At a glance
Most petunias look half-dead by August because the one job that actually saves them, cutting them back hard in late July, gets skipped. The plant goes leggy. The gardener assumes that’s just what petunias do. Next year they buy new ones and the same thing happens.
They don’t have to look like that. Three things done properly: choosing the right type, feeding with the right fertiliser, and making the cut-back when the time comes. Do all three and petunias will flower from late May to the first frost with more impact in September than they had in June. It genuinely works out like that.
Which type matters more than most people realise
The label usually just says “petunia.” It isn’t enough. There are four main groups and in a typical UK summer, where July might be stunning or might be sodden, the difference between them is not cosmetic.
Grandifloras are the ones that look dramatic in photographs. Flowers up to 13cm across, often ruffled and double, in colours that have no business being that vivid. They’re worth growing in a sheltered south-facing position, a porch or a wall that keeps the rain off them. In an exposed garden, a heavy shower in July will reduce them to brown mush within hours. The large petals hold water, rot sets in fast, and there’s nothing to recover. If you’ve tried grandifloras in a windy spot and wondered why they failed, this is why.
Multifloras produce smaller flowers, 5 to 8cm, but more of them per plant and they shed rain. After a shower that destroys a grandiflora, a multiflora is back to looking fine by the afternoon. The Carpet and Mirage series are the ones that reliably perform in UK conditions. For most gardens and containers, this is the right type.
Millifloras are compact, tiny-flowered, and nearly indestructible in bad weather. The Fantasy series is the one to look for. They tolerate wind and rain better than anything else in the group, need minimal deadheading, and work well in small containers or as edging. Less impact than the others, but they won’t let you down when the weather turns against you.
Trailing types (Surfinia, Wave, Tumbelina) are what fill most UK hanging baskets. They spread 60 to 90cm and cascade over container edges. The important distinction: trailing types are vegetatively propagated, meaning they don’t come from seed. This is why they’re sold as individual plants in 9cm pots rather than in seed packets, and why they cost more than plug plants. They’re also largely self-cleaning, so spent flowers drop on their own and deadheading isn’t needed the way it is with other types.
The straightforward answer for most people: multiflora plug plants for borders and containers, trailing Surfinias for baskets. Growing from seed is an option but you need twelve weeks from sowing to planting-out size, and the seeds are more difficult to handle than almost anything else you’ll sow.
Sowing from seed: getting germination right and pinching out properly
Petunia seeds are dust. Not small. Genuinely dust-fine, thousands to the gram. Mixing them with a little dry silver sand before sowing helps distribute them evenly across the compost surface. They need to sit on the surface with nothing covering them, because they need light to germinate. Burying them even a millimetre reduces germination significantly.
Sow from mid-February to late March at 20-21°C. February sowings need supplementary lighting, 12 to 14 hours a day, to prevent seedlings becoming drawn and leggy on a dim winter windowsill. March is more forgiving; a south-facing windowsill usually gives enough light without extra help. A polythene bag over the tray holds humidity during germination, which takes ten to fourteen days. Remove the cover the instant seedlings emerge, not a day later, or damping off becomes a real risk.
Get them into maximum light straight away. Seedlings short of light in the first weeks produce leggy plants that never fully recover, and no amount of pinching out later will compensate for a bad start.
The pinching out step is the one most people skip. When plants reach 8 to 10cm tall with four to six pairs of true leaves, pinch out the growing tip. It delays first flowers by seven to ten days and it feels counterproductive. What it actually does is force the plant to branch rather than grow upright, producing multiple flowering stems where there would otherwise be one. The difference in the finished plant is significant. Skip this step and you get a single-stemmed plant with flowers at the top. Do it and you get a bushy plant with flowers across the whole thing.
Plug plants from mid-April skip all of this. They arrive already past the fiddly stages, and for most home gardeners the extra cost per plant is worth not spending eight weeks managing seedlings.
Planting out and position
Petunias die at 2°C. That isn’t an exaggeration and it isn’t about struggling. It’s death. Late May is the rule in most of England before planting out, early June in the north, mid-June in Scotland. Garden centres stock them from April because April sales keep the lights on, not because April is the right time to plant them outside.
Give them ten to fourteen days of hardening off before the final planting. Days outside, nights in, starting sheltered and gradually moving to the full position. A plant that’s been growing in a warm propagator since February is not ready for a cold May evening without that transition. Skip it and you get delayed flowering, set-back plants, and none of the display you were expecting in June.
Six hours of direct sun daily is the minimum. Eight produces better results. In partial shade petunias grow tall and spineless, produce fewer flowers, and become more prone to fungal problems because the reduced airflow favours disease. If the position doesn’t get six hours, plant something else.
Containers and baskets: where petunias do their best work
Containers give you the control you don’t have in open ground. Drainage is manageable, position is adjustable, and a well-set-up container will outperform open-ground planting every time.
Peat-free multipurpose compost with around 20% perlite mixed in gives good drainage without the compost compacting around the roots over time. Work slow-release fertiliser granules in at planting. Water-retaining gel crystals mixed into the compost reduce how often you need to water by roughly a third, which matters in a basket on a sunny south-facing wall where the compost can dry out in hours.
Three multifloras in a 30cm pot is the right density. Four to five trailing types in a 35cm basket. More than this looks good on the day you plant and deteriorates fast as the plants compete. A correctly spaced basket fed properly will be denser and fuller by August than an overcrowded one.
On container size and watering workload: a 40cm pot needs watering roughly once a day in summer. A 25cm pot may need it twice. Worth knowing before you decide what size to use if the garden is hard to get to.
Watering, feeding, and why the fertiliser type matters
Container petunias need watering every morning in warm weather. In a hot July, evening watering as well for anything in a small container or full sun. A petunia that dries out badly doesn’t just wilt and recover. Flower buds developing inside the plant get damaged during severe water stress, and there’s a visible gap in flowering seven to ten days later even after normal watering resumes. Consistent moisture is not optional.
Water at the base, not overhead. Wet flowers encourage botrytis, and overhead watering also doesn’t reach the root zone as effectively as a slow application at soil level. For baskets, pour slowly until water runs through the base.
Open-ground petunias need almost no watering once established. They look after themselves except in prolonged drought. Many people treat container and ground-planted petunias the same way and wonder why one set is struggling.
The feeding mistake that catches a lot of gardeners: using a balanced or nitrogen-heavy fertiliser through June and July. Nitrogen pushes lush dark foliage. It doesn’t push flowers. A plant fed on nitrogen all summer will look healthy and green and produce almost nothing worth looking at. Switch to high-potash from the moment flowering starts. Tomato fertiliser is the right product and the right format. Weekly, not fortnightly. Petunias in containers exhaust the nutrients in fresh compost within four to six weeks, and after that they’re entirely dependent on what you give them. A plant not fed weekly from June will slow down and look poor by August, and that’s a feeding failure not the plant’s fault.
The cut-back in July is the job that most people skip
Petunias go leggy by late July. The plant pushes growth out to stem tips, those tips flower, and as the early flowers fade the plant starts producing seed. Once the seed production signal is running, flower production slows. You end up with long bare stems, a few flowers hanging at the ends, and a plant that looks like it’s had a hard season. Most gardeners accept this as decline and write off the rest of summer.
It isn’t decline. It’s a management problem with a solution.
Cut every stem back to 4 to 6 inches above the soil line, cutting just above a leaf node. The plant looks terrible for a week. That week of looking at bare green stubs is the difficult part. What’s happening underneath is the root system stopping seed production and redirecting energy into new lateral branches along those stems. Within seven to ten days there’s new growth visible. Within two to three weeks the container is denser and fuller than it was before the cut, and it will flower until the first frost.
Feed immediately after cutting, and this detail matters: use a nitrogen-rich feed first, not potash. The plant needs to build leaves before it can produce flowers. Nitrogen drives that leaf development. Once you can see a good flush of new foliage, switch back to high-potash to trigger flower bud formation. The two-stage feeding after the cut is what produces the September display. Skip the nitrogen and go straight to potash and the recovery is slower.
Trailing Wave and Supertunia types rarely need the hard cut-back because they’re self-cleaning and naturally branch. A light tidy if they start looking lopsided is usually all they need.
Deadheading the other types: remove the spent flower and the small seed pod at the base of the stem. Not just the petals. The pod. The pod is where the seed production signal originates. Leave it in place and the plant still diverts resources away from flowering even with the spent petals gone. Every two to three days for grandifloras and multifloras during peak season.
The September display is the reward for doing the July cut-back. A plant cut hard in late July and fed straight after looks wrecked for a week. Three weeks later it is denser, bushier, and producing more flowers than it was in June. Do it. Trust the process.
What goes wrong
Slugs take young petunias overnight in May. Not slowly over several days. Overnight. A slug can destroy a plant that went in three days ago. Protect transplants at the time of planting, before you see any damage, with ferric phosphate pellets or nematodes applied around containers. Baskets are safe. Ground-level containers and border planting are not.
Aphids cluster on growing tips and buds from June onwards and carry mosaic viruses that produce mottled distorted growth with no cure. The plant looks diseased for the rest of the season. Check every two to three days, squash small colonies by hand, use insecticidal soap for anything larger. The window for control is when you can still see individual insects on a handful of stems. Leave it past that point and you’re dealing with something much harder.
Whitefly are worth watching for in sheltered positions and against warm walls. They cloud up when you disturb the plant, and respond to the same insecticidal soap treatment as aphids.
Petunia blight is worth knowing by name because most UK gardeners don’t recognise it as a specific disease. It’s caused by Phytophthora infestans, the same organism responsible for potato blight and tomato blight. Brown water-soaked patches appear on leaves and stems and spread within days. There’s no treatment worth applying once symptoms appear. Remove and bin the plant immediately. Don’t compost it.
Botrytis shows up as grey fuzzy patches on flowers in prolonged wet weather. Remove affected material, improve airflow, avoid watering in the evening in humid periods.
And leggy plants by August are a management failure, not a disease. Midsummer cut-back, consistent weekly feeding with the right fertiliser, and deadheading every two to three days. Three things. Do all three and petunias don’t go to pieces by August.
Share on socials: