compact growth without forcing soft, weak stems.

Many people think cactus and succulents barely need feeding at all. That is not completely true. They still need nutrients for roots, colour, structure, flowering, and long-term health. The problem is that regular high-nitrogen fertilisers can push the wrong type of growth.

That is why a dedicated cactus and succulent fertiliser is a better choice than a strong general-purpose feed.

Healthy cactus and succulents growing compact with low nitrogen fertiliser
Compact growth

Succulents should grow firm, structured and controlled, not soft and stretched.

Use low nitrogen Lower nitrogen helps avoid soft, stretched growth and keeps cactus and succulents more compact.
Support roots and flowering Phosphorus and potassium help roots, structure, flowering and stress tolerance.
Feed lightly Cactus and succulents respond best to controlled feeding during active growth, not heavy feeding all year.

Why Regular Fertiliser Can Be Too Strong for Succulents

Regular fertilisers are often designed for faster-growing garden plants. That can be useful for vegetables, leafy plants, lawns, or hungry flowering plants, but cactus and succulents grow differently.

Succulents store water in their leaves, stems, or roots. Cacti are adapted to survive dry conditions and slow growth cycles. When they receive too much nitrogen, especially without enough light, they can become leggy, pale, soft, or stretched.

This is why many cactus and succulent problems are not only caused by watering. Feeding also matters.

Common signs of overfeeding or wrong fertiliser: soft growth, stretched stems, weak new growth, pale colour, poor shape, poor flowering, and salt build-up in the potting mix.

A proper succulent fertiliser should not push fast, leafy growth. It should support strong roots, firm structure, colour, flowering, and steady development.

Leggy succulent caused by low light or wrong feeding
Leggy growth Low light is the main cause, but too much nitrogen can make soft stretched growth worse.
Compact succulent growth with correct cactus fertiliser
Compact form The goal is steady, firm growth that keeps the plantโ€™s natural shape.
Cactus flower supported by phosphorus and potassium fertiliser
Flower support Phosphorus and potassium help support roots, flowering and plant strength.
CompleteGrow Cactus and Succulent Plant Food Fertiliser Concentrate
CompleteGrow recommendation

Use a low-nitrogen cactus and succulent fertiliser

CompleteGrow Cactus & Succulent Plant Food Fertiliser Concentrate uses a 2-7-7 NPK ratio made for cacti, succulents, jade, aloe and similar plants.

N 2
P 7
K 7
+ Trace Elements

It gives low nitrogen with higher phosphorus and potassium to support compact growth, healthy roots, flowering, and stronger structure without pushing excessive soft growth.

View Cactus & Succulent Plant Food

Why 2-7-7 Works for Cactus and Succulents

CompleteGrow Cactus & Succulent Plant Food uses a 2-7-7 NPK ratio.

Nitrogen 2 means a lower nitrogen level to support steady growth without forcing soft, excessive foliage. Phosphorus 7 supports root development and helps plants establish properly. Potassium 7 supports plant strength, water regulation, stress tolerance, flowering, and overall resilience.

This balance is ideal for cactus, succulents, jade plants, aloe vera, haworthia, echeveria, euphorbia, and other drought-tolerant plants that need controlled feeding.

The higher phosphorus and potassium make the formula more suitable than many standard all-purpose fertilisers. Instead of trying to push fast growth, it helps the plant build strength and structure.

CompleteGrow also includes essential trace elements, which matter because cactus and succulents still need a complete nutrient profile, even though they grow slowly.
Jade plant fertiliser for compact growth
Jade plants Great for steady, controlled growth and firm structure in Crassula varieties.
Aloe vera fertiliser for healthy roots and structure
Aloe vera Supports aloe without treating it like a fast-growing leafy plant.
Echeveria succulent fertiliser for compact rosettes
Rosette succulents Helps maintain cleaner growth, better shape and healthier colour.

Regular Fertiliser vs Cactus & Succulent Fertiliser

Succulents do not need heavy feeding. They need the right balance.

Feature Regular Fertiliser CompleteGrow Cactus & Succulent Fertiliser
Nitrogen level Often higher and more suited to leafy, fast-growing plants. Low nitrogen 2% to support controlled, compact growth.
Growth style Can encourage soft or stretched growth if used too strongly. Designed to avoid overfeeding and support firmer plant structure.
Root support May not be balanced for cactus and succulent root needs. Higher phosphorus supports roots and establishment.
Flowering support May not give enough potassium and phosphorus focus. Higher P and K support blooms, strength and resilience.
Trace elements May be missing or not clearly included. Includes essential trace elements for complete plant nutrition.
Best use General garden plants, vegetables and leafy growth. Cacti, succulents, jade, aloe, haworthia, echeveria and potted dry-climate plants.
Succulent collection in pots needing controlled fertiliser feeding
Pots and planters

In pots, cactus and succulents rely on the nutrients you replace.

How Often Should You Fertilise Cactus and Succulents?

Cactus and succulents should be fertilised lightly during active growth, not heavily all year round. In most parts of Australia, this usually means feeding more during spring and summer, then reducing or stopping feeding in the cooler months when growth slows.

CompleteGrow Cactus & Succulent Plant Food can be used in two simple ways:

  • Every watering: use half a cap per 10 litres of water.
  • Once or twice monthly: use one full cap per 10 litres of water.

Always apply fertiliser when the plant actually needs watering. Do not keep cactus and succulents wet just because you want to feed them. Overwatering is still one of the fastest ways to damage these plants.

Best routine: feed during active growth, reduce feeding in winter, use a free-draining mix, and let the potting mix dry before watering again.
Water first, feed smart Only feed when the plant actually needs watering. Do not keep the mix constantly wet.
Drainage matters Use a gritty, free-draining mix so roots do not sit wet for too long.
Feed in active growth Spring and summer are usually the best feeding windows for most cactus and succulents.

Best Fertiliser for Jade, Aloe and Common Succulents

Jade plants, aloe vera, echeveria, haworthia, gasteria, sedum, crassula and many other succulents all benefit from a lighter, more controlled feeding approach.

These plants are not usually trying to produce rapid leafy growth like vegetables or lawn. They are grown for structure, colour, compact shape, firm leaves, flowering, and long-term resilience.

That is why a low-nitrogen cactus fertiliser is usually a better fit than a strong all-purpose fertiliser.

Simple rule: use soil for drainage, sunlight for compact shape, and cactus fertiliser for controlled plant nutrition.
Aloe care Feed gently during active growth and avoid keeping the roots wet.
Jade care Use controlled feeding to support firm, compact growth and stronger stems.
Cactus blooms Good light, seasonal rhythm and the right nutrients all support flowering.

FAQs: Fertilising Cactus and Succulents

Can you use regular fertiliser on succulents?

You can, but it is not always ideal. Many regular fertilisers contain more nitrogen than cactus and succulents need. A dedicated low nitrogen cactus fertiliser is usually safer and better matched.

What is the best NPK for cactus and succulents?

A low-nitrogen formula with higher phosphorus and potassium is ideal. CompleteGrow uses 2-7-7 to support roots, compact growth, flowering, and plant strength.

How often should I feed succulents?

Feed lightly during the active growing season. You can use CompleteGrow at half a cap per 10 litres every watering, or one cap per 10 litres once or twice monthly.

Can fertiliser make succulents leggy?

Too much nitrogen can make succulents grow soft or stretched, especially if light is also low. Light is the main factor, but the wrong fertiliser can make the problem worse.

Should I fertilise cactus in winter?

Usually no, or very lightly. Most cactus and succulents slow down in winter and do not need the same feeding as they do in spring and summer.

Is CompleteGrow safe for jade and aloe?

Yes. CompleteGrow Cactus & Succulent Plant Food is made for cactus, succulents, jade, and aloe when used as directed.

CompleteGrow cactus succulent fertiliser for healthy compact succulents
CompleteGrow

Feed cactus and succulents with nutrients made for their growth style.

Feed cactus and succulents without overdoing it.

CompleteGrow Cactus & Succulent Plant Food is a low-nitrogen 2-7-7 fertiliser made for cactus, succulents, jade and aloe. It supports compact growth, strong roots, flowering and healthier structure without pushing soft, weak growth.

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