Why Your
Indoor Herbs
Keep Dying
Basil, mint, tulsi, coriander, curry leaf β most beginners make the same 7 silent mistakes across all of them. This guide shows you exactly what’s going wrong and how to fix it.
You bought the plant, found a sunny windowsill, and watered it dutifully. Two weeks later, the leaves turned yellow and the stems collapsed. Whether it was basil, mint, coriander, or your kitchen tulsi β sound familiar?
Basil gets most of the blame because it’s the most commonly grown β and the most dramatically temperamental. But the truth is, most indoor herb failures share the same root causes. Mint goes leggy and limp. Coriander bolts within days. Curry leaf justβ¦ sits there doing nothing. Tulsi turns pale and drops leaves. None of this is bad luck. It’s a handful of very specific, very fixable mistakes that beginners repeat across every herb they try.
This guide covers all seven mistakes in plain language β and wherever a fix differs by herb (especially for Indian kitchen herbs like tulsi, kadi patta, and dhania), we call it out specifically.
The Culprits
7 Mistakes That Are
Killing Your Indoor Herbs
Overwatering (The #1 Killer)
Herb roots need oxygen as much as water. Constantly moist soil suffocates them, leading to root rot β which looks identical to underwatering. Yellow leaves, wilting despite wet soil, and a musty smell from the pot are the telltale signs. This is the single most common mistake across every indoor herb.
How it hits each herbNot Enough Light
Most herbs are sun-lovers. Without enough light, stems grow long and leggy reaching for the nearest window, leaves shrink, flavour disappears, and the plant becomes weak. A north-facing windowsill is usually not enough. Light requirements do vary though β some herbs tolerate partial shade better than others.
Light needs by herbCold Drafts & Temperature Shock
This is where herbs diverge significantly. Some β like basil β are extremely cold-sensitive and will blacken and collapse in a matter of hours near a drafty window or AC vent. Others, like mint and coriander, actually prefer cooler conditions and struggle in summer heat. Matching temperature to the right herb is a game-changer.
Temperature toleranceKeeping It in the Nursery Pot
Plants from nurseries and supermarkets are grown to sell quickly, not to thrive long-term. Basil pots are often crammed with 10β20 seedlings. Curry leaf saplings sit in poor-quality soil that stays waterlogged. Mint is frequently pot-bound. Leaving any herb in its original container is the fastest route to failure.
Repotting notes by herbLetting It Flower (Bolt) Too Early
When a herb flowers, it signals the end of its productive leaf-growing phase. Energy shifts to seed production β leaves shrink, become bitter or tough, and the plant’s lifespan shortens. Bolting is triggered by heat, long days, stress, or simply being left too long without harvesting. Some herbs bolt much faster than others.
Bolting tendencyHarvesting the Wrong Way
How you pick from a herb matters as much as how you water it. Plucking individual leaves from the bottom stresses branching herbs and actually slows their growth. But harvesting too aggressively from slow growers like curry leaf can set the plant back weeks. Each herb has its own ideal harvest rhythm.
Harvest method by herbSkipping Fertiliser Entirely
Potted herbs exhaust their soil within weeks β there’s no garden floor to extend roots into. Without feeding, growth stalls, leaves pale and shrink, and the plant becomes increasingly fragile even with perfect watering and light. Fast-growing herbs need feeding more often than slow ones.
Feeding frequencyIndoor herbs don’t die because they’re difficult. They die because we give every herb the same care β when basil, mint, tulsi, and coriander each speak a completely different language.
β The mubamur gardening principle
At a Glance
Herb-by-Herb Indoor
Care Quick Reference
| Herb | βοΈ Light | π§ Watering | π‘οΈ Temp | πΊ Bolts? | βοΈ Harvest | Beginner Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basil Sweet / Italian |
6β8 hrs Full sun |
When top 1β³ dry | 18β30Β°C Very cold-sensitive |
β οΈ High Pinch weekly |
Cut above node | Moderate |
| Tulsi Holy Basil |
6β8 hrs Loves heat |
When top 1β³ dry | 20β35Β°C Very heat-tolerant |
β‘ Moderate Pinch regularly |
Cut above node | Easy in India |
| Mint Pudina |
4β6 hrs Tolerates shade |
Keep lightly moist | 15β25Β°C Prefers cool |
β
Low Rarely problematic |
Cut stems freely | Very easy |
| Coriander Dhania / Cilantro |
4β6 hrs Indirect bright |
Keep evenly moist | 15β25Β°C Bolts in heat |
β οΈ Very High Sow in succession |
Outer leaves first | Tricky |
| Curry Leaf Kadi Patta |
6β8 hrs Maximum sun |
When top 2β³ dry | 18β35Β°C Drought-tolerant |
β
Rarely Slow grower |
Small sprigs only | Patient needed |
Difficulty rating: 1 dot = easiest Β· 5 dots = most challenging for beginners
Your Indoor Herb Survival Checklist
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