Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix: The One Word That Could Ruin Your Plants
- Diana Pierce
- Apr 1
- 4 min read
Are you grabbing the wrong bag?
Diana Pierce | April 1, 2026

I’ll be honest.
I’ve stood in the garden center aisle, staring at a wall of bags, and grabbed whatever looked right. Potting soil. Potting mix. Garden soil. If it had the word potting in the title, that must be the one for my pots. Right? So how different could they really be?
Pretty different, it turns out.
This question actually came out of a reader exchange after my recent article, “Before You Buy a Single Plant This Spring: Read This!” Soil came up there too, and reader Douglas G. jumped in with some sharp, practical advice that stopped me in my tracks. More from him in a moment.
If you’re growing anything in containers on a patio or deck, this is one of those things worth getting straight before you spend a dime on plants this spring.
Potting soil: NOT for your pots
I know I’m going to get some pushback depending on what product you use. Potting soil is often heavier, may include compost or other organic materials, and can hold too much moisture in a container, leading to compacted, waterlogged roots and a very unhappy plant. If the bag says “garden soil” (see above left) or “for in-ground use,” leave it on the shelf.
And yes, I see you, Bachman’s Potting Soil (above right). Despite the name, the label says perlite, vermiculite, and peat moss, formulated for containers. Does the name mislead you? Maybe? However, the ingredients never lie.
Potting mix: THIS is what your containers need
Potting mix is typically a soilless blend made from ingredients like peat moss or coir, along with perlite or vermiculite to keep it light and well-drained.
It’s designed specifically for containers. It’s lightweight, fluffy, and able to hold just enough moisture without drowning the roots, which really matters during hot Minnesota summers.
Three reasons it wins for containers: aeration, drainage, and weight. Potting mix lets water and air reach roots in the confined space of a pot. It prevents the root rot that comes from soil sitting wet. And if you’re moving large planters around a patio, lighter matters.
It’s also sterile, meaning no weed seeds, no fungal pathogens. Fresh start every season.
Douglas G. offered this practical rule: in containers 8 to 10 inches and larger, always use a soilless mix like Promix. Potting soil in a larger pot hardens over time and simply isn’t designed for that environment.
How to read the bag
Always check the label. If bark, perlite, peat, coir, or vermiculite are listed, you are holding a soilless potting mix. According to Fine Gardening, a good container mix typically contains peat moss, pine bark, vermiculite, and perlite. If the label says “garden soil” or “for in-ground use,” leave it on the shelf. No ingredient list at all? Don’t buy it.
One more smart shopping tip from Douglas G.: don’t judge a bag by its weight at the store. Bags sit outside through rain and sun, absorbing moisture along the way. A heavy bag may simply be a wet bag.
Garden shop vs. big box store

Independent garden centers tend to carry higher-quality mixes with clearly labeled ingredients and fewer fillers. Big box stores stock well-known national brands, which can be fine, but quality varies.
Some budget bags are mostly peat with little else. Read before you buy, wherever you shop.
Feed your containers all season long
Even the best potting mix doesn’t feed your plants forever.
Watering flushes nutrients out over time. Plan to start regular fertilizer applications two to six weeks after planting, depending on how fast your plants are growing, according to UMN Extension.
You have two good options:
-A slow-release granular fertilizer mixed in at planting does the quiet background work all season, releasing small amounts of nutrients with every watering.
-Then supplement with a soluble liquid fertilizer as plants hit their stride. Soluble fertilizers dissolve in water and deliver nutrients immediately, which is especially useful when plants show signs of deficiency like yellowing lower leaves.
For most containers, start with an all-purpose fertilizer. If you’re growing flowers or tomatoes, look for a bloom booster or tomato food with higher phosphorus and potassium.
And whatever you use, follow the label. Over-fertilizing damages plants and sends excess nutrients into the environment.
Douglas G. swears by fish emulsion for all his outdoor containers. In his words: “Fair warning, your plants will respond fast.”
One last thing: if you use saucers under your pots, dump them regularly. Waterlogged soil causes nutrient loss and root problems. Moist is good. Soggy is not.
Bottom line
Potting mix for containers.
Potting soil for the ground.
If you’ve ever stood in that aisle wondering which one to grab, you’re not alone. Feel free to share this with another gardener who might be guessing too.
Want to go deeper on potting mix ingredients and options? The Spruce has an excellent detailed breakdown.
And finally, a shout out to the Dakota Country Garden Club for having me as a guest speaker this past week. If your group is looking for an engaging garden or photography talk, I’d love to connect.
Diana

© 2026 Diana Pierce
