Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Article: How to Build a Starter Terrarium: A Complete Guide

How to Build a Starter Terrarium: A Complete Guide

Why Build a Terrarium? A Small Indoor Garden With Its Own Microclimate

A terrarium gives moisture-loving plants something ordinary pots rarely provide: a steadier pocket of humidity around roots, stems, moss, and small plants. That stability is the reason terrariums can work so well in dry indoor air, on shelves, on desks, or in spaces where a standard pot dries out too quickly.

It is not magic, and it is not maintenance-free. A good terrarium works because container, plants, substrate, water, and light are matched from the start. Closed jars slow evaporation and recycle moisture through condensation. Partially open containers hold humidity while allowing some moisture to escape. Open glass bowls behave more like decorative dish gardens and need plants that tolerate drier substrate and more airflow.

Once that difference is clear, terrariums become much easier. Mosses, compact ferns, Fittonia, small Peperomia, Selaginella, and other small tropical plants can settle into closed or semi-closed glass with very little watering. Succulents, cacti, and Tillandsia need open, airy displays instead, because their roots and leaf bases need dry-downs and moving air.

This guide walks through the full process: how terrariums work, which container to choose, which plant groups to use, how to build layers, how to water without causing rot, how to read condensation, and when to leave the system alone. It is written for real indoor conditions, not perfect greenhouse conditions.

Multiple terrariums in jars, both open and closed, displayed on a shelf with visible substrate layers and various plants
Open, closed, and partially closed terrariums all behave differently. Container shape, lid fit, substrate depth, and plant choice decide whether a build stays balanced.

Contents

  1. What Is a Terrarium, and Why Does It Work Differently?
  2. Open, Closed, and Partially Open Terrariums: Which Setup Fits Your Plants?
  3. The Easiest First Terrarium Setup
  4. Choosing a Terrarium Container: Shape, Size, Access, and Light
  5. Best Plants for Starter Terrariums, and Which Ones to Avoid
  6. Layering a Terrarium: Building a Stable, Rot-Resistant Base
  7. Building a Terrarium Step by Step
  8. The First 2 to 3 Weeks: How to Read a New Terrarium
  9. Terrarium Care: Watering, Light, Ventilation, and Fertilizing
  10. Common Terrarium Mistakes and How to Fix Them
  11. Bioactive and Advanced Terrariums
  12. Long-Term Terrarium Maintenance
  13. Terrarium FAQs and Quick Fixes
  14. Terrarium Tools, Substrates, Plants, and Starter Options

Quick answer: choose the setup by airflow

Start with the container type, then choose plants and substrate to match it. That order prevents most terrarium problems.

  • Closed terrarium: best for mosses, compact ferns, Fittonia, Selaginella, small Peperomia, and other small humidity-loving plants.
  • Partially open terrarium: best for humid tropical displays that need some air exchange, including compact Begonia types, jewel orchids, small ferns, and selected Peperomia.
  • Open terrarium: best for dry, airy displays with mineral substrate, such as Haworthia, Gasteria, small cacti, compact Crassula, and Tillandsia kept above the substrate.
  • Main rule: water lightly, keep plants small, avoid direct sun through glass, and never rely on a false bottom to save a flooded build.

What Is a Terrarium, and Why Does It Work Differently?

A terrarium is a clear container used to grow small plants in a controlled microclimate. It can be fully sealed, loosely covered, partly open, or completely open. The more enclosed it is, the more it holds humidity and slows water loss. The more open it is, the more it behaves like a planter without drainage holes.

That difference matters because terrariums do not drain like plant pots. There is usually no hole at the bottom, no saucer, and no regular flush of water through the root zone. Moisture must be added carefully, stored safely below the root zone, and balanced by plant use, evaporation, condensation, and airflow.

How a closed terrarium recycles water

In a closed or nearly closed terrarium, water evaporates from substrate and transpires from plant leaves. Moist air collects inside glass, condenses when temperature changes, and runs back down into substrate. This creates a small water cycle.

A balanced closed terrarium does not stay perfectly clear all day. Light condensation, especially in the morning or after watering, is normal. Constant dripping, glass fogged from top to bottom all day, or water sitting high in the false bottom means the system is too wet, too warm, too dark, or too poorly ventilated.

Terrariums moderate moisture, not everything

A terrarium can soften indoor extremes, but it does not remove basic plant needs. Plants still need light for photosynthesis, oxygen around roots, suitable substrate, and enough air exchange to prevent stale, stagnant conditions. Closed glass is helpful for mosses and humid tropical plants, but it can be stressful for plants that rely on regular dry-downs.

Think of a terrarium as a moisture-management system, not a sealed shortcut around plant care. It can make care easier, but only when the plant list suits the container.

Terrariums vs regular pots

Feature Regular plant pots Terrariums
Drainage Water can leave through holes. Water stays inside.
Airflow Open to room air. Depends on opening and lid.
Humidity Mostly follows room humidity. Higher in closed glass.
Watering Regular watering is possible. Small, careful amounts.
Substrate Can be deeper. Must stay airy.
Light Adjusted pot by pot. One level must suit all plants.
Plant choice Very broad. Best with compact, compatible plants.

The simplest rule is this: build around the plants, not around the jar. A beautiful sealed container will not save succulents from humid stagnant air, and a wide open bowl will not keep moss evenly moist without frequent attention.

Starter terrariums in large glass jars, both open and closed, arranged on a wooden table
Starter terrariums are easiest to manage when the container has enough volume, clear glass, and enough access for planting, trimming, and cleaning.

Open, Closed, and Partially Open Terrariums: Which Setup Fits Your Plants?

The most important terrarium decision is airflow, not style. Airflow controls how quickly water leaves, how much condensation forms, and which plants can stay healthy inside the glass.

Open and closed terrariums are the two obvious categories, but many real containers sit between them. Cork jars with tiny gaps, cloches, loose-lidded jars, and glass vessels that can be left slightly cracked all behave as partially open terrariums. They keep humidity higher than room air without staying fully sealed.

Closed terrariums

Closed terrariums have a lid, cork, cloche, gasket, or fitted top. They retain moisture and create a humid environment. Some are almost airtight. Others lose a little moisture slowly through lid gaps.

Best for: mosses, compact ferns, Selaginella, Fittonia, small Peperomia, creeping tropical plants, and humid forest-floor plants.

Not suitable for: cacti, most succulents, Tillandsia, herbs, palms, large vines, and plants that need frequent dry-downs.

Care rhythm: very little watering once balanced, but close observation after planting and occasional venting if condensation becomes heavy.

Partially open terrariums

Partially open terrariums hold a humid interior but allow some water vapour to escape. This breaks the full water cycle, so the container needs more monitoring than a sealed jar. The advantage is better visibility, less persistent condensation, and more tolerance for plants that dislike saturated still air.

Best for: small tropical plants that like humidity but dislike constantly wet leaves, compact Begonia types, jewel orchids, small gesneriads, compact Peperomia, moss accents, and specialist carnivorous plants when light, water, and substrate are correct.

Not suitable for: dry succulents unless the build is very open, very mineral, and treated more like a dish garden.

Care rhythm: check moisture more often than in a sealed build. Water before the root zone becomes fully dry, but avoid keeping the base flooded.

Open terrariums and glass dish gardens

Open terrariums have no lid. Moisture leaves into the room, air moves freely, and condensation usually does not form. These are best understood as glass dish gardens: decorative, open displays with no drainage hole.

Best for: Haworthia, Gasteria, compact Crassula, small cacti, mineral-loving succulents, and Tillandsia displayed above dry materials rather than buried in wet substrate.

Not suitable for: moss carpets, Fittonia, Selaginella, most ferns, and plants that need consistently humid air.

Care rhythm: more frequent checks, stronger light than closed tropical setups, careful watering, and excellent airflow.

Quick comparison

Setup Best fit Main risk
Open Dry-tolerant plants, mineral substrate, high airflow Drying too fast or overheating
Partially open Humid tropical plants with some air exchange Moisture imbalance
Closed Mosses, compact ferns, small humid tropicals Rot from excess water or stale air

Use this decision guide

Your goal Best setup
Mossy forest-floor jar Closed terrarium
Humid display with less fog Partially open terrarium
Dry succulent arrangement Open glass dish garden
Fittonia, fern, moss, Selaginella Closed or partially open
Tillandsia display Open and airy
Beginner build Medium closed jar

Common setup mismatches

  • Succulents in sealed jars: high humidity and low airflow encourage rot.
  • Moss in open bowls: open air dries moss faster than it can recover unless humidity is high and watering is frequent.
  • Large aroids in small containers: fast growth, large leaves, and glass contact quickly create rot-prone pockets.
  • Tillandsia planted into wet substrate: air plants need wet-dry cycles and free air around the leaf base.
  • A lid added to the wrong plant mix: sealing a container changes the whole environment. It is not just a finishing touch.
A large jar with a wide opening and cork lid, ideal for a terrarium
A loose cork or removable lid is practical for beginner terrariums because it holds humidity but still allows easy access for early adjustments.

The Easiest First Terrarium Setup

For a first build, keep the design narrow and forgiving. A medium closed or loosely covered jar with compact tropical plants is easier than a tiny bottle, a mixed succulent bowl, or a bioactive display with too many moving parts.

Best first build recipe

  • Container: clear glass jar, 2 to 5 L, wide enough for tools or fingers.
  • Lid: cork, glass lid, cloche top, or loose cover that can be opened easily.
  • Drainage: 2 to 3 cm of rinsed expanded clay, pumice, lava rock, or gravel.
  • Barrier: mesh or long-fibre sphagnum to keep substrate out of the false bottom.
  • Substrate: airy, moisture-retentive tropical terrarium mix, not dense garden soil.
  • Plants: one small fern, one Fittonia or compact Peperomia, and moss or Selaginella as a low layer.
  • Water: add lightly after planting, then judge by condensation and substrate moisture.
  • Light: bright indirect light, no direct sun through glass.

Do not start with five different plant groups. A simple two- or three-plant terrarium is easier to read, easier to trim, and easier to rebalance.


Choosing a Terrarium Container: Shape, Size, Access, and Light

Container choice affects everything that happens later: light entry, heat buildup, condensation, planting access, root depth, pruning, and problem-solving. A difficult container makes every future task harder.

Clear glass is usually best. Acrylic can work, especially for lightweight setups, but it scratches more easily and may age less cleanly. Tinted, smoky, painted, or opaque containers are poor choices because they reduce light and make root-zone problems harder to see.

Best containers for closed terrariums

Closed terrariums need enough volume to buffer humidity and enough access to let you plant without damaging stems. A container does not need to be perfectly airtight, but it should hold moisture reliably.

Look for

  • Clear glass or clear acrylic: light reaches plants and substrate layers remain visible.
  • Removable lid, cork, or cloche top: moisture stays in, but maintenance remains possible.
  • Medium to large volume: 2 to 5 L is easier for most beginners than tiny novelty jars.
  • Wide opening: planting, cleaning, and trimming become much easier.
  • Stable base: tall glass can tip easily once substrate and hardscape are added.

Avoid

  • Narrow-neck bottles: beautiful, but difficult to plant, clean, prune, and rebalance.
  • Very small jars under 1 L: moisture and temperature swing quickly.
  • Dark glass: reduced light weakens compact tropical plants.
  • Containers with metal interiors: corrosion and residue can become a problem in humid builds.

Tip: Tall containers can show condensation clearly because vapour has room to rise and cool. Wide containers are easier to plant and maintain. For a first build, choose access over drama.

Best containers for partially open terrariums

Partially open setups work well in cloches, corked jars that can be left slightly loose, glass cylinders with a removable pane, or containers with a small controlled gap. The aim is not free airflow. The aim is slow moisture loss while keeping the inside humid.

Look for

  • A lid you can adjust: small gaps help reduce excessive condensation.
  • Enough height above plants: leaves should not press against wet glass.
  • Good visibility: condensation should not hide every layer all day.
  • Room for a moisture gradient: lower substrate can stay lightly moist while upper surfaces breathe.

Best containers for open terrariums

Open glass displays are best for plants that need airflow and dry-downs. Since most open glass containers still lack drainage holes, they need a careful hand with water and a mineral-heavy substrate.

Look for

  • Wide, open top: air reaches substrate and plant bases.
  • Shallow to medium depth: 8 to 20 cm is practical for open dry displays.
  • Wide base: easier spacing and less overcrowding.
  • Clear sides: light reaches lower growth and moisture is easier to judge.

Avoid

  • Tall narrow vases: airflow is poor and lower layers stay damp.
  • Deep bowls filled with organic soil: roots sit wet too long.
  • Direct midday sun through glass: glass can heat substrate quickly even when room air feels mild.

Container material comparison

Material Good points Limits
Glass Clear and durable Heavy and breakable
Acrylic Light and less breakable Scratches easily
Clear plastic Good for temporary builds May warp or cloud
Ceramic Stable for open displays Blocks root-zone view
Terracotta Breathable in normal pots Wrong for closed humidity

Size guide

Container size Best use Difficulty
Under 1 L Moss-only details High
1 to 2 L Small micro-plant builds Medium to high
2 to 5 L Most beginner jars Low to medium
5 to 20 L Multi-plant landscapes Medium
20 L+ Large planted displays Medium to high

Container checklist before planting

  • Can light reach all planted areas?
  • Can you reach the bottom with tools?
  • Is there space for drainage, substrate, roots, and plant height?
  • Can leaves grow without pressing against glass?
  • Does the lid fit the type of terrarium you want?
  • Will the container stay away from radiators, cold glass, and direct midday sun?
  • Can the finished terrarium be moved safely after filling?

Wash reused containers with hot water, rinse well, and let them dry. Vinegar can help with mineral marks, but rinse thoroughly afterwards. Avoid soap residues, oils, scented cleaners, and old soil dust. In a closed humid container, small contamination problems can spread quickly.

Hands filling a geometric glass terrarium with expanded clay, surrounded by different substrates in clear bowls
Good terrarium building starts below the plants. Drainage depth, substrate texture, and clean materials decide how forgiving the system will be.

Best Plants for Starter Terrariums, and Which Ones to Avoid

Terrarium plant choice should begin with habitat logic. A closed jar suits plants from humid forest floors, wet mossy banks, shaded rock faces, and other moist microhabitats. An open glass bowl suits plants that need dry-downs and moving air. A partially open terrarium sits between both.

Size matters as much as moisture. Small, slow plants are easier to balance. Fast growers may look good on day one, then fill the jar, press against wet glass, block light, and force constant trimming.

Multiple glass terrarium jars filled with mosses, ferns, Fittonia, and Peperomia
Mosses, small ferns, Fittonia, and compact Peperomia suit humid closed or partially closed glass because they stay small and tolerate stable moisture.

Reliable plants for closed terrariums

Closed terrariums favour compact plants that tolerate high humidity, shallow root space, and low airflow. Choose the smallest available forms, not plants that will quickly need a normal pot.

Strong choices

  • Mosses: cushion moss, sheet moss, mood moss, and suitable live Sphagnum for wetter specialist builds.
  • Compact ferns: small Pteris, Asplenium, Nephrolepis, and similar fernlets with space to spread.
  • Selaginella: useful for a soft, moss-like texture in humid closed glass.
  • Fittonia: colourful, compact, and reliable when not allowed to sit waterlogged.
  • Small Peperomia: creeping or compact types such as Peperomia prostrata, Peperomia perciliata, and small Peperomia caperata forms.
  • Ficus pumila: useful as a creeping background, but prune before it covers everything.
  • Marcgravia cuttings: good for humid vertical surfaces in larger builds, with regular trimming.
  • Small tropical ground covers: Pilea depressa, tiny Pellionia types, and other compact creeping plants when scale fits the jar.

Tip: Leaves should have breathing space. If a plant touches glass on planting day, it is already too large or too close to the edge.

Good plants for partially open terrariums

Partially open terrariums are useful for plants that enjoy humidity but dislike saturated, motionless air. This is where plant choice becomes more nuanced.

Good options

  • Jewel orchids: Ludisia and related terrestrial orchids can work in humid, airy glass when roots are not kept soggy.
  • Small Begonia types: better in partially open containers than sealed jars, especially when leaves stay dry and spaced.
  • Miniature gesneriads: useful for experienced growers with stable light and moisture.
  • Compact Peperomia: suitable when substrate remains airy and not saturated.
  • Specialist carnivorous plants: some Drosera, Pinguicula, Nepenthes, or small pitcher setups can work only with pure water, bright light, and low-nutrient media.

Tip: Carnivorous plants are specialist terrarium plants, not general houseplant additions. They need low-mineral water, low-nutrient media, stronger light than many moss-and-fern builds, and species-specific care. Venus flytraps and many temperate pitcher plants also need dormancy, so they are not simple closed-jar plants.

Plants for open glass displays

Open terrariums and glass dish gardens should be planted with dry-tolerant species and mineral-heavy substrate. These builds need more light and more airflow, but still require careful watering because water cannot drain out.

Better open-display choices

  • Haworthia: compact, architectural, and more forgiving than many rosette succulents.
  • Gasteria: slow-growing and tolerant of bright indirect light.
  • Small Crassula: use compact forms and avoid overcrowding.
  • Small cacti: possible only in very open, mineral-rich displays with strong light and very careful watering.
  • Tillandsia: display above dry materials, never buried into wet substrate.
  • Lithops and Pleiospilos: specialist options only, best for experienced growers with strong light, mineral substrate, and strict watering control.

Tip: Many succulent bowls are sold as terrariums, but they behave more like dish gardens. That is fine, as long as you care for them as dry, open, high-airflow displays.

Plants that often fail in terrariums

Plant or group Main issue Better choice
Monstera Too large Compact fern
Philodendron hederaceum Fast vining Pilea depressa
Large Alocasia Needs more scale Fittonia
Calathea and Goeppertia Often too large Compact Begonia
Pilea peperomioides Stretches in cramped glass Small Peperomia
Succulents in closed jars Rot risk Open mineral display
Common herbs Need light and airflow Normal pots
Most epiphytic orchids Need root airflow Jewel orchids
Tillandsia in closed jars Leaf-base rot Open display

Plant selection checklist

  • Choose plants with similar light, moisture, and airflow needs.
  • Use small plants with a mature size that still fits the container.
  • Inspect roots and leaves before planting. Skip plants with pests, mushy stems, or disease spots.
  • Remove damaged leaves before planting so decay does not start inside the jar.
  • Avoid plants that need frequent feeding or rapid seasonal growth.
  • Leave enough space for trimming tools and airflow around stems.
Top-down view of hands arranging succulents into glass open terrariums on a table
Succulents belong in open, airy glass displays with mineral-rich substrate and careful watering, not in sealed humid jars.

Layering a Terrarium: Building a Stable, Rot-Resistant Base

Layering matters because most terrariums do not have drainage holes. Extra water stays inside. A good base gives excess moisture somewhere to collect below roots, keeps substrate from collapsing into the drainage layer, and helps the root zone stay lightly moist rather than swampy.

A false bottom is not a cure for overwatering. It is only a buffer. If water rises into the substrate or roots sit in a permanently wet layer, the terrarium can still rot.

The exact depth depends on container size, plant type, and setup style. The principle stays the same: coarse material below, a barrier where useful, airy substrate around roots, and only as much surface dressing as the plants can tolerate.

Terrarium layer order

  1. Drainage layer: a false bottom that stores excess water below roots.
  2. Charcoal layer: a thin optional layer, most useful in closed or humid builds.
  3. Barrier layer: mesh or long-fibre sphagnum to stop substrate falling into drainage.
  4. Substrate layer: plant-appropriate root zone.
  5. Plants and hardscape: roots, stones, bark, wood, and structural elements.
  6. Surface layer: live moss, leaf litter, gravel, or decorative top dressing where appropriate.

Layer 1: drainage layer

The drainage layer is the safety zone at the base. It holds water below the root zone, which is essential because excess water cannot leave the container.

Good materials

  • Expanded clay
  • Lava rock
  • Pumice
  • Washed aquarium gravel
  • Coarse inert stones

Useful depth

  • Small containers: 1 to 2 cm
  • Medium closed jars: 2 to 4 cm
  • Large builds: 4 cm or more, depending on total depth

Rinse dusty material before use. Fine dust reduces air space and can turn the bottom layer muddy.

Layer 2: charcoal layer

Activated charcoal can help reduce odours and bind some dissolved compounds in humid closed systems. It is not a sterilising layer, and it will not save a waterlogged build.

Use

  • Horticultural activated charcoal
  • Additive-free aquarium activated carbon

Avoid

  • BBQ charcoal
  • Briquettes
  • Fuel-treated charcoal
  • Scented, dyed, or glued decorative products

Use a thin layer, usually 0.5 to 1 cm. More charcoal does not make a wet terrarium safe. If space is tight, mix a small amount through the lower substrate instead of creating a thick separate layer.

Layer 3: barrier layer

A barrier layer stops fine substrate from washing down into the drainage layer. This keeps the false bottom open and prevents the whole base from turning into wet mud.

Good barrier options

  • Plastic mesh cut to fit the container
  • Long-fibre sphagnum moss, lightly packed
  • Coarse moss fragments in humid builds

Do not confuse this with decorative live moss on top. A barrier sits below the growing medium. Surface moss sits above it and behaves like a living plant layer.

Layer 4: substrate layer

Substrate is the root zone. It should hold enough moisture for chosen plants while keeping air spaces around roots. Dense potting soil is usually too heavy for closed terrariums because it compacts, holds water too long, and can turn sour.

Closed terrarium substrate

  • Coco coir or fine peat-free base for moisture retention
  • Fine bark for structure
  • Perlite, pumice, or fine lava rock for air space
  • Small amount of horticultural charcoal for humid systems
  • Leaf mould or worm castings only in small amounts for bioactive builds

Partially open humid substrate

  • Airy tropical mix with bark and mineral material
  • Moderate moisture retention, not saturated sponge texture
  • Extra drainage for Begonia, jewel orchids, and similar plants

Open dry-display substrate

  • Mineral-heavy cactus or succulent mix
  • Pumice, lava rock, coarse sand, and very little organic matter
  • No moisture-retaining crystals or rich compost

Useful depth

  • Small moss builds: 3 to 5 cm
  • Most closed tropical builds: 5 to 8 cm
  • Larger or bioactive builds: 8 to 12 cm or more where container height allows
  • Open succulent displays: enough depth for roots, with fast-drying mineral structure

Gently firm substrate around roots, but do not compress it flat. Roots need oxygen as much as moisture.

Layer 5: plants and hardscape

Hardscape sets the shape of the terrarium before plants go in. Bark, stone, and wood can create slopes, pockets, and shaded corners, but they also affect moisture. Wood in closed humid containers may grow a short-lived fungal bloom at first. Dirty or untreated outdoor wood can introduce pests and decay too quickly.

Placement tips

  • Place larger structural plants first.
  • Keep leaves away from glass, especially in closed jars.
  • Use moss and creeping plants to soften edges after main plants are placed.
  • Leave open pockets for airflow and future growth.
  • Keep plant crowns and stems slightly above wet surface layers.

Layer 6: surface layer

Surface layers can help visually and functionally, but they must match the setup.

Surface layer Best use Watch out for
Live moss Closed humid builds Can smother tiny plants
Leaf litter Bioactive builds Can mould without microfauna
Fine gravel Open dry displays Can trap stem moisture
Bark chips Partially open setups Can decay in sealed jars
Decorative stones Open paths and details Reduce planting space

Layering by terrarium type

Setup Base logic Surface finish
Closed Drainage, charcoal, barrier, airy moist substrate Moss or light leaf litter
Partially open Drainage, optional charcoal, barrier, airy moderate substrate Light moss, bark, or mixed details
Open dry display Drainage if no hole, mineral-heavy substrate Gravel, sand, stone, or dry dressing

Common layering problems

Symptom Likely cause Fix
Water above drainage Too much water Wick out water
Sour smell Low oxygen Remove decay
Soil in drainage Missing barrier Rebuild with mesh
Fungus gnats Wet organic surface Reduce moisture
Algae on glass Light plus wetness Reduce intensity
Close-up of soil, gravel, and charcoal used for terrarium building
Drainage material, activated charcoal, barrier material, and airy substrate each do a different job. Skipping layers makes water balance harder.

Building a Terrarium Step by Step

Build slowly and keep glass clean as you work. Most early terrarium problems start during setup: too much water, dirty materials, overcrowded planting, or leaves pressed against glass from day one.

Step 1: prepare your workspace

Lay out everything before adding substrate. This keeps roots from drying while you search for tools and stops you from adding too much water in a hurry.

You will need

  • Clear glass or acrylic container
  • Drainage material such as expanded clay, pumice, lava rock, or washed gravel
  • Activated charcoal
  • Mesh or long-fibre sphagnum for a barrier layer
  • Terrarium-appropriate substrate
  • Healthy small plants
  • Live moss, leaf litter, stones, bark, or decorative elements if suitable
  • Long spoon, funnel, chopsticks, tweezers, scissors, and cloth
  • Pipette, squeeze bottle, or fine mister for setup adjustment

Rinse stones, gravel, and hardscape. Clean reused glass with hot water, rinse thoroughly, and dry before planting.

Step 2: inspect and prepare plants

Do not put stressed or pest-affected plants into closed glass. High humidity can turn a small problem into a full-container problem.

  • Check leaf undersides, crowns, stems, and root ball.
  • Remove yellow, damaged, or mushy leaves.
  • Trim dead roots with clean scissors.
  • Gently remove excess old soil if it is dense, sour, or pest-prone.
  • Keep roots lightly moist while working.

Step 3: add drainage

Add the false bottom first. For most medium jars, 2 to 4 cm is enough. Spread the material evenly or slope it slightly if your design has a front view.

Do not add water yet. Dry layering gives you more control.

Step 4: add charcoal

Sprinkle a thin layer of activated charcoal over the drainage. Keep it even and light. Thick charcoal wastes depth that roots need.

Step 5: add barrier material

Place mesh or long-fibre sphagnum above the drainage and charcoal. Press gently at the edges so substrate cannot fall through large gaps.

Step 6: add substrate and shape the landscape

Add substrate in stages. Build small slopes, raised pockets, or a deeper back layer if the container allows it. Avoid pressing everything flat. Firm enough to hold plants is fine; compacted is not.

For most small tropical plants, 5 to 8 cm of substrate gives enough root space. For moss-only builds, less may be fine. For bioactive builds, more depth gives microfauna and roots a better buffer.

Step 7: place hardscape

Add larger stones, bark, or wood before planting. Push them gently into substrate so they sit stable. Leave open areas for roots and future pruning.

Avoid building a wall that blocks light or traps wet leaves against glass.

Step 8: plant largest elements first

Start with focal plants. Make small planting holes with a spoon or chopstick, guide roots into place with tweezers, then backfill gently.

  • Keep crowns above the wettest surface layer.
  • Leave space between plant bases.
  • Angle trailers toward open space, not directly into glass.
  • Plant moss last so it does not get buried.

Step 9: add moss, leaf litter, or top dressing

Use surface materials sparingly. Live moss should touch moist substrate, not sit on dry gravel. Gravel caps in open dry displays should stay thin and clear of stem bases. Leaf litter in bioactive builds should be clean and pesticide-free.

Step 10: water lightly

After planting, add less water than you think you need. In a closed terrarium, the aim is evenly damp substrate, not runoff. Use a pipette, squeeze bottle, or controlled mister to settle substrate and clean leaves.

  • Closed tropical build: moisten the upper root zone lightly, then observe condensation over 48 hours.
  • Partially open build: moisten around roots, then adjust based on how quickly the container clears.
  • Open dry display: water only around roots and keep mineral surfaces from staying wet.

Routine misting is not a watering plan. It can be useful during setup, but long-term watering should reach roots without constantly wetting leaves.

Step 11: clean glass and set the lid

Wipe smudges while they are still fresh. Soil on inside glass becomes harder to remove after condensation dries over it.

If the build is closed, set the lid on and watch the next 48 hours. If heavy fog appears immediately and stays all day, open the lid for a short period and let extra moisture escape. If there is no condensation at all and substrate dries quickly, add a few millilitres of water near roots.

Step 12: place the terrarium correctly

Choose bright indirect light, not direct midday sun. Glass can heat faster than expected. Keep terrariums away from radiators, cold draughts, freezing window glass, and hot electronics.

Under a grow light, use a cool-running full-spectrum LED and keep enough distance that lid and glass do not heat up. A timer keeps light consistent.

Table setup with terrarium tools, substrates, moss, and plants ready for assembly
Preparing clean tools, rinsed substrates, and healthy plants before building keeps the process calm and reduces early terrarium problems.

The First 2 to 3 Weeks: How to Read a New Terrarium

A new terrarium needs observation more than intervention. During the first few weeks, water redistributes through substrate, plants adjust to higher humidity, damaged roots either recover or decline, and condensation patterns reveal whether the setup is balanced.

This stage is where many beginner terrariums are overcorrected. A small patch of mould on wood, light morning fog, or one yellowing leaf does not mean the terrarium has failed. Constant dripping, sour smell, collapsing stems, and spreading rot do need action.

What good settling looks like

  • Light condensation appears during cooler periods and clears later.
  • Substrate looks evenly moist, not flooded.
  • Moss stays springy and green, with no sour smell.
  • Plants hold their posture after initial transplant stress.
  • No leaves are pressed flat against wet glass.
  • A small fungal bloom on wood or leaf litter appears briefly, then fades or stays limited.

What to adjust early

What you see Likely meaning What to do
Glass fogged all day Too wet or warm Vent temporarily
No condensation Too dry or open Add a few ml
Water above drainage Overwatering Wick out water
One plant collapses Rot or stress Remove quickly
White fuzz on wood Fungal bloom Watch or remove
Moss browns at top Light, dryness, or poor contact Check depth

First-month care rhythm

  • Check visually every few days, but do not keep opening the lid without reason.
  • Remove dead leaves before they rot into substrate.
  • Do not fertilize during settling.
  • Do not keep adding plants while the system is still stabilizing.
  • Make one adjustment at a time, then wait to see the result.

A terrarium becomes more stable once moisture, plant growth, and condensation find a rhythm. Small, patient adjustments are safer than repeated opening, watering, and rearranging.


Terrarium Care: Watering, Light, Ventilation, and Fertilizing

Terrarium care is mostly observation. Look first, test moisture second, water last. In glass, small changes matter because moisture cannot drain away and stale air can linger around leaves and stems.

Watering closed terrariums

A balanced closed terrarium needs very little water. Do not water by calendar. Read glass and substrate instead.

Water only when

  • No condensation appears for 2 to 3 days.
  • Substrate feels dry below the surface, not just on top.
  • Moss loses springiness and does not recover overnight.
  • Plants show mild thirst without signs of rot.

How much to add

Use tiny amounts. For a medium 20 to 30 cm jar, 5 to 10 ml can be enough for a small adjustment. Add water near roots, not across every leaf. Wait and observe before adding more.

Watering partially open terrariums

Partially open terrariums lose water slowly, so they need more monitoring than sealed jars. Use a wooden skewer, chopstick, or long spoon to test moisture below the surface.

  • Keep humid tropical builds lightly moist, not wet.
  • Let the upper surface breathe before adding more water.
  • Use distilled water, rainwater, or low-mineral water where possible, especially for mosses and specialist plants.

Watering open glass displays

Open succulent and cactus displays need careful watering because they often have no drainage hole. Water around roots, then let substrate dry thoroughly before watering again.

  • Use mineral-heavy substrate.
  • Avoid soaking the whole bowl.
  • Do not let water sit at the base of succulents.
  • Keep Tillandsia removable so it can be watered, dried fully, then returned to the display.

Light

Most terrarium plants need bright indirect light. Direct sun through glass can overheat plants, scorch leaves, cook moss, and trigger heavy condensation.

  • Closed tropical terrariums: bright indirect light, no direct midday sun.
  • Partially open humid terrariums: bright indirect light with enough intensity to prevent stretching.
  • Open succulent displays: brighter light than tropical jars, but avoid hot sun through glass.
  • Grow lights: full-spectrum LED, cool output, usually 20 to 30 cm above the container depending on lamp strength.

Rotate open or partially open displays if growth leans toward one side. Closed jars can also be rotated, but do it gently so condensation and loose substrate are not disturbed.

Temperature

Stable room temperatures suit most tropical terrariums. The risk is not just cold or heat in the room, but temperature inside glass.

  • Avoid radiators, heated shelves, and hot windowsills.
  • Avoid cold winter glass where one side of the terrarium chills sharply.
  • Do not place closed jars under lamps that warm the lid.
  • Move containers seasonally if sunlight changes angle.
  • For many tropical closed terrariums, roughly 18 to 26°C is a practical indoor range. Avoid heat build-up above that inside glass.

Ventilation

Ventilation should be controlled, not constant. A closed terrarium should not be left open all the time, because that breaks the water cycle. It can be opened when the signs show excess moisture, stale air, or spreading mould.

Vent when

  • Glass stays heavily fogged all day.
  • Water drips constantly from the lid or upper walls.
  • Leaves yellow while substrate is wet.
  • Mould spreads beyond a small patch.
  • The terrarium smells sour or swampy.
  • You have just pruned, removed decay, or made a wet adjustment.

Start with 30 to 60 minutes. If the build is very wet, leave the lid open longer while keeping the terrarium out of harsh light. Replace the lid once balance improves.

Fertilizing

Most terrariums do not need routine fertilizer. Low nutrient levels help plants stay compact and reduce algae, salt buildup, and excess growth.

  • Do not fertilize moss-only sealed jars.
  • Do not fertilize during the first settling month.
  • Do not use fertilizer to push growth in a closed terrarium.
  • If a long-running planted setup shows clear nutrient deficiency, use a complete liquid fertilizer at quarter strength or weaker, and only in rooted plant zones.
  • Avoid rich organic feeds in sealed systems because they can feed microbial blooms.

For terrariums, slower growth is usually the goal. Less feeding means less crowding, less algae pressure, and easier long-term balance.

Quick care symptoms

Symptom Likely cause Action
Light morning fog Normal water cycle Leave it
Heavy fog all day Too wet or warm Vent
Soft stems Rot Remove affected parts
Stretching growth Weak light Increase light
Brown moss tips Light, dryness, or poor contact Check conditions
Algae on glass Wetness plus light Wipe and reduce intensity
Moisture condensing on the inner wall of a sealed glass bottle containing terrarium plants
Light condensation is part of the water cycle in closed terrariums. Constant dripping or full-day fog usually means excess moisture or excess warmth.

Common Terrarium Mistakes and How to Fix Them

Terrarium problems usually start when the environment no longer matches the plants inside. The most common causes are too much water, too little airflow, wrong light, unsuitable plants, and dense substrate.

Mistake 1: watering like a normal plant pot

Normal pots can drain. Terrariums usually cannot. Watering until everything is soaked is one of the fastest ways to cause rot.

Signs

  • Water visible above the drainage layer
  • All-day fogging or dripping
  • Soft stems and collapsing leaves
  • Sour smell from substrate

Fix

  • Open the lid temporarily.
  • Wick out pooled water with paper towel or cloth.
  • Remove rotting leaves and stems completely.
  • Stop watering until condensation returns to a light pattern.
  • Rebuild if roots are sitting in wet compacted substrate.

Mistake 2: sealing a wet build too quickly

New terrariums often contain more moisture than expected because substrate, moss, and plant root balls all carry water. Sealing immediately after heavy watering traps that imbalance.

Signs

  • Heavy fog within minutes of closing
  • Condensation that never clears
  • Water droplets collecting on leaves
  • Mould appearing in the first few days

Fix

Leave the lid slightly open for a short period, wipe wet glass, and watch for the next condensation cycle. Do not add more water until the jar proves it needs it.

Mistake 3: using direct sun

Glass intensifies heat. Even plants that like bright light can be damaged when enclosed in hot glass.

Signs

  • Leaves turning translucent or scorched
  • Sudden brown patches
  • Moss bleaching or crisping
  • Hot glass or warm substrate

Fix

  • Move the terrarium out of direct sun immediately.
  • Let the container cool before opening if it feels hot.
  • Remove damaged leaves once plant tissues are clearly dead.
  • Use bright indirect light or a cool grow light instead.

Mistake 4: choosing plants for looks only

Terrarium plants must fit the moisture, light, airflow, and scale of the container. A plant can look perfect in a photo and still be wrong for a sealed jar.

Signs

  • Fast overgrowth
  • Leaves pressing against glass
  • Plants lifting the lid
  • Rot at leaf edges touching condensation
  • Constant pruning needed to keep the layout visible

Fix

Remove mismatched plants early. Replace them with small, slow-growing plants that share the same moisture and airflow needs. A simple two-plant terrarium is usually better than a crowded mixed jar.

Mistake 5: compacted substrate

Dense substrate holds too much water and too little oxygen. Roots need air spaces even in humid terrariums.

Signs

  • Sour smell
  • Blackened roots
  • Fungus gnats
  • Plants yellowing despite visible moisture
  • Substrate pulling away in wet clumps

Fix

Remove the affected section if it is localised. For widespread compaction, rebuild with a lighter mix containing bark, pumice, perlite, lava rock, or other structure-building materials.

Mistake 6: letting leaves touch glass

Wet glass keeps leaves damp for too long. That can lead to spotting, yellowing, fungal growth, and decay.

Fix

  • Trim leaves touching glass.
  • Move small plants inward if possible.
  • Use smaller plant choices in future builds.
  • Leave growth space around the container edge.

Mistake 7: over-cleaning or under-cleaning bioactive systems

Bioactive terrariums need some organic material to feed microfauna, but wet decay can still overwhelm a small system. Clean leaf litter is useful. Mushy leaves, diseased tissue, and sour material are not.

Fix

Remove mushy or diseased material. In established bioactive setups, leave a modest amount of clean leaf litter and add more only when the existing layer is being processed.

Overgrown terrarium jars with large plants touching the glass and overcrowded interiors
Overcrowding blocks light, reduces airflow, and keeps leaves wet against glass. Smaller plants and wider spacing make terrariums last longer.

Bioactive and Advanced Terrariums

A bioactive terrarium includes small organisms that help break down decaying plant material and reduce mould pressure. It is not a system that runs itself, but it can become more stable and lower-maintenance when built correctly.

Bioactive setups need more planning than decorative terrariums. Microfauna need food, moisture, shelter, and clean conditions. They also need to be matched to container size and plant type.

What bioactive means

In plant-only terrariums, bioactive usually means adding springtails and sometimes small isopods.

  • Springtails: tiny decomposers that feed on fungal growth, microbes, and decaying organic matter.
  • Small isopods: break down leaf litter and soft debris, but can nibble tender roots or moss if populations are too high or food is low.
  • Leaf litter and bark: food and shelter for microfauna.
  • Balanced moisture: enough humidity for microfauna, not a flooded base.

Use captive-bred cultures from clean sources. Do not add wild-collected bugs, garden soil, snails, slugs, or random outdoor leaf litter. These can introduce pests, pathogens, and organisms that do not belong in a small indoor container.

When bioactive is useful

  • Closed or partially closed tropical terrariums with moss and leaf litter
  • Larger containers with enough substrate depth
  • Humid builds where mould blooms happen on wood or leaf litter
  • Long-term naturalistic setups where some organic breakdown is expected

When bioactive is not necessary

  • Small decorative jars under 1 L
  • Open succulent displays
  • Fresh builds that have not stabilised yet
  • Containers with very little organic material
  • Setups where plants need dry mineral conditions

Bioactive base requirements

  • Drainage: enough false bottom to avoid waterlogging.
  • Airy substrate: microfauna and roots need oxygen.
  • Leaf litter: clean, pesticide-free, and added gradually.
  • Bark or cork pieces: shelter and feeding surfaces.
  • No pesticides: enclosed systems hold residues and fumes.
  • No antibacterial sprays: these disrupt the microbial layer the system relies on.

Springtails first, isopods later

Springtails are the safest first addition for most plant terrariums. They are small, unobtrusive, and useful in humid containers. Isopods are better for larger builds where there is enough leaf litter and space. In very small jars, isopods can become too disruptive.

Advanced equipment

Most terrariums do not need pumps, foggers, fans, or waterfalls. Extra equipment makes sense only when container size and plant choice justify it.

Equipment Useful for Downside
Grow light Dark shelves Can heat glass
Small fan Large vivarium builds Can dry small jars
Hygrometer Learning patterns Can be inaccurate
Fogger Large displays Often too wet
Water feature Advanced vivariums Adds algae risk

Start simple. A stable container, correct substrate, good light, and suitable plants matter more than equipment.

Close-up of isopods crawling on substrate
Springtails and small isopods can support bioactive terrariums, but they need clean cultures, leaf litter, moisture balance, and enough space.

Long-Term Terrarium Maintenance

A mature terrarium should not need constant work. The goal is to watch, trim lightly, remove decay, and adjust moisture before small issues become structural problems.

Weekly visual check

You do not need to open the terrarium every week. You do need to look at it carefully.

  • Condensation: light and changing is fine; heavy and permanent needs adjustment.
  • Leaf posture: limp, curled, or yellowing leaves can signal moisture or light imbalance.
  • Glass contact: trim leaves before they stay wet against the wall.
  • Moss texture: springy moss usually has enough moisture; crisp or brown patches need investigation.
  • Substrate smell: earthy is normal; sour or swampy is not.
  • Pests: fungus gnats, scale, snails, and slugs should be handled early.

Pruning

Trim for balance, not perfection. Terrariums look more natural when plants have some movement and unevenness.

  • Use clean, sharp scissors.
  • Cut dying leaves at the base instead of pulling.
  • Prune creeping plants before they cover moss or block light.
  • Thin moss only where it smothers smaller plants.
  • Remove trimmings immediately so they do not decay inside.

Cleaning glass

Use a lint-free cloth, cotton pad, or soft brush. Avoid chemical cleaners inside the container. For narrow jars, wrap cloth around a chopstick or use long tweezers.

  • Wipe algae gently before it thickens.
  • Remove water marks with distilled water on a cloth where possible.
  • Clean after pruning, not before, because trimming often drops debris.

Mould, algae, and fungus

Not every white patch is a crisis. New wood, moss fragments, and leaf litter often develop a short-lived fungal bloom. Bioactive setups with springtails often process this naturally.

Issue Likely cause Response
White fuzz on wood Early fungal bloom Watch briefly
Green film on glass Light plus moisture Wipe and reduce light
Grey mould on leaves Dead tissue Remove affected leaves
Sour smell Rot or low oxygen Remove decay
Fungus gnats Wet organic surface Dry down slightly

Avoid spraying pesticides inside closed terrariums. Residues and fumes can linger in enclosed glass, damage sensitive plants, and harm springtails or isopods in bioactive setups. Remove affected material, isolate the problem, and rebuild if pests or rot are already established.

When to refresh a terrarium

Even a well-built terrarium may need a refresh after long use. This is normal, especially in dense decorative builds without microfauna.

Refresh when

  • Substrate stays wet and sour despite careful watering.
  • Plants decline even after light and moisture are corrected.
  • Roots have filled the container.
  • Algae and mould return immediately after cleanup.
  • The drainage layer is full of organic sludge.
  • Fast growers have taken over and plant balance is gone.

How to refresh without losing everything

  • Remove healthy plants first and keep roots lightly moist.
  • Save clean moss sections if they are pest-free.
  • Discard sour substrate and decayed material.
  • Rinse and dry drainage material if reusing it.
  • Clean the container with hot water and rinse thoroughly.
  • Rebuild with improved substrate and fewer plants.

Some closed decorative terrariums benefit from a partial refresh after 12 to 24 months. Slower, cleaner, less crowded builds can last longer; overplanted jars may need attention sooner.


Terrarium FAQs and Quick Fixes

Do terrariums need drainage holes?

Most terrariums do not have drainage holes. Instead, they use a false bottom made from stones, expanded clay, lava rock, pumice, or gravel. This holds excess water below the root zone. The trade-off is that watering must be careful because water cannot drain out.

Does a drainage layer prevent overwatering?

No. A drainage layer gives extra water somewhere to collect, but it does not make overwatering safe. If water rises into substrate or roots sit in a wet layer, rot can still develop.

How long can a terrarium last?

A stable planted terrarium can last 24 months or longer with careful trimming and moisture control. Bioactive builds can last for years, but they still need observation, occasional pruning, and sometimes a partial refresh.

Should a closed terrarium be airtight?

Not always. A truly sealed terrarium can recycle water for a long time, but a loose lid is often easier for beginners because it allows tiny moisture losses and easier maintenance. A closed-but-not-airtight jar still behaves like a terrarium, just with slower water loss.

Is condensation good or bad?

Light condensation is normal in closed terrariums. Full-day fog, dripping lids, wet leaves, or glass that never clears suggest excess moisture, excess warmth, or too little air exchange.

Can succulents grow in a closed terrarium?

No. Succulents need airflow and dry-downs. A sealed humid jar keeps roots and leaf bases too wet. Use succulents in open, mineral-heavy glass displays instead.

Can I put Tillandsia in a terrarium?

Only in an open, airy display. Tillandsia should not be buried into wet substrate or sealed into humid still air. Remove it for watering, let it dry completely, then return it to the display.

Do I need to mist a terrarium?

Misting can help during setup, especially to settle moss or clean soil from leaves. It should not be the main watering method. For routine care, add small amounts of water near roots with a pipette or squeeze bottle.

What water should I use?

Distilled water, rainwater, or low-mineral water is best for moss-heavy terrariums and specialist plants. Tap water may leave mineral marks on glass and can build up in closed systems over time.

Why is moss turning brown?

Brown moss can mean too much light, not enough moisture contact below, poor water quality, overheating, or trapped decay. Check substrate below moss before adding water. If the surface is wet and moss still browns, light or heat is more likely than drought.

Why does my terrarium smell bad?

A healthy terrarium smells earthy or barely smells at all. Sour, swampy, or rotten smells usually mean anaerobic substrate, decaying plant material, or water sitting too high in the base. Remove decay, vent, and rebuild if substrate has gone sour.

Are bugs inside always bad?

No. Springtails are usually beneficial in humid terrariums. Small isopods can help in larger bioactive builds. Fungus gnats, scale, snails, and slugs are problems. Do not use chemical pesticides inside closed glass because residues and fumes can linger.

Do terrariums need fertilizer?

Usually no. Fertilizer encourages fast growth, algae, and salt buildup. If an older planted setup shows clear nutrient deficiency, use a very weak liquid fertilizer only around rooted plants. Do not fertilize sealed moss jars.

Why are plants leaning toward one side?

Light is likely too weak or coming strongly from one direction. Move the terrarium closer to bright indirect light, rotate occasionally, or use a cool grow light.

When should I rebuild instead of fixing?

Rebuild when multiple plants have rotted, substrate smells sour, drainage is flooded with sludge, or mould and algae return immediately after cleanup. Saving healthy plants and rebuilding cleanly is often better than trying to repair a collapsed system.


Terrarium Tools, Substrates, Plants, and Starter Options

You do not need complicated equipment to build a good terrarium. You need clean materials, a suitable container, plant-matched substrate, controlled watering, and tools that help you work neatly inside glass.

Useful substrate materials

  • Lava gravel, pumice, expanded clay, or coarse stones: drainage layer and air space below roots.
  • Activated carbon: thin filtration layer for closed and humid builds.
  • Coco coir or peat-free base: moisture-holding structure for tropical builds.
  • Fine bark: root-zone structure and airflow.
  • Perlite or pumice: prevents compaction and improves drainage.
  • Long-fibre sphagnum: useful as a barrier or moisture-holding component, depending on build type.
  • Live moss: living surface layer for humid closed terrariums.
  • Leaf litter: food and habitat in bioactive builds.

For most jars under 5 L, plan for roughly 2 to 3 cm of drainage material and 4 to 8 cm of substrate, adjusting for container shape and plant roots.

A ready-made Terrarium Substrate Mix gives you the core materials for a clean layered base without buying each component separately.

Helpful terrarium tools

Terrarium scissors help trim leaves and creeping growth inside narrow containers without pulling plants loose.

Terrarium tweezers make it easier to place moss, guide roots, remove fallen leaves, and adjust small plants.

Pick-up tool with claw is useful for deep jars where fingers cannot reach the base.

Terrarium plant tool set gives you small rakes, brushes, and shovels for shaping substrate and cleaning details.

Wide-mouthed terrarium jars are easiest for first builds because they allow better access, cleaner planting, and simpler long-term care.

Miniature terrarium rake and shovel with telescopic handles on white background
Small tools make a real difference in glass containers, especially when planting moss, trimming crowded growth, and cleaning without disturbing roots.

Build Your Terrarium With the Right Plants, Glass, and Substrate

A good terrarium starts with one clear choice: closed and humid, partially open and tropical, or open and airy. Once that is decided, plant choice, substrate, container size, and watering become much easier.

Find compatible supplies, plants, and kit options here:

Contact us for plant help if you want a container matched with suitable plants, substrate, and care expectations.

Build slowly, water lightly, keep plants small, and let your terrarium show you what it needs.

Leave a comment

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

All comments are moderated before being published.

Also worth reading: