A complete guide to mixing, monitoring, and mastering nutrient solutions for maximum crop health and yield
Introduction: The Heart of Hydroponic Success
In soil, plants can often find what they need. In hydroponic vertical farming, you are the soil. Every nutrient, every mineral, every drop of water passes through your hands.
This responsibility comes down to two simple measurements: EC and pH.
Master these two numbers, and you master plant nutrition. Ignore them, and no amount of expensive lights or perfect climate control will save your crop.
This guide takes you from beginner to pro:
- What EC and pH are and why they matter
- How to mix nutrient solutions correctly
- Daily monitoring and adjustment protocols
- Troubleshooting plant symptoms by EC/pH
- Advanced strategies for commercial growers
Part 1: What Is EC?
Definition
EC stands for Electrical Conductivity.
It measures how well water conducts electricity — which directly correlates to the concentration of dissolved nutrient salts in your solution.
Unit: mS/cm (milliSiemens per centimeter) or µS/cm (microSiemens per centimeter)
- 1 mS/cm = 1000 µS/cm
Why EC Matters
EC tells you how much “food” is in your water. Too little, and plants starve. Too much, and plants burn.
| EC Level | What It Means | Plant Response |
|---|---|---|
| Below 0.5 | Very dilute, like rainwater | Starvation, yellow leaves |
| 0.5-1.0 | Low nutrient concentration | Suitable for seedlings, light feeders |
| 1.0-1.8 | Moderate concentration | Ideal for leafy greens, herbs |
| 1.8-2.5 | High concentration | Ideal for fruiting crops, heavy feeders |
| Above 2.5 | Very high concentration | Risk of nutrient burn, reduced growth |
EC vs. TDS vs. PPM
You may also see these terms:
| Term | Meaning | Relationship to EC |
|---|---|---|
| EC | Electrical Conductivity | The actual measurement |
| TDS | Total Dissolved Solids | Calculated from EC × conversion factor |
| PPM | Parts Per Million | Same as TDS |
Conversion factors vary by meter:
- 1.0 mS/cm × 500 = 500 ppm (Hanna scale)
- 1.0 mS/cm × 700 = 700 ppm (Eutech scale)
Recommendation: Always use EC. PPM conversions vary between meters and cause confusion.
Part 2: What Is pH?
Definition
pH measures how acidic or alkaline your nutrient solution is.
Scale: 0 (most acidic) to 14 (most alkaline)
- pH 7.0 = neutral
- Below 7.0 = acidic
- Above 7.0 = alkaline
Why pH Matters
At the wrong pH, nutrients become locked out — they’re present in the water but plants cannot absorb them.
The Golden Range for Hydroponics: pH 5.5 to 6.5
| pH Level | Effect on Plants |
|---|---|
| Below 5.0 | Toxic levels of iron, manganese; calcium deficiency |
| 5.0-5.5 | Slightly acidic; acceptable for some crops |
| 5.5-6.5 | Optimal — all nutrients available |
| 6.5-7.0 | Iron, phosphorus availability decreases |
| Above 7.0 | Multiple deficiencies, poor growth |
pH and Nutrient Availability
At different pH levels, different nutrients become available or unavailable:
| Nutrient | Available at pH | Locked out when pH is… |
|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen (N) | 5.5-7.0 | Below 5.0 or above 7.5 |
| Phosphorus (P) | 5.5-6.5 | Below 5.0 or above 7.0 |
| Potassium (K) | 5.5-7.5 | Below 5.0 |
| Calcium (Ca) | 6.0-7.0 | Below 5.5 |
| Magnesium (Mg) | 5.5-7.0 | Below 5.0 |
| Iron (Fe) | 5.0-6.0 | Above 6.5 |
| Manganese (Mn) | 5.0-6.5 | Above 6.5 |
| Boron (B) | 5.0-7.0 | Below 5.0 |
| Zinc (Zn) | 5.0-6.5 | Above 6.5 |
Key insight: Keep pH between 5.5 and 6.5, and all nutrients remain available.
Part 3: EC and pH by Growth Stage
Germination (Days 1-5)
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| EC | 0.5-0.8 mS/cm |
| pH | 5.5-6.0 |
Note: Seeds contain their own stored energy. Very low nutrients are sufficient.
Seedling Stage (Days 6-12)
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| EC | 0.8-1.2 mS/cm |
| pH | 5.5-6.2 |
Goal: Gentle nutrient levels to support early root development.
Vegetative Stage (Days 13-25)
| Parameter | Leafy Greens | Herbs | Fruiting Crops |
|---|---|---|---|
| EC | 1.2-1.8 | 1.2-1.6 | 1.5-2.0 |
| pH | 5.8-6.2 | 5.5-6.0 | 5.8-6.5 |
Goal: Support rapid leaf and stem growth.
Flowering/Fruiting Stage (After Day 25)
| Parameter | Leafy Greens | Herbs | Fruiting Crops |
|---|---|---|---|
| EC | 1.5-2.0 | 1.4-1.8 | 1.8-2.5 |
| pH | 5.8-6.2 | 5.5-6.0 | 5.8-6.5 |
Goal: Maximize flower and fruit production.
Part 4: EC and pH by Crop Type
Leafy Greens
| Crop | EC (mS/cm) | pH |
|---|---|---|
| Lettuce | 1.2-1.8 | 5.8-6.2 |
| Kale | 1.5-2.0 | 5.8-6.3 |
| Spinach | 1.4-1.8 | 6.0-6.5 |
| Arugula | 1.2-1.6 | 5.8-6.2 |
| Swiss chard | 1.5-2.0 | 6.0-6.5 |
Herbs
| Crop | EC (mS/cm) | pH |
|---|---|---|
| Basil | 1.2-1.8 | 5.5-6.0 |
| Cilantro | 1.2-1.6 | 5.5-6.0 |
| Mint | 1.4-1.8 | 5.5-6.0 |
| Parsley | 1.4-1.8 | 5.5-6.0 |
| Dill | 1.2-1.6 | 5.5-6.0 |
Fruiting Crops
| Crop | EC (mS/cm) | pH |
|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes | 2.0-3.5 | 5.8-6.5 |
| Peppers | 1.8-2.5 | 5.8-6.3 |
| Cucumbers | 1.8-2.5 | 5.8-6.2 |
| Strawberries | 1.2-1.8 | 5.8-6.2 |
Microgreens
| Crop | EC (mS/cm) | pH |
|---|---|---|
| Most varieties | 0.8-1.2 | 5.5-6.0 |
Part 5: How to Mix Nutrient Solution
The Golden Rule of Mixing
Never mix concentrated A and B together before adding to water.
Mixing concentrated A and B creates a chemical reaction that causes precipitation — nutrients fall out of solution and become unavailable to plants.
Correct Mixing Order
Step 1: Start with clean water
- RO water (0 EC) is ideal
- Dechlorinated tap water is acceptable if EC is below 0.4
- Test tap water first — high baseline EC causes problems
Step 2: Add Part A (calcium-based)
- Pour the required amount into water
- Stir or circulate until fully dissolved
- Wait 1-2 minutes
Step 3: Add Part B (nitrate-based)
- Pour into the same water
- Stir or circulate until fully dissolved
- Wait 1-2 minutes
Step 4: Add Part C (micronutrients — if used)
- Add after A and B are fully mixed
- Stir well
Step 5: Add supplements (optional)
- Beneficial bacteria, enzymes, or other additives
- Add last, after base nutrients
Step 6: Check and adjust EC
- Measure EC
- Add more A+B (in correct ratio) if EC is too low
- Add plain water if EC is too high
Step 7: Adjust pH
- Add pH down (phosphoric or citric acid) to lower pH
- Add pH up (potassium hydroxide) to raise pH
- Add slowly, wait 5-10 minutes, re-test
Mixing Example (100L reservoir)
| Step | Action | Amount | Resulting EC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start | RO water | 100L | 0.0 |
| Add Part A | 200ml | Stir | ~0.8 |
| Add Part B | 200ml | Stir | ~1.6 |
| Check EC | Target 1.6 | – | 1.6 ✅ |
| Adjust pH | pH down | 5ml | 5.8 ✅ |
Part 6: Daily Monitoring Protocol
What to Check Every Day
| Task | Tool | Target | Action if Off |
|---|---|---|---|
| EC | EC meter | By crop/stage | Add nutrients or water |
| pH | pH meter | 5.5-6.5 | Add pH up/down |
| Water level | Visual | Above minimum | Top up with pH-adjusted water |
| Temperature | Thermometer | 18-22°C | Adjust heater/chiller |
| Plant color | Visual | Green, no spots | See troubleshooting |
The Daily Log
| Date | Time | EC | pH | Water Temp | Water Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Why logging matters: Trends tell you more than single readings. EC rising daily? Water is evaporating faster than plants are eating — top up more often. EC dropping daily? Plants are hungry — increase concentration.
EC Trend Interpretation
| Trend | What It Means | Action |
|---|---|---|
| EC stable, water level drops | Perfect balance | Continue |
| EC rising, water level drops | More water than nutrients being used | Top up with plain water |
| EC dropping, water level drops | More nutrients than water being used | Increase nutrient concentration |
| EC stable, water level stable | No consumption (problem) | Check plants, roots, pumps |
Part 7: Weekly Maintenance
Change Nutrient Solution Every 7-10 Days
Even with perfect daily adjustments, old solution accumulates:
- Unused salts
- Organic matter from roots
- Potential pathogens
Weekly procedure:
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Drain entire reservoir |
| 2 | Rinse with clean water |
| 3 | Wipe down walls and pump intake |
| 4 | Fill with fresh water |
| 5 | Mix fresh nutrients (see Part 5) |
| 6 | Adjust EC and pH |
| 7 | Run system for 1 hour |
| 8 | Re-check EC/pH |
Calibrate Your Meters Weekly
| Meter | Calibration Frequency | Calibration Solution |
|---|---|---|
| EC meter | Monthly | 1.413 mS/cm or 2.77 mS/cm |
| pH meter | Weekly | pH 4.0 and pH 7.0 |
pH meter calibration steps:
- Rinse probe with distilled water
- Place in pH 7.0 solution
- Calibrate to 7.0
- Rinse
- Place in pH 4.0 solution
- Calibrate to 4.0
- Rinse and return to storage solution
Part 8: Troubleshooting by EC and pH
EC Too High (Above Target)
| Possible Cause | Solution |
|---|---|
| Water evaporation | Top up with plain pH-adjusted water |
| Over-feeding | Dilute with plain water |
| Meter uncalibrated | Re-calibrate |
| Old solution | Change completely |
Plant symptoms of EC too high:
- Leaf tip burn (brown, crispy edges)
- Dark green, curled leaves
- Reduced growth rate
- Root browning
EC Too Low (Below Target)
| Possible Cause | Solution |
|---|---|
| Plants eating more than expected | Increase nutrient concentration |
| Under-feeding | Add more A+B in correct ratio |
| Water added without nutrients | Add nutrients to match volume |
| Leak in system | Find and fix leak |
Plant symptoms of EC too low:
- Yellow lower leaves (nitrogen deficiency)
- Slow growth
- Small leaves
- Purple stems (phosphorus deficiency)
pH Too High (Above 6.5)
| Possible Cause | Solution |
|---|---|
| Tap water has high pH | Use pH down, consider RO system |
| Nutrient brand affects pH | Adjust after mixing |
| Algae growth in reservoir | Clean system, block light |
Plant symptoms of high pH:
- Iron deficiency (yellow new growth, green veins)
- Manganese deficiency (yellow between veins)
- Overall poor growth
pH Too Low (Below 5.5)
| Possible Cause | Solution |
|---|---|
| Too much pH down added | Add pH up slowly |
| Certain nutrient brands run acidic | Adjust after mixing |
| Root rot (acids from decay) | Check roots, add beneficial bacteria |
Plant symptoms of low pH:
- Calcium deficiency (distorted new growth, tip burn)
- Magnesium deficiency (yellow between veins on older leaves)
- Possible toxicity of iron/manganese
Part 9: Troubleshooting by Plant Symptoms
Yellow Leaves
| Symptom | Likely Cause | EC/pH Check | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lower leaves yellow | Nitrogen deficiency | EC too low | Increase EC |
| New leaves yellow | Iron deficiency | pH too high (>6.5) | Lower pH to 5.8 |
| Yellow between veins | Magnesium deficiency | pH too low or high | Adjust to 5.8-6.2 |
Brown Leaf Tips
| Symptom | Likely Cause | EC/pH Check | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crispy brown tips | Nutrient burn | EC too high | Dilute solution |
| Brown edges, curling | Potassium deficiency | EC too low | Increase EC |
Stunted Growth
| Symptom | Likely Cause | EC/pH Check | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall slow growth | General deficiency | EC too low | Increase EC |
| Small, dark leaves | Phosphorus deficiency | pH too high or low | Adjust to 5.8-6.2 |
Root Problems
| Symptom | Likely Cause | EC/pH Check | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brown, slimy roots | Root rot | pH may be low | Add beneficial bacteria, lower water level |
| White, healthy roots | Good | EC/pH on target | Continue |
Part 10: Water Quality — The Foundation
Why Starting Water Matters
Your starting water affects everything. High baseline EC means less room for nutrients.
| Water Type | Typical EC | Suitable For |
|---|---|---|
| RO (reverse osmosis) | 0.0-0.1 | All crops, best choice |
| Distilled | 0.0-0.1 | All crops, expensive for large systems |
| Soft tap water | 0.2-0.4 | Leafy greens, herbs |
| Hard tap water | 0.4-0.8 | May cause calcium buildup |
| Well water | Varies widely | Test first — often high in iron or sulfur |
Test Your Tap Water
Before using tap water, test:
- Baseline EC
- pH
- Chlorine/chloramine (use dechlorinator if present)
- Hardness (calcium/magnesium levels)
Adjusting for Tap Water
If your tap water EC is 0.4:
- Target EC for lettuce: 1.4
- Nutrients to add: 1.0 (1.4 – 0.4)
Important: You still need to add a complete nutrient formula. Don’t assume tap water provides everything.
Part 11: Advanced Strategies for Pro Growers
Strategy 1: Crop-Specific EC Ramping
Instead of one EC for the entire grow cycle, ramp EC up gradually.
Example for tomatoes:
| Week | EC (mS/cm) |
|---|---|
| 1-2 (seedling) | 1.2 |
| 3-4 (early veg) | 1.6 |
| 5-6 (late veg) | 2.0 |
| 7-8 (early flower) | 2.4 |
| 9+ (fruiting) | 2.8-3.2 |
Strategy 2: pH Swing Management
Allow pH to drift within the optimal range rather than locking it to a single number.
Example:
- Monday: pH 5.5
- Wednesday: pH 5.8
- Friday: pH 6.2
- Sunday: adjust back to 5.5
Why: Different nutrients are most available at different pH levels. A slow drift ensures all nutrients get their turn.
Strategy 3: EC by Light Integration
Higher light intensity increases photosynthesis, which increases nutrient uptake.
| Light Intensity (PPFD) | EC Adjustment |
|---|---|
| Below 200 | Reduce EC by 10-20% |
| 200-400 | Standard EC |
| Above 400 | Increase EC by 10-20% |
Strategy 4: Temperature-EC Relationship
| Water Temperature | EC Adjustment |
|---|---|
| Below 18°C | Reduce EC (plants eat less) |
| 18-22°C | Standard EC |
| Above 22°C | Increase EC (more oxygen demand) |
Part 12: Common Beginner Mistakes
Mistake 1: Mixing A and B Concentrated
Problem: White precipitate forms — nutrients fall out of solution.
Solution: Always add A and B separately to a large volume of water.
Mistake 2: Never Changing Solution
Problem: Salt buildup, nutrient imbalances, pathogen growth.
Solution: Change reservoir every 7-10 days.
Mistake 3: Ignoring pH Creep
Problem: pH drifts over time but goes unmonitored.
Solution: Check pH daily. Small adjustments prevent big problems.
Mistake 4: Using PPM Instead of EC
Problem: Different meters use different conversion factors (500 vs 700). 500 ppm on one meter equals 700 ppm on another.
Solution: Use EC exclusively. It’s universal.
Mistake 5: Not Calibrating Meters
Problem: Readings drift over time. Your “1.6 EC” might actually be 1.2.
Solution: Calibrate pH meter weekly, EC meter monthly.
Mistake 6: Adding pH Adjusters Directly to Reservoir
Problem: Localized pH shock can damage roots.
Solution: Dilute pH adjusters in a cup of water first, then add slowly.
Part 13: Equipment Recommendations
EC and pH Meters by Budget
| Budget | EC Meter | pH Meter | Total Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry | HM Digital TDS-3 ($15-20) | pH test strips ($10) | $25-30 |
| Mid-range | Bluelab Truncheon ($150-200) | Apera PH20 ($50-80) | $200-280 |
| Professional | Bluelab Guardian Monitor ($300-400) | Same (built-in) | $300-400 |
| Commercial | Hanna GroLine ($400-500) | Hanna GroLine ($400-500) | $800-1,000 |
Other Essential Equipment
| Equipment | Purpose | Budget |
|---|---|---|
| Calibration solutions | EC (1.413) + pH (4.0, 7.0) | $20-30 |
| Storage solution | For pH probe | $10-15 |
| Thermometer | Water temperature | $10-20 |
| Measuring cup | Accurate nutrient measurement | $5-10 |
| Syringe or pipette | Small pH adjustments | $5-10 |
Part 14: Quick Reference Cards
Daily Checklist
| Task | Tool |
|---|---|
| □ Measure EC | EC meter |
| □ Measure pH | pH meter |
| □ Check water level | Visual |
| □ Check water temp | Thermometer |
| □ Log readings | Notebook |
| □ Visual plant inspection | Eyes |
Weekly Checklist
| Task | Frequency |
|---|---|
| □ Change nutrient solution | Every 7-10 days |
| □ Clean reservoir | Weekly |
| □ Calibrate pH meter | Weekly |
| □ Calibrate EC meter | Monthly |
EC/pH by Crop Quick Card
| Crop | EC (mS/cm) | pH |
|---|---|---|
| Lettuce | 1.2-1.8 | 5.8-6.2 |
| Basil | 1.2-1.8 | 5.5-6.0 |
| Kale | 1.5-2.0 | 5.8-6.3 |
| Tomatoes | 2.0-3.5 | 5.8-6.5 |
| Peppers | 1.8-2.5 | 5.8-6.3 |
Summary: The Mastery Path
Beginner Level
- Understand what EC and pH measure
- Own basic EC and pH meters
- Check EC/pH daily
- Keep pH between 5.5-6.5
Intermediate Level
- Calibrate meters regularly
- Mix nutrients in correct order
- Change solution weekly
- Log daily readings and spot trends
Pro Level
- Adjust EC by growth stage and crop type
- Use pH drift strategy
- Integrate EC with light and temperature
- Troubleshoot plant symptoms by EC/pH
Next Steps
Ready to master your nutrient management?
- Read our PPFD/DLI Complete Guide for light optimization
- Read our LED Spectrum Deep Dive for spectrum strategies
- Contact us for customized nutrient schedules for your crops

