SKU: 28467002789
plant fertilizer indoor

plant fertilizer indoor Liquid Houseplant Fertilizer - 8 fl oz

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Description

plant fertilizer indoor Liquid Houseplant Fertilizer - 8 fl ozFeed Your Entire Indoor Plant Jungle with One Fertilizer Balanced 9 3 6 Formula Nourishes Foliage, Roots, and Flowers for Healthy Growth Simplify plant care with our Liquid Fertilizer for Indoor Plants. With a 9 3 6 NPK ratio and added micronutrients, this all in one plant food keeps every houseplantleafy greens, flowering favorites, and everything in betweenhealthy, vibrant, and growing strong. If you love houseplants, you probably have more than

Feed Your Entire Indoor Plant Jungle with One Fertilizer

Balanced 9-3-6 Formula Nourishes Foliage, Roots, and Flowers for Healthy Growth

Simplify plant care with our Liquid Fertilizer for Indoor Plants. With a 9-3-6 NPK ratio and added micronutrients, this all-in-one plant food keeps every houseplant—leafy greens, flowering favorites, and everything in between—healthy, vibrant, and growing strong.

If you love houseplants, you probably have more than one! When your home looks like a lush jungle of greenery, keeping track of every plant’s needs can be difficult. That’s why you need one perfectly balanced fertilizer to make every plant happy and keep your to-do list simple!

Our liquid indoor plant food has a 9-3-6 NPK ratio. The high nitrogen promotes healthy, green foliage while the other nutrients encourage roots to grow strong and flowering plants to produce buds. This fertilizer is also a great source of other nutrients your plants need to be healthy. It has calcium, magnesium, sulfur, copper, iron, manganese, and zinc, all of which will promote your plants’ overall growth and health.

This indoor plant food can be prepared the same way for all your indoor plants, but the frequency you need to apply it will vary for each plant. You’ll need to keep track of what each plant needs, but you’ll only have to prepare one fertilizer for all of them.

How to Use Liquid Fertilizer for Indoor Plants

You can prepare a large portion of liquid plant food at once if you need to feed many plants. Mix one teaspoon of fertilizer per one gallon of water. If you have any leftovers, you can store them in a container with a lid and keep them for up to six months.

To feed your plants, water them according to your regular watering schedule but occasionally replace the water with the fertilizer based on each plant’s needs.

How Often to Fertilize Indoor Plants

While this plant food is suitable for all plants, the frequency each plant will need it every month will vary depending on the plant.

Fast-growing plants usually need fertilizer every 2-3 weeks in spring and summer and less often in the winter. Slow or moderate-growing plants usually only need fertilizer once or twice every month in spring and summer and may not need it at all during the winter. 

You can determine if your plants are getting enough nutrients based on how much you water them. Different plants will have different signs of not receiving enough water, but the most common signs are wilting, dropping leaves, or the development of crunchy brown leaves. Dehydration is challenging to reverse, but once you give your plants enough water, it will promote new growth. Brown leaves won’t be able to turn green again, so you’ll need to remove those.

A common sign of too much water is yellowing leaves. Leaves will start to turn yellow on the tips and edges until the entire leaf is yellow. Some plants may wilt or drop leaves if they receive too much water. The best way to tell if your plant is overwatered is to check the soil. If it’s wet, you may be overwatering it, or there may not be drainage holes in the container.  

Why Buy Plant Food from Perfect Plants?

Since 1980, Perfect Plants has been family-run and grower-direct, raising premium plants under the Florida sun. Our expert care ensures every product we offer, from live trees to fertilizers, arrives ready to help your plants flourish indoors and out.

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SKU: 28467002789

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4.5 ★★★★★
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AB
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 1
Definitely Not Unflavored. This is Tart / Sour, Which Limits the Options to Certain Juices
Flavor Name: Unflavored, Size: 1.46 Pound (Pack of 1)
I was expecting an unflavored fiber powder. However, expect a sour/tart taste. This means you can't add it to tea or coffee. I don't think it is appropriate to say that it is "unflavored" as I've had psyllium husk from other vendors that are truly "unflavored" (i.e. no citric acid). Dextrin (another fiber source) is also unflavored. But this Metamucil is tart (like sucking a lime) and can only be added to tart juices like orange juice or lemonade.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2026
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Verified Purchase
Melanie
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Happy it is unflavored
Flavor Name: Unflavored, Size: 1.46 Pound (Pack of 1)
I was worried about the taste based on some of the reviews. I tried it in my coffee, and I'm glad I did it that way. I keep coffee in the fridge, so that is what I mixed with one tablespoon of this. I use half and half and no sugar. I tasted it. It tastes like burnt coffee. Not a bad thing...thats just what the taste it added. I decided to see what would happen if I added a splash of a flavored creamer. The taste went away instantly. Hope this helps someone!
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Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2026
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Customer
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Purchase or perish.
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
I don't think Mike can produce anything below 5 stars. In his recent Christmas episode on the Naked Bible Podcast I was a bit wary of listening to it. I realize this is a review of his book here, but let me make my point. The problem with not wanting to listen to his Christmas episode is that I don't really care if Christmas was/is a pagan holiday. So, honestly, it wasn't appealing to me. Somehow I ended up listening to it, and I'm telling you the amount of information he crammed in there was FASCINATING. I'm not kidding. I was so tired of hearing that subject (because I've been born and raised into Christianity), but Mike and Trey did their thing and it had me on the edge of my metaphorical seat the entire time. If you listen to that episode (Naked Bible Episode 195) you'll see exactly what I'm talking about. And what's the point of all that I just said? It's that Mike doesn't do anything half way. All that he puts out is serious work that is worthy of much consideration. No Hillary v. Trump fact checking here (though I'm sure he'd encourage you to research what he's saying). The point is, however, that not everyone has the training that he or his contemporaries have. And THAT is exactly why it is paramount that we rely upon scholars who have said extensive training. I challenge you with this (something I've challenged myself to accept): You essentially know nothing about the Bible if you don't have not just Heiser's background, but other scholars such as John H. Walton. There are many to list, but Walton would be a good companion to list next to Heiser. If you're the lay-person, do yourself a favor and pick up this work, or The Unseen Realm (or both!) and any of Walton's work. Open up your mind and challenge yourself to realize that unless you are incredibly familiar with the Ancient Near East's way of life and thought processes, then it's highly likely that you don't actually understand what is going on when you read the Bible. Enter "The Bible Unfiltered." Considerations for the seminary student: This is a great book for those who need a quick reference on a particular subject. Heiser's name is well known, and thus to reference this book in one's papers, even for a one-liner, is to reference legitimate scholarship. I'm not advocating that one does one's entire paper off of just one chapter from this book, but my point is more-so that with Heiser's reputation it will be known that you're not quoting Joe Scholar who earned his PhD in I Do What I Want. If you know Mike then you know that he's done a lot of work to present to you CONTEXTUAL research on any given listed topic. For that alone the price is worth it (though it undoubtedly cost him more to do the research that it does for us to purchase the book). Considerations for the lay-person: 1. On p. 7, Heiser says, "If Bible study doesn't seem like work to you, you aren't really doing it." Yes, that's harsh, but so was Phinehas, Peter, Paul, and Jesus. (Even Bonhoeffer was harsh in his "The Cost of Discipleship")! Over and over again Heiser says on his podcast that Bible reading is not actually Bible STUDY (not yelling, I just don't have italics in this comment box). 2. This book is great for having a quick reference for subjects. You do not have to read the book in order to understand the content of any given chapter. I use this book to help direct me to other scriptures that I can't seem to remember. Here, Heiser treats topics with brevity, yet with depth at the same time--depth that stems from years of immersing hisself in the original cultural context, the surrounding culture's contexts, and original languages of the Bible. In other words, this book will act, for the lay person, as an appetizer that gets you excited for the full meal and subsequently spark a desire within you to finally take seriously contextual Bible study. If you've never read Heiser's stuff before, this is a great place for you to get introduced to his work. From here I'd recommend getting The Unseen Realm, and then Reversing Hermon. Follow all his other works at drmsh.com, nakedbiblepodcast.com, and moreunseenrealm.com (I'm not getting paid to say all of this). Considerations for the scholar: Rid yourself of your presuppositions, get with the times, and adopt the supernatural worldview of the Bible's authors, because yours isn't supernatural enough. (Can that be considered speaking the truth in love?...) (Pictures won't rotate for some reason. Sorry!). My hand on the book next to the Schuyler Bible shows the size of the book.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2018
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Verified Purchase
Pastor Jamie Strickler
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent Resource
Format: Paperback
Heiser is always top notch!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2026
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Verified Purchase
Alexandra benulis
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
5 stars
Format: Paperback
Great book.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2026

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