How to Fill a Tall Planter: The Complete Guide
To fill a tall planter, start by laying a drainage layer of clay pebbles or gravel at the bottom, then add a geotextile felt, and finish with quality potting soil mixed with compost. This method ensures optimal drainage and healthy roots.
- Drainage layer: clay pebbles or gravel (5-10 cm) to prevent waterlogging.
- Geotextile felt: stops soil from mixing with the drainage.
- Enriched soil: potting soil + compost to nourish plants.
- Moderate watering: after planting, water without soaking.
Why Drainage Is Crucial in a Tall Planter
A tall planter on legs or placed on the ground accumulates water more easily. Without drainage, roots rot. Outdoor tall planters made of plastic, wood, or resin must all have holes at the bottom. If not, drill them.
Steps to Fill a Tall Planter
- Prepare the bottom: place 5 to 10 cm of clay pebbles or gravel. For a 100 cm or 120 cm tall planter, plan more.
- Add geotextile felt: cut it to size and lay it over the drainage layer.
- Fill with potting soil: use universal potting soil mixed with 20% compost for flowering plants.
- Plant: dig a hole, place the root ball, and press gently.
- Water: use a fine spray to settle the substrate without washing it away.
How to Fill a Plastic Planter on Legs
Tall plastic planters are lightweight. To stabilise them, add stones at the bottom before the drainage layer. Avoid overloading if you need to move them. Follow the same steps, but ensure drainage holes are not blocked.
How to Fill a Wooden Planter
Wood is sensitive to moisture. Line the inside with a plastic sheet that has holes at the bottom. Add a generous drainage layer. Use a specific potting soil for balcony plants. For a tall wooden planter, the weight of the substrate stabilises the whole structure.
How to Fill a Large Outdoor Planter
For a large planter (e.g., 120 cm), reduce the volume of soil by placing lightweight objects (empty plastic bottles, polystyrene) at the bottom before the drainage layer. This lightens the total weight while maintaining drainage.
Mistakes to Avoid
- No drainage: stagnant water = root rot.
- Soil too compacted: root suffocation.
- Wrong soil: use quality potting soil, not garden soil.
- Forgetting the felt: soil will clog drainage holes.
Conclusion
Filling a tall planter correctly is simple if you follow the layers: drainage, felt, quality potting soil. For a lasting and aesthetic result, choose planters suited to your plants and outdoor space. Browse our selection of tall planters and accessories to style your balcony or patio.

