Ornamentals And Succulents

How to Grow Gazania in Pots: Container Success Guide

how to grow gazanias in pots

Yes, gazania grows really well in pots, and honestly it might be one of the best flowers you can pick for container gardening if you have a hot, sunny spot and you tend to forget to water. These compact, low-growing plants (usually around 6 to 12 inches tall and wide) slot neatly into pots on a balcony, patio, or windowsill, and when they're happy they pump out vivid daisy-like blooms in oranges, yellows, pinks, and reds for weeks on end. The main thing to get right is drainage and sun. If you also want an edible crop, check out how to grow pickles in a pot for a similar container setup. If you’re wondering how to grow bromeliads in pots, focus on bright light and fast-draining potting media so the roots never sit in water drainage and sun. Get those two things right, and almost everything else falls into place. If you're also wondering about planting gerbera daisies in pots, the key is choosing a well-draining mix and giving them plenty of sun.

Can gazania actually grow in pots (and what to expect)

Compact gazania flowers growing in a terracotta pot on a sunny patio

Gazania is a South African native, which tells you a lot about what it wants: baking sun, lean soil, and not much water. Extension specialists from UIUC classify it as a tender annual in most of the US, meaning outside of USDA hardiness zones 8B through 11, it won't survive a frost in the ground or in a pot outdoors. If you want a similar container-friendly guide for a different plant, you can also follow our tips on how to grow begonias in pots. In most places gardeners grow it as an annual and replant each spring, which is totally fine because it's fast-growing, inexpensive from seed or nursery packs, and flowers prolifically from early summer right through to the first cold snap.

In a container, gazania's compact size is a genuine advantage. It doesn't need a huge pot, it doesn't sprawl aggressively, and its drought tolerance means it's forgiving when you miss a watering. What it won't forgive is soggy soil. That's the one thing that kills potted gazania fastest, and it's completely avoidable once you understand why it happens.

Choosing the right pot size, drainage, and container setup

For a single gazania plant, a pot that's about 8 to 10 inches in diameter is plenty. If you want to grow three or four plants together for a full, lush display, go for a 14- to 16-inch container. The rule of thumb is to give each plant roughly 8 inches of horizontal space so the roots can spread without competing too heavily.

Drainage holes are non-negotiable. At least one good-sized hole at the base lets excess water escape instead of pooling around the roots. Pooled water cuts off oxygen to roots and invites rot fast, especially in a plant that's evolved to live in dry, gritty soil. If you've got a pot you love but it has no hole, either drill one or use it as a cachepot (a decorative outer sleeve) and keep the actual plant in a plain nursery pot with holes inside it.

For pot material, terracotta or unglazed clay pots are ideal because they're porous and allow moisture to evaporate through the walls, keeping the root zone drier between waterings. Plastic and glazed ceramic hold moisture longer, which isn't ideal for a drought-loving plant like gazania. That said, plastic is fine if you're disciplined about not overwatering. One practical note: dark-colored pots in full sun heat up significantly and increase water demand, so if you're in a hot climate and using a dark pot, check the soil moisture more frequently.

Best soil mix for potted gazania

Close-up of potting soil mixed with coarse sand/grit and perlite for fast drainage.

Standard peat-based potting mix straight from the bag holds too much water for gazania. It's designed to stay moist, which is great for many plants but works against you here. What you want is a fast-draining, gritty mix that lets water pass through quickly and doesn't stay wet for long.

The simplest approach is to take a standard potting soil and cut it with coarse horticultural sand and perlite. A good working ratio is roughly 50% potting soil, 30% coarse sand or grit, and 20% perlite or pumice. This creates air pockets in the mix and prevents compaction. Avoid adding vermiculite (it retains water), water-retaining crystals, or heavy amounts of peat or compost. Gazania actually does better in lower-fertility soil, so resist the temptation to enrich the mix heavily. A lean, gritty medium is genuinely what this plant prefers.

If you want to do a quick test before planting, scoop some of your mix into a container, pour water onto it, and watch how fast it drains. It should drain through in under 30 seconds. If water sits on the surface and takes a while to soak in, add more grit or perlite.

Planting gazanias in containers

You have three ways to get gazanias into pots: from seed, from divisions of an existing plant, or from purchased nursery seedlings. Nursery seedlings are the easiest option if you're a beginner and want flowers quickly. Bought plants typically start blooming within a few weeks of being potted up.

Starting from seed

If you're starting from seed, begin indoors 6 to 8 weeks before your last expected frost date. Sow seeds about 1/8 to 1/4 inch deep in small cells or a seed tray filled with a fine, moist starting mix. They germinate best with warmth (around 65 to 75°F) and usually sprout within 7 to 14 days. Once seedlings have a couple of sets of true leaves and all frost risk has passed, they're ready to move into their final container outdoors.

Transplanting seedlings or divisions

Hands transplanting a gazania seedling into a pot, keeping the crown above the soil level.

When transplanting into the pot, the single most important thing is not to bury the crown of the plant (the point where the stems meet the roots) beneath the soil surface. Crown rot is a real problem with gazania, and it starts when the crown stays damp against wet soil. Plant so the crown sits at or very slightly above the soil level, and leave an inch or so of space between the soil surface and the rim of the pot to make watering easier without splashing soil all over the crown. After planting, water in gently, and then wait until the top inch or two of soil is dry before watering again.

Sunlight, watering, and feeding schedule

Sun requirements

Gazania needs full sun, and that means at least 6 to 8 hours of direct sunlight per day. This isn't a plant that'll compromise. Poor light leads directly to poor flowering and leggy, weak stems. South or west-facing spots are ideal for container placement. One of the big advantages of growing in pots is that you can move them into the best sun position, so use that flexibility. If your blooms are sparse or your plant looks stretched and floppy, the first thing to check is whether it's getting enough direct sun.

Watering

The watering rule for potted gazania is simple: let the soil dry out between waterings. Stick your finger an inch or two into the soil. If it feels dry at that depth, water thoroughly until it runs freely from the drainage holes. Then don't water again until it dries out. In hot summer weather in a terracotta pot, that might mean watering every 2 to 3 days. In a larger plastic pot with overcast weather, it might be once a week or less. Let the soil be your guide, not a fixed schedule.

Feeding

Gazania doesn't want to be overfed. Too much nitrogen produces lush foliage but few flowers, and gazania already prefers low-fertility conditions. A light application of a balanced, slow-release granular fertilizer at planting time is a reasonable starting point. After that, a half-strength liquid fertilizer every 3 to 4 weeks during the growing season is enough to keep things going without pushing excessive leaf growth. Keep granular fertilizers away from the crown and stems when applying, as they can cause burn on contact with plant tissue.

Keeping flowers coming: deadheading and maintenance

Deadheading (removing spent, fading flowers) is one of the most effective things you can do to keep gazania blooming continuously. When a flower finishes, the plant's energy shifts toward producing seeds. By removing those spent blooms before seeds set, you redirect that energy into producing new buds. NC State Extension specifically recommends deadheading as the main maintenance technique for continuous gazania blooms.

To deadhead properly, look for flowers that are browning, wilting, or fully faded. Trace the stem down to where it meets a leaf node or branch junction and snip or pinch it off there. Don't remove buds that haven't opened yet, even if they look a bit closed up. Gazania flowers close at night and on cloudy days, which is completely normal behavior, not a sign of a dying bloom.

Beyond deadheading, give the plant a light tidy every couple of weeks. Remove any yellowing or dead leaves at the base. This improves airflow around the crown, which reduces the risk of fungal problems, and it keeps the plant looking neat in a container setting.

Common problems in pots and quick fixes

ProblemLikely CauseQuick Fix
Few or no flowersNot enough sun, or too much nitrogenMove pot to a sunnier spot; reduce fertilizer frequency
Leggy, floppy stemsInsufficient lightRelocate to full sun; trim back leggy growth
Yellowing lower leaves, mushy stemsOverwatering or poor drainageLet soil dry fully; check drainage holes are clear; repot with grittier mix if needed
White powdery coating on leavesPowdery mildewImprove airflow around plant; avoid wetting foliage; remove affected leaves
Sticky residue, distorted new growthAphidsKnock off with a strong spray of water; use insecticidal soap if persistent
Holes in leaves, slime trailsSlugs or snailsRemove by hand in evenings; use a copper tape barrier around the pot
Fine webbing on undersides of leavesSpider mites (common in hot, dry conditions)Mist undersides of leaves; use insecticidal soap or neem oil

The honest truth is that most problems with potted gazania come back to two things: too little sun or too much water. Before assuming something exotic is wrong, rule those out first. I've seen plants that looked half-dead perk right back up after being moved into a sunnier spot or after a week of being left to dry out properly.

Overwintering and seasonal care for potted gazania

Gazania in a terracotta pot under a clear cloche in a sheltered area for winter frost protection

In USDA zones 9 and warmer, gazania can survive mild winters outdoors in a container if you tuck it somewhere sheltered and reduce watering significantly during the cooler months. The key through winter is to keep the soil on the dry side, since cool and damp is a quick route to crown rot. Group pots together near a wall or building for extra protection, and consider wrapping the pot itself (not the plant) with bubble wrap or horticultural fleece to insulate the root zone.

In zones 8 and colder, where frost is a real risk, you have two practical options. The first is to bring the pot indoors before the first frost into a cool but frost-free space like a garage, basement, or unheated greenhouse. Keep it near a window if possible, water very sparingly (just enough to prevent the soil from bone-dry dust), and don't feed it at all until spring growth resumes. The second option, which NC State Extension also recommends, is to take stem cuttings in late summer before temperatures drop. Root the cuttings in a small pot indoors over winter and plant them out fresh in spring. Cuttings root easily and give you identical plants to the parent without needing to store a big pot through the cold months.

Many gardeners in cooler climates simply treat gazania as an annual, buy fresh plants or start new seeds each spring, and don't overthink the winter question at all. There's nothing wrong with that approach. Start seeds indoors around late February or early March (6 to 8 weeks before your last frost), harden the seedlings off by gradually introducing them to outdoor conditions over 7 to 10 days, and pot them up once frost risk has passed. You'll have a full display going by early summer.

Your quick-start checklist

  1. Choose a pot at least 8 inches wide with at least one drainage hole at the base.
  2. Fill with a fast-draining mix: roughly 50% potting soil, 30% coarse sand or grit, 20% perlite.
  3. Plant seedlings so the crown sits at or just above the soil surface, not buried.
  4. Position the pot in the sunniest spot you have (6 to 8 hours of direct sun daily).
  5. Water thoroughly, then wait until the top 1 to 2 inches of soil dry out before watering again.
  6. Feed lightly every 3 to 4 weeks with a half-strength balanced liquid fertilizer.
  7. Deadhead spent flowers regularly to keep new buds coming.
  8. Check for aphids, spider mites, and slugs every week or two and deal with them early.
  9. Before the first frost, bring the pot indoors or take cuttings if you're in a colder zone.

If you're already growing other sun-loving flowers in containers, gazania fits right into the same care rhythm as gerbera daisies or geraniums in pots. The main difference is that gazania is even more forgiving of dry spells, making it a great option if you're time-poor or just getting started with container gardening. Give it sun, give it sharp drainage, and it'll reward you with months of colour.

FAQ

Why are my potted gazanias not blooming even though they look healthy?

Most non-blooming in pots comes from either insufficient direct sun or excess nitrogen. Aim for 6 to 8 hours of direct light, and pause additional feeding if you used a rich fertilizer. Also check spacing and deadheading, crowded plants and seed-setting both reduce new bud production.

My gazania leaves look healthy but the crown seems soft. What should I do?

Soft or collapsing crown usually indicates crown rot from staying too wet. Stop watering immediately, move the pot to full sun, and let the mix dry back thoroughly. If the crown is already mushy, consider taking healthy side cuttings or starting over, since rot can spread quickly through the base.

Can I grow gazania in a pot with no drainage holes using a saucer?

It’s risky. If you must use a decorative cover, keep the plant in a separate nursery pot with drainage, then place that inner pot inside the outer sleeve. Empty any trapped water from the saucer after watering, and never let the crown sit in water.

How often should I water when the weather changes (hot summer vs mild spring)?

Use the dry-down method, not a calendar. Test 1 to 2 inches down, water thoroughly until it runs from the holes, then wait until that depth feels dry again. Expect terracotta in heat to dry fast, while cool or cloudy weather can stretch intervals to a week or more.

Is it better to plant one gazania per pot or multiple together?

Both work, but multiple plants require space and fast-drying soil. For containers, allow about 8 inches of horizontal space per plant and use a pot wide enough to reduce root competition. If you pack them too tightly, they dry unevenly and can struggle with airflow around the crown.

What’s the best way to deadhead gazania without damaging buds?

Remove only flowers that are fully spent or browning and trace the stem back to the leaf node where it branches. Leave closed buds alone, since they can still open later. It’s also normal for flowers to close at night or on cloudy days, so don’t remove them just because they look closed.

Should I prune leggy gazania stems?

Instead of heavy pruning, first fix the cause, usually low light. Move the pot to the brightest direct-sun spot you have. Light tidy-ups are fine, remove yellowing leaves at the base, but avoid cutting into healthy crown tissue because gazania is sensitive to staying damp around the base.

Can I take cuttings to save my potted gazania over winter indoors?

Yes, especially in climates with real frost. Take stem cuttings in late summer before cold weather, root them in a small pot indoors, and keep them just lightly moist. This avoids trying to store a wet crown through winter, and the new plants will be genetically the same as the parent.

What pot size is too small for gazania?

Very small pots can dry out too quickly and increase the risk of underwater stress or root crowding. For one plant, 8 to 10 inches in diameter is a solid target. If you want a fuller display with multiple plants, use a 14 to 16 inch pot and space them so each plant has roughly 8 inches of room.

Why do the flowers look pale or fewer than expected in summer heat?

In extreme heat, the plant may respond to stress by slowing bud set if the soil swings between too wet and too dry. Stick to thorough watering only when the top 1 to 2 inches are dry, and avoid frequent splashy waterings. A gritty mix also buffers heat swings better than straight bagged peat mix.

Is gazania drought tolerant, or can it handle missed waterings indefinitely?

It tolerates drying, but it still needs a full soak when the mix is dry at depth. If you repeatedly let the mix stay bone dry for long stretches, flowering can drop even if the plant doesn’t die. Aim for “dry between waterings,” not “never water.”

Citations

  1. Gazania is typically described by extension sources as a tender plant grown as an annual; UIUC Extension lists hardiness as “Tender Annual” and recommends full sun with very well-drained, low-fertility soils for best performance.

    https://extension.illinois.edu/flowers/gazania

  2. NC State Extension describes gazania as low-growing with container use; it specifically notes: “Allow the soil to dry between waterings,” “plant in full sun for best blooming,” and “deadhead to encourage continued blooms.”

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/common-name/gazania/

  3. UF/IFAS lists gazania as requiring full day sun for healthy plants and being suitable as “a perennial grown as an annual,” with USDA hardiness zones indicated as 8B through 11 for the perennial survival range (implying colder zones behave annual-only).

    https://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/database/documents/pdf/shrub_fact_sheets/gazsppb.pdf

  4. For gazania in containers, NC State Extension notes the plant form is about 1/2 to 1 foot tall and wide, implying a compact, spreading habit that fits well in pots when given enough root space.

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/common-name/gazania/

  5. At least one drainage hole is important in containers: Apartment Plant Lab states drainage holes prevent pooled water that reduces root oxygen and increases root-rot risk; it also says a pot with at least one drainage hole lets excess water exit rather than collect in the bottom.

    https://apartmentplantlab.com/drainage-101-pots-with-holes-cachepots-avoid-root-rot-5/

  6. More porous/semi-porous pots are better for plants that don’t require lots of water; NC State Extension notes that “porous and semi-porous pots are best used to grow plants that do not require a lot of water.”

    https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/extension-gardener-handbook/18-plants-grown-in-containers

  7. NC State Extension emphasizes that container watering needs vary with container size, pot color, and sun exposure: water needs increase if the pot is small, dark-colored, or in full sun.

    https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/extension-gardener-handbook/18-plants-grown-in-containers

  8. A common practical guideline for succulent-type container mixes (relevant to drought-tolerant gazania culture) is that drainage and air spaces matter: apartment/succulent guidance stresses gritty, free-draining media and avoiding water-retentive mixes to reduce rot risk.

    https://houseplant101.com/plants/ox-tongue/

  9. A gritty, low-organic, fast-draining medium is recommended for gazania: one care guide specifies a mix concept using coarse horticultural sand, perlite/pumice, and limited organic component, explicitly warning that standard peat-based mixes hold too much moisture for gazania.

    https://lifetips.alibaba.com/plant-care/how-to-care-for-gazanias

  10. UF/IFAS states gazania needs less water and prefers full sun; this supports the container approach of leaning “dry on purpose” and keeping media from staying wet.

    https://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/database/documents/pdf/shrub_fact_sheets/gazsppb.pdf

  11. One gazania culture guide provides a specific drainage-test and mix-avoidance approach: it advises testing drainage by pouring water onto a measured amount of mix and avoiding peat moss, vermiculite (described as water-retentive), and water-retaining crystals.

    https://lifetips.alibaba.com/plant-care/gazania-gazania

  12. Succulent/fast-draining soil blending guidance (useful for adapting gazania potting): plantonomics suggests limiting peat/compost/bark to ~10–20% and starting with a gritty structure using coarse sand/grit, potting soil, and perlite/pumice.

    https://plantonomics.com/soil-for-succulents

  13. NC State Extension’s gazania guidance stresses watering conservatively: “Allow the soil to dry between waterings,” which aligns with selecting a fast-draining, drought-tolerant medium rather than a water-holding potting mix.

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/common-name/gazania/

  14. For seed-starting depth, one seed product info source specifies sow depth of 1/8 inch (not deeply buried).

    https://www.superseeds.com/products/gazania-new-day-mix

  15. For seed-starting timing, one source recommends starting indoors 6–8 weeks before the last frost (then transplanting outdoors after risk passes).

    https://www.superseeds.com/products/gazania-new-day-mix

  16. Burpee’s gazania propagation guidance gives a specific sowing depth and transplant-feeding caution: it states sow gazania seed about 1/4 inch deep and mentions feeding only after seedlings are older (and keeping granular fertilizers away from crown/foliage to avoid burn).

    https://www.burpee.com/garden-guide/ornamental-gardening/annual-flowers/learn-about-gazanias

  17. A cultivar culture guide advises not burying the crown when transplanting to avoid crown rot (important for pot planting depth decisions).

    https://wt.ballhort.com/DisplayProductInformation/102069/culture_seed_gazania_kiss.pdf

  18. NC State Extension explicitly recommends full sun for best blooming and deadheading to encourage continued blooms—core container-placement and maintenance instructions.

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/common-name/gazania/

  19. UF/IFAS fact sheet notes full-day sun is required for healthy gazania plants (supporting the “hours of direct sun” concept).

    https://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/database/documents/pdf/shrub_fact_sheets/gazsppb.pdf

  20. A gazania culture seed/production guide lists a media philosophy for greenhouse container culture: media should be allowed to dry between moisture events and provides a fertilizer target expressed as nitrogen rate in ppm (useful as a dosage reference in ppm terms).

    https://www.syngentaflowers.com/ams/sites/g/files/kgtney2381/files/file_field/import/field_media_link/sites/g/files/zhg721/f/media/2020/03/03/culture_seed_gazania_gazoo.pdf

  21. NC State Extension again supports irrigation pacing: allow soil to dry between waterings (a practical watering rule to prevent rot in pots).

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/common-name/gazania/

  22. NC State Extension instructs deadheading as a method to encourage continued blooms (directly answering the “maintenance for continuous flowering” question).

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/common-name/gazania/

  23. Chicago Botanic Garden provides a practical deadheading method: remove spent/browning blooms and cut just below the old flower where the stem meets branching, while not removing buds that haven’t opened yet (relevant technique for potted gazania grooming).

    https://www.chicagobotanic.org/how-to-dead-annuals-for-more-blooms

  24. RHS defines deadheading as removing fading/spent flowers to encourage more blooms and prevent seed production—consistent with how continuous container bloom is maintained.

    https://www.rhs.org.uk/garden-jobs/deadheading-plants

  25. A gazania plant-entry source notes gazania pest susceptibility patterns including aphids, slugs/snails, and spider mites (useful for quick container problem scanning).

    https://gardenish.co/plants/gazania-rigens/

  26. Powdery mildew identification basics from USU Extension: powdery mildew appears as white, powdery blotches on leaves/stems/buds and can prevent buds from opening or cause abnormal development (useful diagnostic sign).

    https://extension.usu.edu/planthealth/ipm/notes_orn/list-flowers/powdery-mildew

  27. One gazania culture guide emphasizes that letting the soil dry between waterings is key (implicitly reducing overwatering/root rot risk in containers).

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/common-name/gazania/

  28. UF/IFAS and other extension references imply limited winter hardiness: gazania is perennial only in the warmer hardiness range (UF/IFAS cites USDA zones 8B through 11) and therefore generally requires protection or is treated as an annual in colder regions.

    https://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/database/documents/pdf/shrub_fact_sheets/gazsppb.pdf

  29. General container overwintering guidance from Garden Design: larger pots provide more root-zone protection than small ones, and pots can be wrapped and grouped near a building; plants can also be brought indoors to cool garages/basements/greenhouses.

    https://www.gardendesign.com/containers/perennials-in-pots.html

  30. NC State Extension’s gazania notes that containers can be overwintered indoors or via stem cuttings (indicating a practical “indoor overwinter” option for gardeners trying to keep plants going year-to-year).

    https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/gazania-rigens/

  31. A seed-culture note warns about overwinter handling conceptually for tender plants: the ‘keep cool and dry-ish’ approach is often used by gardeners/extension growers to reduce decay risk before increasing water again when growth resumes (useful as a winter watering rule-of-thumb).

    https://www.reddit.com/r/gardening/comments/1ndmpkc/

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