Do This 2-Minute Job Right Before Your Sunflowers Bloom – for Bigger, Longer-Lasting Flowers
See why a high-potash feed makes a big difference
Sunflowers always impress. But growing those tall stems, large leaves, and spectacular flower heads requires lots of energy. Fertilizing sunflowers during the season helps support this, and the plant’s needs shift in early summer.
At the start of the season, sunflowers need a balanced mix of nutrients. Once they have buds, you should fertilize sunflowers with a high-potassium feed to guarantee large, strong flowers.
When you grow sunflowers, feeding the plants is important. It is even more so if you have poor soil or grow them in pots. And for the best results, you need to apply the right fertilizer at the right time. To explain why and how to fertilize sunflowers in summer, I chatted to plant experts about what makes the perfect feed and how often to use it. (And this Miracle-Gro water-soluble plant food, available at Amazon, provides any flowers with crucial nutrients for stronger blooms.)
When to Fertilize Sunflowers
Sunflowers are heavy feeders that need lots of nutrients throughout the season to develop their (sometimes towering) stems and distinctive flower heads. Both annual and perennial sunflower varieties benefit from additional feeding, though how much you need to may depend on where they are growing.
Before planting sunflowers, it is beneficial to add compost or well-rotted manure to boost soil nutrient levels. Then, once the plants reach 6-8 inches tall, a balanced fertilizer (like this all-purpose plant food from Burpee) helps ensure plants receive a dose of nutrients to encourage speedy, healthy growth.
The next important time to fertilize sunflowers is just before the plants bloom. At this stage, feeding them with a high-potash fertilizer helps to encourage large flowers. And regular additional feeds will help keep sunflowers blooming all summer long.
‘The best time to start using a high-potash feed is when the sunflower has established a strong stem and healthy leaves and the first flower buds begin to form,’ claims Dr Russell Sharp, a plant scientist who develops plant care products at Eutrema.
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‘This is the point where the plant's priorities change from producing leafy growth to developing its flowers.’
How pivotal fertilizing sunflowers is can depend on your soil type. ‘If they're growing in fertile garden soil, they may need very little additional feeding early in the season,’ claims Russell.
‘However, those grown in containers or poorer soils will often benefit from extra nutrients once they begin developing flower buds.’ It makes regular feeding crucial when growing sunflowers in pots.

Dr Russell Sharp is a plant scientist and innovator, best known for developing the range of plant care products offered by his company, Eutrema. He previously served as Senior Lecturer in Horticulture at Moulton College and Northampton University, where he shared his expertise with the next generation of plant enthusiasts.
How to Fertilize Sunflowers During Flowering
A high-potash fertilizer is a product with a higher amount of potassium (the K in a product’s NPK ratio shown as three numbers on any packaging), and it is beneficial for developing healthy buds and strong flowers.
‘A high-potash feed will encourage your sunflowers to produce healthier, stronger, and bigger flowers,’ explains Lotte Berendsen, an expert from PlantIn, the plant care app.
‘As potash encourages blooming, you can begin feeding with a high-potash feed when the first buds start to form. A fertilizer with an NPK of 5-10-10 is ideal. Continue feeding to keep supporting the flowers on your plant.’
Fertilize sunflowers every week or two with a liquid feed applied when you water plants. A perfect liquid fertilizer for sunflowers will be a bloom booster or tomato feed.
‘Tomato feed naturally contains a low level of nitrogen, and higher amounts of potash and phosphorus,’ adds Lotte. ‘It helps with the transport of water throughout the plant and its flowers and reduces water loss, which is crucial for the development of healthy flowers.’
You can use organic fertilizer for sunflowers, including organic tomato feed, liquid seaweed fertilizer, or a homemade tomato fertilizer such as comfrey tea or nettle feed.
‘Continue feeding through the flowering period, particularly for sunflowers grown in pots, as nutrients are used up much more quickly in containers than they are in open ground,’ concludes Russell.

Lotte is a gardening enthusiast, writer, and plant expert at PlantIn, where she provides customers with detailed care and treatment plans.
Shop Summer Fertilizer for Sunflowers
There is a huge range of sunflowers to grow, from towering varieties that reach 12 feet plus to dwarf sunflowers for pots. You can prune your sunflowers to keep them at their best all summer long. It is as simple as removing dead or brown leaves, and also cutting old blooms off multi-flowering ones.
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Drew has worked as a writer since 2008 and was also a professional gardener for many years. As a trained horticulturist, he worked in prestigious historic gardens, including Hanbury Hall and the world-famous Hidcote Manor Garden. He also spent time as a specialist kitchen gardener at Soho Farmhouse and Netherby Hall, where he grew vegetables, fruit, herbs, and cut flowers for restaurants. Drew has written for numerous print and online publications and is an allotment holder and garden blogger. He is shortlisted for the Digital Gardening Writer of the Year at the 2025 Garden Media Guild Awards.