Aeroponics

Aeroponics is an advanced form of hydroponics where plants are grown with their roots suspended in the air. Instead of using soil or a continuous flow of water, the root systems are periodically misted with a high-density, nutrient-rich aqueous solution. This method represents the pinnacle of precision agriculture, offering unparalleled control over the growing environment.

  • Best Crops for Aeroponic Systems: Lettuce, Herbs, Strawberries & What to Avoid

    Lettuce, herbs, strawberries, and more — which crops perform best in aeroponics and how they compare to DWC and NFT Key Takeaways Lettuce is the #1 aeroponic crop — it reaches full harvest size in 21–28 days, 10–14 days faster than DWC and up to 25 days faster than soil growing. Strawberries in aeroponic systems produce fruit 30–45 days after establishment and yield continuously for 8–10 months with consistent nutrient management. Herbs like basil, mint, and cilantro grow 30–40% faster in aeroponics than in NFT systems due to higher root-zone oxygen levels between mist cycles. Crops with compact root systems under 18 inches perform best — large vining crops like…

  • Building a DIY Aeroponic Tower

    Low-pressure vs high-pressure aeroponics, nozzle selection, and cycle timing — everything you need to build your first tower Key Takeaways A DIY low-pressure aeroponic tower costs $80–$150 in materials and can hold 20–30 plant sites in a 5-foot vertical column. Low-pressure nozzles produce 100–200 micron droplets; high-pressure nozzles produce 30–80 micron droplets that absorb 60% faster into root tissue. The optimal mist cycle for a low-pressure tower is 30 seconds on / 4–5 minutes off — roots need dry intervals to absorb oxygen between misting. Nutrient solution pH must stay between 5.5 and 6.5; even a 12-hour drift above 6.8 causes visible chlorosis within 48 hours. A vertical aeroponic tower…

  • What Is Aeroponics? A Beginner’s Introduction to Mist-Root Growing

    How aeroponic misting works, why roots grow faster, and who should consider this method Key Takeaways Aeroponics suspends plant roots in air and feeds them with nutrient mist sprayed every 30–120 seconds — no soil, no growing medium required. Aeroponic roots absorb up to 98% of available oxygen compared to roughly 60% in soil, which is why plants grow 30–40% faster on average. A basic low-pressure aeroponic system costs $80–$200 to build; high-pressure commercial setups range from $500 to $5,000+. Nutrient solution pH must stay between 5.5 and 6.5 — a range 0.5 points tighter than most hydroponic methods. Aeroponics uses 95% less water than soil gardening and 40% less…