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Mature size & growth rate

How big does Fingerroot Ginger (Curcuma comosa) get?

Also called Wan Chak Motluk, Thai Ginger, Krachai.

More about fingerroot ginger

About Fingerroot Ginger

Curcuma comosa · also called Wan Chak Motluk, Thai Ginger · tropical

A Thai medicinal ginger with distinctive finger-like rhizomes and large, deep-green leaves with attractive purple midribs. Produces attractive pink-purple flower bracts in summer. Used extensively in Thai traditional medicine. An eye-catching tropical accent plant for warm gardens, conservatories, or large containers.

Mature size: 60-100 cm tall in flower

Watch for — Lack of bloom: Requires warmth and a period of active growth before flowering. Ensure rhizomes are mature and well-fed throughout the growing season.

Indoor size vs how big it gets in the wild

Fingerroot Ginger stays fairly low but widens over time — it spreads into a bigger clump by offsets, runners or rhizomes rather than shooting upward. Indoors and in a pot, expect 60-100 cm tall in flower. A pot, your light levels and a little pruning are what set the final size in a home, far more than the plant's theoretical potential.

Size here is about width, not height: the plant builds an ever-wider clump or sends out plantlets and runners while staying relatively short.

Growth rate and years to mature

Fingerroot Ginger is a moderate grower. Realistically, expect three to six years to reach mature indoor size, gaining a steady amount each growing season. Its feeding profile backs this up: apply a balanced, slow-release fertiliser in spring and supplement with a dilute liquid fertiliser every 2 weeks during summer. cease all feeding as the plant enters dormancy in autumn.

Want this turned into the right next pot at the right moment? The pot size calculator and the fingerroot ginger repotting guide cover when and how much to size up — pot size is one of the biggest levers on how fast fingerroot ginger grows.

How to keep fingerroot ginger smaller

You are not stuck with the maximum size. For fingerroot ginger specifically, these are the levers, in order of impact:

The keep-it-smaller method, step by step

  1. Lift the whole plant. Slide fingerroot ginger out of its pot in spring when the clump has filled it.
  2. Split the clump. Tease or cut the rootball into two or more sections, each with healthy roots and growth.
  3. Repot one division. Put a single division back in the original pot to reset it to a smaller size; pot or give away the rest.
  4. Remove offsets as they form. Through the year, detach new runners or pups to stop it spreading again.

How to grow fingerroot ginger bigger or faster

If you want it to fill the space sooner, push the conditions rather than hoping — for fingerroot ginger the accelerators are:

Light is almost always the ceiling. The fingerroot ginger light requirements page covers exactly how bright a spot it needs to grow at its potential instead of stalling.

When fingerroot ginger outgrows the room (or the pot)

"Too big" usually arrives as one of these signs for fingerroot ginger:

If it is the pot rather than the room, it is a repotting job, not a goodbye — see the fingerroot ginger repotting guide. If you want more of this plant instead of a bigger one, the fingerroot ginger propagation guide turns prunings into new plants.

Fingerroot Ginger size — frequently asked questions

How big does fingerroot ginger get?

Fingerroot Ginger reaches 60-100 cm tall in flower when grown indoors. Size here is about width, not height: the plant builds an ever-wider clump or sends out plantlets and runners while staying relatively short.

Is fingerroot ginger slow or fast growing?

Fingerroot Ginger is a moderate grower. Expect three to six years to reach mature indoor size, gaining a steady amount each growing season. Fingerroot Ginger stays fairly low but widens over time — it spreads into a bigger clump by offsets, runners or rhizomes rather than shooting upward.

How long does fingerroot ginger take to reach full size?

Roughly three to six years to reach mature indoor size, gaining a steady amount each growing season. Light, pot size and feeding move that timeline more than anything else.

How do I keep fingerroot ginger smaller?

Divide the clump every year or two — splitting fingerroot ginger is the main way to control its spread and refresh it. Remove runners, plantlets or offsets as they appear if you want it to stay a single tight clump. Keep it slightly pot-bound; a snug pot naturally limits how wide the clump can get.

How can I make fingerroot ginger grow bigger or faster?

Give it a wider pot and let the clump fill it — width is exactly how this plant gets bigger. Good light plus regular feeding maximises offset and runner production. Leave plantlets and offsets attached and feed through the growing season for the fastest spread.

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