Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Culture
  3. Evergreens

Your Guide to Indoor Gardening For Plants and Vegetables

Have you ever noticed how a little fresh greenery immediately makes a room feel vibrant, healthy, and alive? Indoor plants not only look great and transform your home into a classy, lush space, but they also provide health benefits such as elevating your mood and oxygenating the air. Plus, if you try your indoor gardening hand at growing vegetables and herbs, your indoor plants can even put nutritious food on your plate and take your dinners to another level.

Growing plants and vegetables indoors may seem like a daunting hobby reserved only for guys with the greenest of thumbs or tons of free time to dedicate to doting over watering and lighting needs, but it’s actually not all that difficult to get started with some basic indoor gardening. With a few supplies, some natural light, and a little TLC, you can watch your very own seeds sprout into vibrant plants, flowers, and edible herbs and vegetables. Make some room on your windowsill for a few pots and keep reading for our guide to indoor gardening for plants and vegetables.

Recommended Videos

What Plants Are Easiest to Grow Indoors?

Let’s face it: Some plants are hard to keep alive. We may forget to water them, or overwater them and drown the poor things, or we can’t get the right lighting and temperature conditions to help them thrive. Perhaps you even have pets who gnaw away at anything green and growing or pests have taken over and sabotaged your gardening efforts.

While it’s true that some plants do have specific needs for water, light, humidity, and growing temperature, not all plants are necessarily so fickle, and some are so hardy that they’re nearly impossible to kill. Plants that are easiest to grow indoors require less direct sunlight, and can withstand — or even thrive with — infrequent watering. Some of the easiest plants to grow indoors are also resistant to most pests, which can give you some confidence that you can have success growing them.

Indoor gardening seedlings in pots.
Unsplash

There are quite a few beginner-friendly indoor plants, but some of our recommendations for the easiest plants to grow indoors include the following:

Aloe Vera

Aloe plant without pot.
Unsplash

An attractive supplement whose sap is used to moisturize and heal the skin. Aloe requires very little water and can live for years in the same container. Aloe thrives with indirect, but bright, sunlight, but you should be careful not to cut and remove more than one-third of the leaves at one time or the plant may be unable to recover.

Snake Plant (Sansevieria)

One of the easiest plants to grow indoors is the snake plant, which features stiff, sword-like green leaves with yellow edges. The leaves can grow very large, from a humble six inches to six or more feet. Snake plants are great for beginner gardeners because they require very little care. In fact, depending on the humidity in your house, snake plants thrive best with only one or two watering per winter. They also are tolerant of poorly lit growing conditions.

Spider Plant

Spider plant on a desk.
Unsplash

Though the name may have you running the other way, spider plants are one of the easiest plants to grow indoors and a good place to start as a beginner indoor gardener. Named for the resemblance of the long leaves to the left of a spider, spider plants grow and grow and grow. They sprout “babies” that you can remove from the mother plant once the roots come in, and then you can grow them in separate containers. Spider plants do well in hanging baskets or pots but may need to be repotted every couple of years because the root systems get too large.

Jade

Jade plant.
Unaplash

Jade is an attractive plant that’s easy to grow indoors because the round leaves retain water. Even if you forget to water your jade plant for a month or so, you can usually still completely revive it. For best results, place your jade plant near a sunny window that faces south or west, if possible, and water it once the soil is dry to the touch.

What Vegetables Are Easiest to Grow Indoors?

If you’re looking to be more self-sufficient with your food and grow edible plants indoors, there are a handful of herbs and vegetables that are surprisingly easy to grow inside.

Scoop of potting soil.
Unsplash

Lettuce

Lettuce is a popular vegetable for beginners to grow indoors because it’s fairly hearty, grows quickly, and is a crowd favorite. Plant lettuce seeds in containers that are at least six inches deep. Keep it well watered, in a cool environment, and out of direct sunlight. Trim the outer leaves when ready to harvest (the leaves should be at least 4-6 inches) to keep the plant intact.

Basil

Potted herbs.
Unsplash

You can buy a small basil plant at most grocery stores and just take over the gardening care from that point, which is certainly the easiest way to go. However, if you want to grow your plants from seeds, plant them in a container filled with damp soil and cover them with a plastic bag or plastic wrap until the sprouts appear. Then remove the plastic. Be sure to keep the pots in a sunny area and ensure the soil stays damp.

Garlic Greens

Garlic greens are edible aromatic greens you can add to salads, stir-frys, and more. They have a mild garlicky flavor with hints of scallions or chives. If one of your garlic cloves sprouts a green foot from one of the ends, plant the clove with the bulb in a pot about an inch deep in the soil. In a matter of weeks, the greens will grow. You can harvest them once they are about 8 inches tall and then plant a new bulb in its place.

Microgreens

Plants germinating.
Unsplash

If you’re new to indoor gardening but want to grow something you can eat, microgreens are a great place to start. Microgreens, which are essentially the sprouted seeds of other vegetables like broccoli, celery, lettuce, mustard greens, arugula, etc., require very little space and grow quickly, so it’s rewarding and an easy way to build confidence in your indoor gardening capabilities. Microgreen seeds like to grow in damp, humid soil, so cover them with plastic wrap until they sprout.

To grow your microgreens indoors, you’ll need pots or a tray at least two inches deep filled with damp potting soil. Scatter the seeds so that they are about 1/4 inch apart, and then cover the seeds with a thin layer of soil and water (about 1/8-inch of soil). Place the pots in a south-facing window sill and keep the soil damp. After the microgreens sprout, trim them and use them in salads, sandwiches, and more. Then plant more seeds because they won’t keep growing after you’ve cut the leaves off.

Chives and Scallions

Chives and scallions are among the easiest vegetables to grow indoors. They grow quickly and take up minimal space. To grow scallions for example, simply trim off and keep the white ends with the root bulb from a bunch you purchase at the grocery store to eat instead of tossing them in the compost pile. Place the roots (about one-inch pieces) in a small container filled with about an inch of water and position in a sunny area. Change the water every few days until they sprout. Then plant them in moist soil and harvest the greens after they have grown to a height of 6-8 inches.

Tips for Indoor Gardening for Plants and Vegetables

Man doing indoor gardening.
Unsplash

Remember, as with any new venture, not every plant you grow right off the bat may be a vibrant green growing machine. Some plants will do better than others, but here are a few tips for Indoor gardening for beginners:

  • Consider grow lights: If you have limited access to windowsills, grow lights or artificial sun lamps can be a better alternative to dimly lit areas for plants that require plenty of sunlight. Otherwise, direct your indoor gardening efforts towards plants that prefer indirect sunlight or low-light conditions.
  • Use the right soil: Potting mix is actually preferable to garden soil for growing indoor plants and vegetables because quality potting mixes contain vermiculite or perlite, which facilitate drainage and keep the soil properly moist without being overly saturated.
  • Don’t over-water your plants: While plants do need water, many beginner gardeners go overboard with the watering. Be sure to heed the watering requirements for the plants you are growing, and plant them in containers that have holes in the bottom to allow excess water to drain out.
  • Stabilize the temperature: Most plants don’t love large swings in temperature and humidity. Avoid placing your plants near drafty, cold areas or atop heating vents, or near radiators.
Amber Sayer
Amber Sayer is a fitness, nutrition, and wellness writer and editor, and was previously a Fitness Editor at Byrdie. She…
Matt Damon continues his ‘Odyssey’ to bring clean water to people who need it
See Matt Damon become a rapper to make sure everyone knows they can help a family in need
Adult, Male, Man

Matt Damon is a busy man. He has always had a lot going on and is one of the true movie stars remaining in the world today. But, while he is winding down the build-up for one of the biggest projects of his career, Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey, he is not distracted from his lifelong project to bring clean water to millions around the world. Get Blue is a new initiative launched to further that mission. It is partnering with a ton of your favorite brands so you can easily get on board and bring this goal closer to shore. One of the ways he is doing this is by bringing attention to the cause by stepping into a new role of The Nomad, a rapper spittin' rhymes about water.

Music moves people in ways that few things can. It connects us, crosses borders, and makes us feel part of something bigger than ourselves. That’s what Get Blue is built on. I won’t stop looking for creative ways to draw attention, encourage participation and drive donations to help solve the global water crisis. - Matt Damon

Read more
What was once old is new again: Bang & Olufsen Beosystem 3000c Dune Grey Edition reunites generations
A new limited edition turntable combining physical and streaming makes music as generational as family
Electronics, Cd Player, Hot Tub

I hail from the generation of the curated playlist. While most of the artists I grew up listening to had phenomenal albums (can we get a standing ovation for Michael Jackson's Thriller or Dr. Dre's The Chronic?), my dad was of the mind that singles were only as good for a couple of stand-alone minutes and worked better in the context of an entire album. He could sit and listen to Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon or The Beatles' Abbey Road with no breaks. I think the only album we could both do that with was Nirvana's Nevermind. In any case, by the time I was able to decide on the music in my own car, my generation was ripping music and making playlists on CDs. Even the greatest hits collections still had only one artist at a time. We wanted a collection of artists giving us the same feeling for 90 minutes without changing a CD. However, there is something to be said about my dad's way. A good album is a good album. And listening to them unbroken is a lost joy we're discovering again as a society. That is why Bang & Olufsen's new Beosystem drop is making a splash. The Beosystem 3000c Dune Grey Edition brings the two generations together, making music the connection we've always needed it to be.

Revisting the past with a modern twist

Read more
Six subscription services you can buy dad today and gift tomorrow
For the ultra procrastinator, here are gifts you can get today that you don't have to wait for delivery.
Adult, Male, Man

We all love Dad. But that doesn't mean we are not guilty of waiting until the last possible moment to buy him a gift. If you are like me, then you have definitely had those moments where you completely forgot what day it was. If you got a call from mom today and reminded you to call your dad tomorrow for Father's Day, then panicked because you forgot to get him something, you're not alone. The biggest issue with procrastinating on a gift is that you have to wait for delivery for most things. Getting a gift you can get your hands on right now is a lot harder to do. That is, unless you buy a subscription service. That's right, get him something that feels tailor-made for him without it needing to be done three months ago. Here are six subscription services for any kind of man in your life.

Old Money

Read more