Overwatering is the most common mistake new cannabis growers make—and one of the easiest to fix once you recognize the signs.
If your cannabis plant is drooping, yellowing, or just not looking right, overwatering is one of the most common causes — especially for new growers.
The tricky part is that overwatered plants can look a lot like underwatered ones, which leads a lot of growers to make the problem worse without realizing it.
Not sure if this is what you’re dealing with?
Post a photo of your plant and growers here will help you figure it out. You’ll usually get friendly, real advice pretty quickly
Quick signs of overwatering
Your plant may be overwatered if:
This thread is meant mainly for soil growers (ProMix / peat-based mixes count too).
If you’re in coco or hydro, watering frequency is a totally different game.
This is what overwatering typically looks like:
Cannabis plants showing classic overwatering symptoms — heavy drooping leaves and a “weighed down” appearance
More severe overwatering (or prolonged root stress)
Advanced case of overwatering where plant health begins to decline, often with yellowing leaves.
Not sure if it’s overwatering? Check out our droopy leaves guide to compare causes. (link)
What “Overwatering” Really Means
Overwatering doesn’t mean you watered too much once.
It means:
Here’s what overwatering usually looks like:
1) Droopy leaves… but they feel thick
Overwatered leaves droop downward, but they still feel “full” or heavy.
If your leaves are droopy and feel soft/floppy, that’s more often underwatering.
2) The “claw”
Leaves curl down at the tips like a hook.
That’s a big red flag.
3) Slow growth
The plant just sits there looking miserable.
4) Yellowing lower leaves
Especially early in veg, when it shouldn’t be losing leaves yet.
5) Fungus gnats
If you’ve got fungus gnats, you’ve got wet soil.
It’s basically a free warning sign.
6) Soil still wet after days
If your soil is still wet 3+ days later, your watering schedule is the problem.
Overwatering vs Underwatering (The Easiest Test)
Want the fastest method on earth?
Lift the pot.
If it feels heavy, do not water.
If it feels light, water.
Seriously. That’s it.
Your plant does not care if it’s “watering day.”
The calendar doesn’t grow weed — the roots do.
Common Beginner Mistakes (How Overwatering Happens)
Watering on a schedule
This is the #1 beginner mistake.
If you water every 2 days “because that’s what people do”… you’re going to overwater.
You water when the pot is light.
Pot is too big for the plant
This one kills more grows than people realize.
Tiny plant in a big pot = wet soil forever.
The roots can’t drink all that water yet.
No drainage
If your pot can’t drain properly, you’re basically running a swamp.
You need:
Some soils hold way too much water.
If your soil looks muddy or packs down like clay, it’s going to stay wet too long.
How to Fix Overwatering (Step-by-Step)
If you think you overwatered…
Step 1: Stop watering.
This is the part where beginners panic.
They’ll say:
“But it looks sad!”
Yes. That’s because it’s drowning.
Don’t water it again until the pot gets light.
Step 2: Add airflow
A fan moving air around the pot helps the soil dry faster and keeps problems from escalating.
Step 3: Raise temps slightly
Warm soil dries faster.
Cold + wet = root problems.
Step 4: Wait until the pot is light
Let the plant “earn” its next watering.
When the roots get oxygen again, the plant often bounces back surprisingly fast.
How Much Should You Water? (Beginner-Friendly Answer)
Here’s the part people mess up:
Small plants do NOT need a full soak every time.
If your plant is still small, don’t drench the entire pot.
Instead:
Once the plant is established, watering to runoff is fine (depending on your setup).
Overwatering Can Look Like Nutrient Problems
This is where beginners really spiral.
Overwatered roots can’t absorb nutrients properly.
So people see yellowing and go “I must need more nutrients.”
Nope.
Wet roots don’t uptake properly.
So adding more nutrients often makes the situation worse.
Fix the watering first.
Fungus Gnats = Your Soil Is Too Wet
If you have fungus gnats, you’re watering too often.
Period.
They thrive in damp soil and decaying organic material.
Letting your pots dry properly usually solves the problem over time.
Best Advice in One Sentence
Don’t water because you feel like you should.
Water because the pot is light and the plant actually needs it.
Most beginners kill plants with love.
Post Your Pics (We’ll Help You Diagnose It)
Not sure if you’re overwatering?
Post a picture of:
No judgment — we’ve ALL done it.
Quick Note for Coco/Hydro Growers
If you’re growing in coco or hydro, you can ignore half this thread.
Coco growers often water daily (or multiple times per day) on purpose.
If your cannabis plant is drooping, yellowing, or just not looking right, overwatering is one of the most common causes — especially for new growers.
The tricky part is that overwatered plants can look a lot like underwatered ones, which leads a lot of growers to make the problem worse without realizing it.
Not sure if this is what you’re dealing with?
Post a photo of your plant and growers here will help you figure it out. You’ll usually get friendly, real advice pretty quickly
Quick signs of overwatering
Your plant may be overwatered if:
- Leaves are drooping but feel heavy, not dry
- Soil stays wet for several days
- Yellowing starts on lower leaves
- Growth has slowed or stalled
This thread is meant mainly for soil growers (ProMix / peat-based mixes count too).
If you’re in coco or hydro, watering frequency is a totally different game.
This is what overwatering typically looks like:
Cannabis plants showing classic overwatering symptoms — heavy drooping leaves and a “weighed down” appearance
More severe overwatering (or prolonged root stress)
Advanced case of overwatering where plant health begins to decline, often with yellowing leaves.
Not sure if it’s overwatering? Check out our droopy leaves guide to compare causes. (link)
What “Overwatering” Really Means
Overwatering doesn’t mean you watered too much once.
It means:
- Your root zone stays wet too long
- Roots need oxygen just as much as they need water.
- When your soil stays soaked, the roots can’t breathe.
- Growth stalls. Leaves droop. Problems start stacking up.
Here’s what overwatering usually looks like:
1) Droopy leaves… but they feel thick
Overwatered leaves droop downward, but they still feel “full” or heavy.
If your leaves are droopy and feel soft/floppy, that’s more often underwatering.
2) The “claw”
Leaves curl down at the tips like a hook.
That’s a big red flag.
3) Slow growth
The plant just sits there looking miserable.
4) Yellowing lower leaves
Especially early in veg, when it shouldn’t be losing leaves yet.
5) Fungus gnats
If you’ve got fungus gnats, you’ve got wet soil.
It’s basically a free warning sign.
6) Soil still wet after days
If your soil is still wet 3+ days later, your watering schedule is the problem.
Overwatering vs Underwatering (The Easiest Test)
Want the fastest method on earth?
Lift the pot.
If it feels heavy, do not water.
If it feels light, water.
Seriously. That’s it.
Your plant does not care if it’s “watering day.”
The calendar doesn’t grow weed — the roots do.
Common Beginner Mistakes (How Overwatering Happens)
Watering on a schedule
This is the #1 beginner mistake.
If you water every 2 days “because that’s what people do”… you’re going to overwater.
You water when the pot is light.
Pot is too big for the plant
This one kills more grows than people realize.
Tiny plant in a big pot = wet soil forever.
The roots can’t drink all that water yet.
No drainage
If your pot can’t drain properly, you’re basically running a swamp.
You need:
- drainage holes
- runoff to escape
- no standing water sitting underneath
Some soils hold way too much water.
If your soil looks muddy or packs down like clay, it’s going to stay wet too long.
How to Fix Overwatering (Step-by-Step)
If you think you overwatered…
Step 1: Stop watering.
This is the part where beginners panic.
They’ll say:
“But it looks sad!”
Yes. That’s because it’s drowning.
Don’t water it again until the pot gets light.
Step 2: Add airflow
A fan moving air around the pot helps the soil dry faster and keeps problems from escalating.
Step 3: Raise temps slightly
Warm soil dries faster.
Cold + wet = root problems.
Step 4: Wait until the pot is light
Let the plant “earn” its next watering.
When the roots get oxygen again, the plant often bounces back surprisingly fast.
How Much Should You Water? (Beginner-Friendly Answer)
Here’s the part people mess up:
Small plants do NOT need a full soak every time.
If your plant is still small, don’t drench the entire pot.
Instead:
- water in a ring around the plant
- let the roots expand toward moisture
Once the plant is established, watering to runoff is fine (depending on your setup).
Overwatering Can Look Like Nutrient Problems
This is where beginners really spiral.
Overwatered roots can’t absorb nutrients properly.
So people see yellowing and go “I must need more nutrients.”
Nope.
Wet roots don’t uptake properly.
So adding more nutrients often makes the situation worse.
Fix the watering first.
Fungus Gnats = Your Soil Is Too Wet
If you have fungus gnats, you’re watering too often.
Period.
They thrive in damp soil and decaying organic material.
Letting your pots dry properly usually solves the problem over time.
Best Advice in One Sentence
Don’t water because you feel like you should.
Water because the pot is light and the plant actually needs it.
Most beginners kill plants with love.

Post Your Pics (We’ll Help You Diagnose It)
Not sure if you’re overwatering?
Post a picture of:
- the whole plant
- the soil surface
- your pot size
- your temps/humidity if you know them
No judgment — we’ve ALL done it.
Quick Note for Coco/Hydro Growers
If you’re growing in coco or hydro, you can ignore half this thread.
Coco growers often water daily (or multiple times per day) on purpose.