Plant diagnosis
Why is my squash not growing?
Sprawling warm-season fruit — massive leaves, massive water demand, and a target for squash bugs and vine borers.
The 4 most likely causes
The cause of squash no new growthusually narrows to one of the items below, ranked by how often we see each in Growli's diagnostic chats. Work down the list — most readers find their answer in the top two.
- Seasonal dormancy (Likely)
Most houseplants slow or stop growing from late autumn to early spring as light levels drop. If your squash hasn't pushed new growth in midwinter, this is usually normal — reduce watering and stop fertilising until day length picks up again. - Wrong light level (Most likely)
Squash is a high-light plant and quickly turns leggy, pale, or stalled in low light. Move it within a metre of a south or east-facing window, or supplement with a grow light. It wants 6-8 hours of direct sun. - Root-bound in its pot (Likely)
When roots circle the pot, water runs straight through and the plant can no longer take up nutrients. Squash typically needs a fresh pot every 1-2 years — one size up, not several. If you can see roots through the drainage holes or the soil dries in a day or two, repot. - Nutrient deficiency (nitrogen or iron) (Possible)
If squash has not been repotted or fed in a year or more, the older leaves can yellow uniformly while the newest growth stays green — a classic sign of nitrogen depletion. Yellow leaves with green veins on new growth point to iron or manganese deficiency. A balanced liquid feed during the growing season usually resolves both.
How to diagnose in 60 seconds
Run these quick checks before you change anything — the right fix depends on what you find.
- What season is it? Most houseplants pause growth from October to March in the northern hemisphere — that is dormancy, not failure.
- Tip the plant out. Roots circling the pot mean it is root-bound and stalled.
- When did you last fertilise? Plants in fresh potting mix coast for 3-6 months on built-in nutrients, then need feeding.
- Measure light with a phone lux meter app. Below 500-1000 lux at midday is too dim for most squash.
The fix — step by step
This is the recovery sequence Growli walks users through for squash with no new growth. Work through the steps in order; skipping ahead is the most common reason a plant fails to bounce back.
- Confirm it is not just dormancy. Note the season. From mid-autumn to early spring most houseplants — including squash — pause growth as light drops. If it is the dark half of the year, do nothing and wait.
- Check light levels honestly. Use a free phone lux-meter app at midday. Squash needs at least the light suggested by 6-8 hours of direct sun. If you are below that, move it closer to the window or add a grow light.
- Check if it is root-bound. Tip the plant out. Roots circling tightly mean it is time to repot one pot size up in fresh mix. Don't jump multiple sizes — too much soil holds too much water and triggers rot.
- Feed during the growing season only. Use a balanced liquid fertiliser at half strength every 2-4 weeks from spring through early autumn. Skip feeding in winter. Over-feeding a stalled plant burns the roots — undershoot rather than overshoot.
- Be patient with recovery. Even with everything corrected, expect 4-8 weeks before squash pushes obvious new growth. The first sign is usually a tighter, glossier new leaf rather than a dramatic size jump.
When this can't be saved
Most cases of squash no new growth are recoverable, but a few red flags point to a plant that has gone past the point of return. If you spot any of these, consider propagating a clean cutting and starting over.
- Stems are softening and leaves are slowly dropping despite "no growth" — the plant is actively dying, not stalled.
- Roots are uniformly brown and mushy when you tip the pot — recovery from this point is rare.
- Multiple growing seasons have passed with no new growth and good conditions — the plant may be terminal.
Prevention
For squash, the single biggest preventative is matching its native rhythm: 2-3cm of water per week as a deep weekly soak, 6-8 hours of direct sun, and a free-draining pot with a working drainage hole. Plan a yearly repotting check in spring — refresh the top inch of soil even if the pot stays the same — and feed at half strength every 2-4 weeks from spring to early autumn. Track light with a free lux meter app every few months as the sun angle changes through the year.