Repotting guide
When & how to repot Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps' (Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps')
Also called Dentate Traps Venus Flytrap, Sawtooth Flytrap.
More about dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'
About Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps'
Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps' · also called Dentate Traps Venus Flytrap, Sawtooth Flytrap · houseplant
Dionaea 'Dentate Traps' is a Venus flytrap cultivar selected for short, triangular, tooth-like marginal spines that give the trap a neat sawtooth or comb appearance. The traps still snap shut on insects to digest them. A vigorous, easy form, it needs full sun, pure water, lean acidic soil and a cold winter dormancy like all flytraps.
Mature size: Rosette about 8-13 cm across; traps up to roughly 2.5-3 cm; flower scapes 15-30 cm tall.
How to tell dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' needs repotting
Repotting on a calendar is less reliable than reading the plant. For dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps', watch for these signs:
- Roots spiralling thickly out of the drainage holes or pushing the whole plant up out of the pot.
- The pot is so packed that water runs straight through in seconds and barely wets the soil.
- It has split a plastic pot, or the rootball is a solid mass with almost no soil left when you slide it out.
- Growth and (for dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps') flowering have clearly stalled despite good light and feeding — but remember this plant likes being snug, so a little crowding alone is not a reason to repot.
For the underlying biology of a pot-bound root system and why it stalls a plant, see our guide to spotting and fixing a root-bound plant.
How often to repot dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'
Only every 2–4 years, when genuinely crowded. Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps' is one of the plants that genuinely prefers a snug pot — it grows and flowers better with its roots a little restricted, so resist the urge to repot it on schedule. Low rosette of snap-traps edged with short triangular teeth instead of the usual long bristles; dies back to a rhizome for winter dormancy and re-sprouts in spring, clumping over time..
What size pot to step dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' up to
Go up only one pot size — roughly 2–3 cm (about an inch) wider in diameter, no more. Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps' positively prefers a snug pot: it flowers and grows better when the roots are a little restricted. The single biggest repotting mistake here is over-potting — dropping dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' into a pot two or three sizes up. All that surplus soil holds water the small root system cannot use, stays cold and wet, and rots the roots within weeks. When in doubt, choose the smaller pot.
Not sure of the exact diameter? Our pot size calculator takes the current pot and root spread and tells you the right next size — it deliberately recommends a single step up, never a big jump.
The best time of year to repot dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'
Early spring, just as new growth restarts, is the ideal window for dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'. The plant is moving into its strongest growth phase and re-roots into fresh soil quickly. Avoid repotting in winter dormancy or, for flowering plants, while it is in bud or bloom — recovery is slowest then and you risk dropping the flowers.
Step-by-step: repotting dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'
- Confirm it actually needs it. Slide dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' out and check the roots. Only continue if it is genuinely packed — this plant prefers a snug pot, so if there is still soil and room, put it straight back.
- Pick a pot only one size up. Choose a pot just 2–3 cm wider with good drainage. Resist anything bigger; over-potting is the main killer here.
- Ease it out gently. Water lightly the day before, then tip dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' out, supporting the base. Tease the outer roots free only enough to stop them circling.
- Repot at the same depth. Add a layer of fresh nutrient-free peat and sand carnivorous mix, set the plant so the soil line sits exactly where it did before, and backfill around the sides, firming lightly.
- Settle it in. Water once to settle the soil, then let it sit. Hold off on more water until the top of the soil dries — fresh soil around a small root system stays wet for a while.
Aftercare
Because the new soil holds more water than the old crammed rootball did, ease right back on watering — let the top of the soil dry before you water dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' again, or you will rot the roots in the very pot you just moved it to. Keep it out of harsh direct sun for a fortnight. Do not fertilise for about 4 weeks — fresh mix already carries nutrients and feeding freshly disturbed roots scorches them.
The right soil mix for dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'
Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps' wants nutrient-free peat and sand carnivorous mix. A 1:1 sphagnum-peat and silica-sand (or perlite) mix is ideal. Never use fertilised potting soil, compost or lime. Always use fresh mix when you repot — reusing old, broken-down soil reintroduces the compaction and poor drainage you are repotting to fix.
Repotting dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' — frequently asked questions
How often should you repot dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'?
Only every 2–4 years, when genuinely crowded for dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'. Only repot dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' every 2–4 years, and only when it is genuinely root-bound — it flowers and grows best slightly crowded. Step up just one pot size in spring using nutrient-free peat and sand carnivorous mix. The key mistake is over-potting: a too-big pot stays wet and rots the roots.
What size pot does dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' need?
Go up only one pot size — roughly 2–3 cm (about an inch) wider in diameter, no more. Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps' positively prefers a snug pot: it flowers and grows better when the roots are a little restricted. The single biggest repotting mistake here is over-potting — dropping dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' into a pot two or three sizes up. All that surplus soil holds water the small root system cannot use, stays cold and wet, and rots the roots within weeks. When in doubt, choose the smaller pot. Use our pot size calculator to size it from the plant's current pot and root spread.
When is the best time of year to repot dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'?
Early spring, just as new growth restarts, is the ideal window for dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'. The plant is moving into its strongest growth phase and re-roots into fresh soil quickly. Avoid repotting in winter dormancy or, for flowering plants, while it is in bud or bloom — recovery is slowest then and you risk dropping the flowers.
Does dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' like to be root-bound?
Yes — dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' genuinely flowers and grows best when slightly pot-bound, so do not rush to repot it. The mistake to avoid is over-potting into a much larger pot: the excess soil stays wet, the roots cannot use it, and the plant rots. Only repot every few years and only one snug size up.
Should you fertilise dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' after repotting?
Not immediately. Wait about 4 weeks after repotting dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps'. Fresh mix already contains nutrients, and feeding freshly cut or disturbed roots burns them. Resume your normal feeding routine once you see new growth.
Related guides
- Dionaea muscipula 'Dentate Traps' care — light, water, soil and common problems
- How often to water dionaea muscipula 'dentate traps' — the watering brief
- How to repot a plant — the complete step-by-step method
- Root-bound plant — how to spot and fix it
- Pot size calculator — size the next pot correctly
- When & how to repot snake plant
- When & how to repot dracaena
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- All 5561 repotting guides in the Growli library