Indoor plant advice often includes warnings about tap water. You may see claims that chlorine harms plants, that cold water shocks roots, that rainwater is always better, or that salt and mineral build-up in pots makes tap water harmful.
In reality these factors are usually minor compared with the real causes of plant problems.
Most struggling houseplants suffer from:
- overwatering
- poor drainage
- excessive fertiliser use
Below is a quick myth-busting guide.
The fast answer
Myth 1 — chlorine in tap water harms plants
Reality
Chlorine levels in drinking water are extremely low and do not normally harm plant roots or soil microbes.
Plants even require tiny amounts of chloride as a micronutrient. The concentration used to disinfect drinking water is far below levels that damage plants.
For most houseplants, tap water is perfectly safe.
Myth 2 — cold tap water shocks plant roots
Reality
Cold water can cool potting soil slightly, but the effect is small and temporary.
Because soil has thermal mass, watering with cold tap water typically lowers soil temperature by only a few degrees for a short period.
Roots remain within their normal operating temperature range.
Myth 3 — rainwater is always better than tap water
Reality
Rainwater can be useful for certain sensitive plants, but most houseplants grow perfectly well with tap water.
Water chemistry usually matters far less than watering frequency and drainage.
What about salt and mineral build-up?
Many gardening articles warn about “salt build-up” in pots.
In horticulture, the word salts does not mean table salt (sodium chloride).
Instead it refers to dissolved mineral nutrients and ions, such as:
- potassium
- nitrate
- calcium
- magnesium
- sulphate
These come mainly from fertilisers, and to a lesser extent from tap water.
When water evaporates from a pot, the dissolved minerals remain behind. Over time the concentration can increase.
This is why container growers sometimes monitor electrical conductivity (EC) to track nutrient levels.
What actually causes watering problems?
For indoor plants the most common issues are:
Overwatering
Roots require oxygen as well as water. If compost stays saturated for too long, oxygen levels drop and roots struggle.
Poor drainage
Containers must allow excess water to drain away. If water collects at the bottom of the pot, roots remain waterlogged.
Excess fertiliser
Repeated feeding can increase the concentration of dissolved nutrients in the potting mix.
This raises the EC of the root zone and can stress roots.
Depending on fertiliser type, heavy feeding can also gradually shift the pH of the growing medium.
Can tap water slowly change potting soil?
In some situations, yes.
Hard tap water often contains calcium and magnesium bicarbonates. Over long periods, repeated watering with highly alkaline water can slowly shift the pH of the potting medium upward.
This is most likely when:
- water hardness is high
- plants stay in the same pot for many years
- pots receive little flushing from heavy watering
However this process usually happens gradually over months or years, not quickly.
A simple way to monitor potting mix pH
Home gardeners do not need laboratory soil analysis to check their potting mix.
If you are curious or concerned:
- use a good-quality garden pH meter, or
- use simple pH test strips on a small soil-water mixture.
Both methods give a reasonable indication of whether the growing medium is drifting strongly acidic or alkaline.
What pH range should indoor plants be in?
Most houseplants grow well when the potting mix remains roughly between:
pH 5.5 – 7
Small deviations from this range are usually harmless.
Potential issues appear when pH moves well outside this range.
What to do if pH drifts
If pH rises above about 7–7.5
This may reduce availability of certain micronutrients.
Simple solution
Repot the plant into fresh potting mix.
Fresh compost resets the root environment.
If pH falls below about 5.5
Low pH can sometimes occur when fertilisers accumulate or when ammonium-based feeds dominate.
First step
Flush the pot thoroughly with clean water to remove excess fertiliser salts.
If the pH remains very low, repotting is usually the easiest fix.
Deep dive: does cold tap water really cool the soil?
Some gardening advice claims cold tap water shocks plant roots. A quick look at the physics shows why this effect is usually small.
In the UK, tap water often emerges from pipes at around 5–8 °C.
Indoor potting soil is typically 18–20 °C.
At first glance that seems like a large temperature difference.
However, when water enters the pot it mixes with a much larger mass of soil.
The simple heat balance
Consider a typical 1-litre pot.
Approximate masses:
| Component | Mass | Temperature |
|---|---|---|
| Potting soil | ~700 g | 20 °C |
| Water added | ~300 g | 6 °C |
When mixed, the final temperature settles between the two.
A simple heat balance gives a resulting soil temperature of roughly:
16–17 °C
So the soil does not drop to water temperature.
Instead it usually cools by only 3–4 °C temporarily.
How long does the soil stay cooler?
Soil warms again from:
- room air temperature
- heat stored in surrounding soil
- heat transfer through the pot walls
Typical recovery times are estimated as:
| Pot size | Approximate re-warming time |
|---|---|
| 0.5 L pot | 1–2 hours |
| 1 L pot | 2–3 hours |
| 2 L pot | 3–5 hours |
This means the soil temperature dip is modest and temporary.
Summary
Despite common advice online:
- chlorine in tap water rarely harms plants
- cold tap water causes only small, temporary cooling of soil
- salt and mineral build-up mainly comes from fertiliser use
- rainwater is optional for most species
The biggest factors affecting indoor plant health remain:
- watering frequency
- drainage
- fertiliser use
In other words:
how you water matters far more than the water itself.




