Fertilising guide
How to fertilise Echeveria agavoides (Echeveria agavoides)— schedule & NPK
Also called Molded wax agave, lipstick echeveria.
More about echeveria agavoides
About Echeveria agavoides
Echeveria agavoides · also called Molded wax agave, lipstick echeveria · houseplant
Echeveria agavoides, the molded wax agave or 'lipstick' echeveria, forms compact, agave-like rosettes of thick, glossy, sharply pointed green leaves tipped in vivid red. Unlike most echeverias it is smooth and waxy rather than powdery. It stays around 15-20 cm across, offsets slowly, and sends up pink-and-yellow flowers in spring. Tough and very drought-tolerant.
Growth habit: Evergreen rosette succulent with a firm, agave-like form; slowly offsets at the base to form small clusters and produces tall arching flower stalks in spring.
What fertiliser echeveria agavoides actually wants — and why
Echeveria agavoides is a light-feeding succulent — a gentle, low-nitrogen feed a few times in growth keeps it plump without forcing the weak, stretched growth over-feeding causes.
A cactus and succulent formula or a diluted balanced feed with modest, even numbers. Avoid high-nitrogen plant foods — they make a succulent etiolate and grow soft, fracture-prone tissue.
For the language behind the three numbers on the bottle — what nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium each do — see the NPK ratio explained entry. The short version for echeveria agavoides: match the feed to the job the plant is doing right now, not to a generic “plant food” on the shelf.
How often to feed echeveria agavoides, and which months
Feeding only earns its keep while the plant is in active growth and can use the nutrients — pour feed into a dormant or low-light plant and it simply builds up as root-burning salt. For echeveria agavoides:
Feed monthly during spring and summer with a half-strength balanced succulent fertiliser. Withhold feed in autumn and winter. Keep that to monthly between spring through early autumn (roughly March to September) and stop entirely once growth slows for winter.
The dormant-season rule matters more than the exact interval: skip feeding entirely when echeveria agavoides is resting. For the wider context on indoor feeding rhythms across the seasons, the houseplant fertiliser schedule walks through the year month by month.
What strength to mix for echeveria agavoides
Quarter to half strength at most for echeveria agavoides. Succulents take up very little, and a strong dose burns the fine roots before the plant can use it.
Feeding always goes onto already-damp soil, never dry roots — water echeveria agavoides first if the soil is dry, then apply the diluted feed. The companion question is when to water at all, covered in the echeveria agavoides watering schedule.
Signs you are over-feeding echeveria agavoides
Over-feeding is far more common — and more damaging — than under-feeding for most plants. The classic tells for echeveria agavoides:
- Stretched, leggy, pale growth with widely spaced leaves.
- A white salt crust on the soil or around the pot rim.
- Brown, crisped leaf tips and edges.
- Soft, mushy tissue at the base — over-feeding plus damp soil rots it.
Signs you are under-feeding echeveria agavoides
- Uncommon — succulents tolerate lean conditions well.
- Very slow growth and dull, faded colour over a long period.
- Older leaves shed faster than new ones replace them in a tired old mix.
If the symptoms point at watering, light or roots rather than nutrition, the full echeveria agavoides care brief covers soil, humidity and the common problems for this species.
Flushing and leaching the salts
Feed lightly enough and you rarely need to flush, but once a year run plain water through the pot of echeveria agavoides until it drains clear, and refresh the gritty mix every 2-3 years.
Organic vs synthetic feeds for echeveria agavoides
Organic options
A heavily diluted seaweed or worm-casting feed once or twice in summer. UK: a drop of Westland seaweed feed; US: quarter-strength Espoma Cactus! or Dr. Earth liquid. Fresh free-draining mix matters more than any feed.
Synthetic / liquid feeds
A dedicated cactus/succulent liquid at quarter to half strength — UK: Baby Bio Cacti & Succulent Drip Feeders or Westland; US: Miracle-Gro Succulent Plant Food or Schultz Cactus Plus.
Brand names are examples, not endorsements, and UK and US ranges differ — check the label’s own NPK and dilution rate, since formulations change.
Fertilising echeveria agavoides — frequently asked questions
What fertiliser does echeveria agavoides need?
A cactus and succulent formula or a diluted balanced feed with modest, even numbers. Avoid high-nitrogen plant foods — they make a succulent etiolate and grow soft, fracture-prone tissue. Echeveria agavoides is a light-feeding succulent — a gentle, low-nitrogen feed a few times in growth keeps it plump without forcing the weak, stretched growth over-feeding causes.
How often should I feed echeveria agavoides?
Feed monthly during spring and summer with a half-strength balanced succulent fertiliser. Withhold feed in autumn and winter. Feed monthly during spring and summer with a half-strength balanced succulent fertiliser. Withhold feed in autumn and winter. Keep that to monthly between spring through early autumn (roughly March to September) and stop entirely once growth slows for winter.
What strength of feed for echeveria agavoides?
Quarter to half strength at most for echeveria agavoides. Succulents take up very little, and a strong dose burns the fine roots before the plant can use it.
What does over-feeding echeveria agavoides look like?
Stretched, leggy, pale growth with widely spaced leaves. A white salt crust on the soil or around the pot rim. Brown, crisped leaf tips and edges. Soft, mushy tissue at the base — over-feeding plus damp soil rots it. Feeding echeveria agavoides like a leafy houseplant is the classic error — it produces a flush of pale, stretched, floppy growth that never firms up and is prone to rot at the base.
Should I flush the soil of echeveria agavoides?
Feed lightly enough and you rarely need to flush, but once a year run plain water through the pot of echeveria agavoides until it drains clear, and refresh the gritty mix every 2-3 years.
Keep reading
- Echeveria agavoides care — the full brief (light, soil, humidity, problems, pet safety)
- How often to water echeveria agavoides — the watering schedule
- The houseplant fertiliser schedule — feeding through the year
- NPK ratio explained — what the three numbers on the bottle mean
- How to fertilise snake plant
- How to fertilise dracaena
- How to fertilise peperomia
- All 2464 fertilising guides in the Growli library