How to Grow Courgettes in Pots in the UK – Container Growing Guide

Small Space Gardening

At a glance

Minimum pot size40cm diameter, 30cm+ deep
Sow indoorsLate April – May
Place outsideLate May – June (after last frost)
Critical careWater daily in summer heat

Courgettes are one of the most productive vegetables you can grow in a container, and they are far more suited to pot growing than their sprawling reputation suggests – provided you choose the right variety and meet their basic needs consistently. A compact bush courgette in a 40-50cm pot on a sunny patio will produce fruit from July to October, cropping prolifically enough that two or three plants is typically more than a household can use fresh. They are the ideal crop for anyone who wants meaningful vegetable harvests from a small patio, balcony or courtyard space.

The two most important factors in container courgettes are pot size and watering. Too small a pot and the roots cannot sustain the enormous leaf area the plant needs to photosynthesize and fruit – courgettes are greedy, fast-growing plants and they need a generous root run. And because containers dry out far faster than open ground, particularly in summer heat, consistent watering is non-negotiable – a courgette in a pot that dries out significantly will drop its flowers and set back fruiting by days even in an otherwise ideal summer. Getting these two things right makes container courgette growing straightforward and very rewarding. Like chillies in pots, the key is treating the container as a high-maintenance environment rather than a set-and-forget one.

Best varieties for pots

Variety Plant spread Yield Pot suitability
Patio Star F1
Excellent
Buckingham F1
Excellent
Defender F1
Good – needs larger pot
Soleil F1 (yellow)
Excellent

Patio Star F1 is the variety bred specifically for container growing – it has a genuinely compact, upright habit that keeps the plant within a manageable footprint while still producing an excellent yield. Buckingham F1 is another compact variety with similar patio credentials and a very reliable cropping record in UK conditions. Both are the first choices for anyone growing courgettes on a balcony or in a limited space. Defender F1 is a widely available, reliable variety that works well in larger containers of 50cm or more but is too vigorous for smaller pots. For something different, Soleil F1 produces vivid yellow courgettes on a compact plant – the flavour is milder and slightly sweeter than green types and the colour is striking in a salad.

Choosing the right pot and compost

The minimum viable pot size for a single courgette plant is 40cm diameter and 30cm deep – approximately 40 litres of compost volume. This is the absolute minimum; a 50cm pot holding 60-70 litres of compost produces a significantly more vigorous and productive plant. Do not be tempted to use a smaller pot with a view to potting on later – courgettes establish quickly and resent root disturbance, so the final pot should be in place from the time of planting out. Terracotta pots look attractive but dry out faster than plastic – if using terracotta, line the inside with polythene (leaving the drainage holes clear) to slow moisture loss. Large plastic growing bags are also excellent and hold moisture well.

Use a peat-free multipurpose compost enriched with slow-release fertiliser granules mixed in at planting time. Courgettes are heavy feeders and the nutrient content of standard multipurpose compost is depleted within six to eight weeks by an actively growing plant. Adding a generous handful of slow-release fertiliser granules at planting provides a sustained background nutrition level, with liquid feeding beginning from the time the first flowers appear. Place the pot in the sunniest available position – courgettes need at least four to six hours of direct sun daily for good fruiting and will crop poorly in shade.

Sowing and planting out

Sow courgette seeds indoors in late April or May, one seed per 9cm pot on its side (to prevent water pooling on the flat seed surface and causing rot) at 2cm depth. Place on a warm windowsill at 18°C or above – germination takes three to seven days in good conditions. Grow on in a warm, bright position until the plant has two to three true leaves and the roots are just beginning to circle the base of the pot. This typically takes three to four weeks from sowing.

Do not plant outside until after the last frost – in most UK regions this means late May at the earliest, and June is safer. Courgettes are very cold-sensitive and a cold check at the seedling stage sets the plant back significantly. Harden off over a week before the final planting – placing outside during the day and bringing in at night – before committing to the pot permanently. Water the plant in well after planting and place in the final sunny position. The best container vegetables share courgettes’ need for a generous pot and a sunny aspect.

Amazon Container courgette essentials

Courgette seeds – Patio Star or Buckingham F1

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50cm large garden planter pot

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High-potash tomato liquid feed

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Watering, feeding and seasonal care

May – Jun
Sow indoors late April to May. Harden off and plant out late May or June after last frost. Water in well and place in the sunniest available spot. The plant grows rapidly once established – water every two to three days and begin checking daily as temperatures rise. No feeding needed yet if slow-release granules were added at planting.
Jul – Aug
Peak growing and cropping period. Water daily in hot weather – a courgette in a pot can require up to two litres of water per day in a heatwave. Begin feeding weekly with a high-potash liquid feed once flowers appear. Harvest fruits every two to three days while small to keep the plant producing. Hand-pollinate if fruit is setting poorly.
Sep – Oct
Cropping slows as days shorten and temperatures cool. Continue watering and feeding but less frequently. Watch for powdery mildew on the leaves from September – remove affected leaves but the plant continues cropping. First frost ends the season entirely. Compost the spent plant and pot up any remaining compost for next season.

Hand pollination and harvesting

Courgettes produce separate male and female flowers on the same plant – the female flower has a tiny immature courgette behind it at the base, the male is on a plain stem. In a garden, bees move pollen from male to female flowers reliably. In a pot on an urban balcony or in a position with limited pollinator access, pollination can be poor and fruit development fails – the tiny courgettes turn yellow and drop off shortly after the flower opens. Hand pollination solves this entirely.

To hand-pollinate, take a clean, dry artist’s paintbrush or simply pick a male flower, remove the petals and brush the pollen-covered stamen gently inside an open female flower. Do this in the morning when both flowers are fully open and the pollen is fresh. One male flower typically contains enough pollen to pollinate three or four female flowers. Once successfully pollinated, the tiny courgette swells visibly within two to three days. Harvest fruits when they are 10-15cm long – at this size they are at their most flavoursome and tender, and regular picking every two to three days keeps the plant setting new fruits continuously. Allowed to swell to marrow size, the plant stops producing entirely. The same harvesting principle applies in a raised bed as in a container.

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Push a plastic bottle into the compost as a watering reservoir. Cut the bottom off a 2-litre plastic bottle, push the neck end into the compost at an angle near the root zone, and fill the bottle with water. The water drains slowly directly to the root zone, dramatically reducing the frequency of watering needed in hot weather and ensuring that water reaches the roots rather than running off the surface. This improvised wick system is particularly useful if you are away for a day or two and cannot water manually.

Common problems and solutions

Problem
Fruits turning yellow and dropping off before reaching picking size – tiny courgettes develop briefly and then yellow, shrivel and fall, despite the plant appearing healthy and producing plenty of flowers
Solution
Poor pollination – the female flowers are not being successfully fertilised. Hand-pollinate using a paintbrush or a detached male flower, doing so in the morning when flowers are fully open. Ensure there are male flowers present simultaneously with females – on a very young plant the first few flowers are often all male. Once pollination succeeds, the courgette develops rapidly within days.
Problem
Wilting in hot sun despite being well-watered – the plant droops dramatically in the afternoon even when the compost is adequately moist, then recovers in the cool of the evening
Solution
Afternoon wilt in hot weather is normal for courgettes – the large leaf area transpires water faster than the roots can supply it in peak heat. As long as the plant recovers by evening and the compost is not bone dry, this is not a problem. If wilting is severe and persistent, move the pot to a position with afternoon shade, or water in the morning and again in late afternoon.
Problem
Powdery mildew – a white powdery coating spreading across the upper surface of the leaves from August onward, eventually affecting most of the foliage and reducing the vigour of the plant
Solution
Powdery mildew on courgettes is almost inevitable by late August in UK growing conditions. Remove the most severely affected leaves and ensure the plant is consistently watered at the roots. The plant typically continues to crop for several more weeks even with significant mildew. A diluted baking soda spray (1 teaspoon per litre of water) applied to leaves acts as a mild preventive measure.
Amazon Container courgette essentials

Courgette seeds – Patio Star or Buckingham F1

★★★★★

~£4

View on Amazon

50cm large garden planter pot

★★★★★

~£20

View on Amazon

High-potash tomato liquid feed

★★★★★

~£7

View on Amazon

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Prices correct at time of publishing.

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