Order by noon for same-day delivery · Mon–Sat across Los Angeles
Keep gerbera daisies blooming with bright window light and fresh vase care.

Keep Gerbera Daisies Blooming

Keep gerberas blooming longer with simple care for light, water, soil, feeding, and vase life.

Gerbera daisies look like pure happiness, right up until the flowers slow down. If you want to keep gerbera daisies blooming all season, focus on a few steady habits: strong light, careful watering, airy soil, light feeding, and fast deadheading. Get those basics right, and you give the plant a real reason to keep sending up buds.

The same idea applies to cut stems. People often worry about flowers fading too fast, but a good care routine makes a visible difference. If you keep gerberas in a vase too, start with Fiore’s fresh cut flower care guide for the first-hour basics.

The Simple Secret to Repeat Gerbera Daisy Blooms

Most gerberas do not stop blooming because they are finished. They stop because one part of the routine slips. The plant may still look healthy, but if light drops, roots stay wet, or old blooms remain in place too long, flower production slows down fast.

Gerberas are heavy bloomers, which means they use a lot of energy. To keep gerbera daisies blooming, think in a loop. Light builds strength, water protects the roots, soil keeps air moving, and deadheading tells the plant to make more flowers instead of seeds.

One of the most common reasons potted gerberas stop flowering is low light. If the leaves look decent but new buds never form, check the sun first.

Quick Care Cheat Sheet

Care FactorBest TargetWhy It Matters
Light6 to 8 hours of bright sun, with afternoon shade in very hot spotsMore light gives the plant the energy it needs to keep blooming.
WateringWater deeply, then let the top inch dry before watering againWet roots and a soggy crown can lead to rot and fewer flowers.
SoilFast-draining mix, slightly acidic to neutralRoots need both moisture and air.
FeedingBalanced liquid feed every 2 to 4 weeks in active growthRegular nutrients support repeat buds.
DeadheadingRemove faded blooms at the base of the stemThis keeps energy going into new flowers, not seed production.

If you like the cheerful look of blooming plants indoors, our guide to indoor flowering plants shares other long-lasting options for home color.

Our picks

Handpicked for You

View All Products
Picture of Hand-tied

Hand-tied

(9)
48+ bought in past month
from $125
Picture of Designer's ChoicePicture of Designer's Choice

Designer's Choice

(33)
150+ bought in past month
from $150
Picture of VividPicture of Vivid

Vivid

(26)
127+ bought in past month
from $150

Set Up the Right Growing Conditions

Gerberas are not difficult, but they are picky about the basics. Small problems with light, airflow, or wet soil around the crown can be enough to pause blooming. Start by checking where the plant lives every day, not only how often you water it.

Give Them the Light They Need

Outdoors, gerbera daisies do best with strong morning sun and some relief from harsh late-day heat. Indoors, a bright east or south-facing window is often the best fit. If the light is weak, the plant may hold leaves but stop making flowers.

A full-spectrum grow light can help if your natural light is limited. Keep it on a steady schedule for 8 to 10 hours a day, and place it close enough to be useful without overheating the foliage.

Water Carefully, Not Constantly

Overwatering is the fastest way to lose flowers. Gerberas dislike soggy soil, and they especially dislike water sitting at the crown. Instead of watering by the calendar, check the soil with your finger. If the top inch feels dry, water. If it still feels cool and damp, wait.

Bottom-watering tip
Set the pot in shallow water for 20 to 30 minutes, then let it drain well. This can help keep the crown drier while the roots take up what they need.

Gerberas also like mild temperatures, around 65 to 75 degrees Fahrenheit. Good airflow matters too. Damp, still air can invite mildew, especially if leaves stay crowded.

Use Soil and Feeding That Support More Buds

Healthy roots are what keep gerbera daisies blooming for the long run. If the potting mix stays dense and wet, roots struggle, and flower production usually drops soon after. A light, fast-draining mix works better than a heavy one that packs down over time.

A simple home blend can work well in pots: peat moss for moisture balance, perlite for airflow, and a little compost for nutrition. If you buy potting soil, choose one labeled well-draining and add extra perlite if needed. The container must have drainage holes.

Only When It Blooms

The studio, in your inbox

Seasonal flowers, new designs from Culver City, and the occasional offer. Nothing more.

Valuable offers, sent occasionally. Unsubscribe anytime.

Feed Lightly but Regularly

Gerbera daisies bloom best with regular, gentle feeding in spring and summer. Use a balanced liquid fertilizer at half strength every 3 to 4 weeks. That is usually enough to support repeat blooming without pushing weak, fast growth.

When growth slows in fall, reduce feeding. If the plant rests in winter, stop until active growth starts again.

Repot Once a Year

Fresh potting mix can make a real difference. Soil breaks down and compresses over time, which limits airflow around the roots. Repot in spring, moving only one pot size up, and keep the crown slightly above the soil line. Burying it too deeply can lead to rot.

Deadhead the Right Way for More Flowers

If you want more blooms, deadheading is one of the simplest ways to help. Once a flower fades, the plant shifts toward seed production. Remove that spent bloom early, and the plant is more likely to put its energy into new buds instead.

Do not just pull off the petals. Follow the full flower stem down to the base and cut it cleanly near the crown with clean scissors or snips. That keeps the plant tidier and reduces the chance of rot. For a closer look at timing and technique, see our guide to deadheading gerbera daisies.

Regular deadheading can lead to noticeably more blooms over the season because the plant stays focused on making flowers, not seeds.

It also helps to remove yellow leaves and damaged foliage every week or two. Cleaner growth means better airflow, and better airflow helps keep the crown dry.

Our Services

For the moments that call for flowers.

Residential Floral Services — Fiore Designs Los Angeles

Residential Floral Services

Fresh, seasonal arrangements tailored to your home with weekly or bi-weekly flower delivery.

Inquire About Home Florals
Elegant floral centerpiece for a private dinner by Fiore Designs

Private Dinner Flowers

Floral design for private dinners. Low centerpieces built for conversation and intimate candlelit tablescapes.

Plan Your Dinner
Elegant floral centerpieces and tablescapes designed for a wedding reception.

Wedding Reception Flowers

Custom floral design for wedding receptions, including centerpieces and focal arrangements.

Plan Your Reception Florals

How to Make Cut Gerbera Daisies Last Longer

Gerberas can brighten a room for days, but they need a little care once cut. Start with a clean vase, recut the stems by about an inch, and place them in fresh water right away. Many people are surprised by how much longer flowers can last with simple conditioning. As one Fiore client put it, arrangements can stay fresh for 2 to 3 weeks with proper care, depending on the season and flower types.

Gerbera stems often do better in a lower water level than other flowers. Too much water can soften the stems and cause drooping. Use flower food if you have it, refresh the water every two days, and trim the stems again when you change it. If you want a broader vase-life guide, read how long cut flowers last.

Keep the vase out of direct sun, away from heaters, and away from ripening fruit. Heat and ethylene both shorten vase life. If you want florist-made stems that open beautifully at home, Fiore’s Hand-tied bouquet is an easy place to start.

Troubleshoot Common Gerbera Problems

Yellow Leaves

Yellowing usually points to too much water. Let the soil dry a bit more between waterings, and make sure the pot drains fully. If the mix stays wet for days, repot into a lighter soil.

For more recovery steps, this guide to saving overwatered plants gives a simple walkthrough.

No New Blooms

If flowers stop, check light, feeding, and deadheading first. Seasonal light shifts indoors can be enough to slow a plant that bloomed well a month earlier. Once the routine improves, many gerberas start pushing new buds again within a few weeks.

Pests

Aphids, spider mites, and whiteflies can show up on stressed plants. Check new growth and the undersides of leaves. A firm rinse with water can help with small issues, while insecticidal soap may help with heavier pressure.

Keep the Routine Simple

To keep gerbera daisies blooming, stay consistent. Give them bright light, let the soil dry slightly between waterings, use a loose mix, feed lightly, and remove spent flowers quickly. Those few habits do most of the work.

If you want fresh flowers at home without the plant care, Fiore’s residential floral services bring seasonal arrangements into your space on a regular schedule. For help choosing the right next step, you can also reach out through our contact page.

Questions we hear most

Frequently Asked Questions

The most common reasons are low light, soggy soil, missed feeding during active growth, or old blooms left on the plant too long. Start by checking sun exposure, then review watering and deadheading habits.
Water deeply, then wait until the top inch of soil feels dry before watering again. Do not water on a fixed schedule if the soil is still damp, because wet roots can slow blooming and lead to rot.
No. Remove the whole flower stem down near the base instead of only pulling off petals. Leaving the stem in place can lead to rot near the crown and does not help the plant reset as cleanly.
Use a clean vase, recut the stems, keep the water level fairly low, and change the water every two days. Keep the arrangement out of direct sun and away from heat and ripening fruit.
A fast-draining potting mix works best. The roots need moisture, but they also need air. A lighter mix with ingredients like peat moss and perlite helps prevent soggy conditions that can reduce flowering.
More in the journal

Keep reading

View All