What is the best rooting hormone for plant cuttings? Numerous homemade remedies are claimed to work for rooting cuttings, including cinnamon, honey, willow extracts, aspirin, peroxide, coconut water, vitamin C, and aloe vera. Which of these works best?
How do they compare to commercial products? In this post, I will review various options promoted on social media and recommend the best ones.

Antifungal vs. Rooting
These two concepts are commonly misunderstood in discussions about rooting cuttings. There are two processes to consider when trying to root cuttings. The main one is to get the cutting to initiate roots, and this can only be done by having enough rooting hormone in the plant. It can be a natural rooting hormone, or it can be added by the gardener.
The second process is keeping the cutting free of fungal attack so that roots can form. If cuttings get infected before roots form, the cutting may deteriorate to a point where roots won’t form. In this way, antifungal agents may help rooting, but they don’t cause roots to form.
If cuttings are kept relatively clean, fungal infection is usually not a problem, and for this reason, most commercial rooting hormones do not contain a fungicide.
Cuttings that have been taken incorrectly, or at the wrong time, or from plants that are hard to root, tend not to root. Consequently, they develop a fungal infection as the plant material dies.
Cuttings Root On Their Own
Many cuttings root on their own without any added rooting hormone because cuttings naturally contain it. Most softwood cuttings from herbaceous plants and houseplants root very easily. Most shrubs are easily propagated from softwood or semi-hardwood cuttings.
This fact has led to a lot of confusion about homemade rooting hormones. Place some aspirin in water, insert the cutting and its roots. People incorrectly conclude that the aspirin caused the rooting. It didn’t. The water, along with the natural rooting hormones in the plant, caused the cutting to root.
To test a rooting hormone, you need to use a plant species that does not root easily, and you need to run controls by trying some cuttings with and without the test material. Without a control, you can’t claim success with any homemade rooting hormone.
Honey Rooting Hormone
Honey contains no rooting hormones, so it will not help cuttings produce roots. Cuttings of Queen of the Philippines (Mussaenda philippica) showed no improvement over controls. Honey also did not significantly increase rooting on Parkia biglobosa. There was some improvement in rooting when pre-soaked in honey before IBM (a rooting hormone) is applied, for Ricinodendron heudelotti.
An unpublished report from the University of Hawaii compared honey to commercial rooting hormones and found mixed results testing Hemigraphis alternata, Plumbago zeylanica, Arachis hypogaea, Vitex rotundifolia, and Hibiscus clayii.
A few online citizen science projects compare honey to a control or a rooting hormone. These usually show that both the control and honey work, but they don’t have enough samples and repetitions to reach any statistical conclusion.
It does have antifungal properties and may reduce fungal infections, but as stated above, this is usually not a problem with healthy cuttings.
The reason honey does not spoil is that it only contains 17% water. At this low level, it sucks the water out of bacteria and fungi, killing them. I can only assume that dipping a cutting in whole honey would do the same to the cutting and harm it. Many people suggest a honey solution, which would be better.
Cinnamon Rooting Hormone
We talk about cinnamon as being one product, but it is many, and the so-called cinnamon available from grocery stores in North America is not even the real cinnamon. Anecdotal comments about cinnamon working are of little use since they never specify which cinnamon is being used.
Cinnamon, real or fake, does not contain rooting hormones. It does have some antimicrobial properties and may help keep fungal growth down, but it does not cause roots to form.
Coconut Water Rooting Hormone
Fresh coconut water contains growth hormones and regulators; after all, a coconut is a seed. These chemicals are very unstable and variable. Some have suggested that coconut water might work as a rooting hormone, but few tests have been done.
In one test, fresh green coconuts were used, but there was no increase in rooting. Another study using semi-hardwood cuttings found more rooting with coconut milk, but the study does not provide details of the milk used, nor does it provide adequate statistical analysis.
Coconut water from fresh green coconuts may contain rooting hormone and may work as a rooting hormone, but this is not a common source of coconut milk for most gardeners. It is unlikely that coconut water from a jar or can will work.
Peroxide Rooting Hormone
Peroxide is a common name for hydrogen peroxide, which is normally supplied as a 3% solution. Higher concentrations are available.
Hydrogen peroxide is a disinfectant and contains no rooting hormone. It is a signaling molecule in a wide range of reactions during plant growth, so its presence may improve the normal rooting process.
Peroxide produced quicker rooting in semi-hardwood olive cuttings (which are hard to root) when it was used as a pretreatment before applying IBA rooting hormone. There is also evidence that peroxide is involved in the function of IBA in mung bean seedlings and that it helps with root growth in sweet potato seedlings.
A simple citizen science experiment compared cuttings in water with and without hydrogen peroxide. Rooting only occurred without peroxide.
There may be some value in treating cuttings with peroxide before applying rooting hormones, but there is no evidence that hydrogen peroxide on its own causes roots to develop.
Aspirin Rooting Hormone
Aspirin is not a rooting hormone, and it probably has limited, if any, positive effect on rooting. For more on this, see Aspirin Rooting Hormone – Does it Work?
Willow Water Rooting Hormone
I have discussed this option in detail in another post called Willow Water Rooting Hormone – Does It Work?
Willows contain natural IBA, and so it is claimed that by soaking the bark, you create a solution of IBA that will work as a rooting hormone. The problem is that the solubility of IBA is low in water, and even if the extraction is as complete as possible, the resulting solution is lower than any recommended commercial product. Not only that, but most recipes suggest diluting this, which makes it even less effective.
The concentration of IAA may be high enough, but the science does not support the idea that willow water is a good rooting hormone solution.
Other Homemade Rooting Hormones
There are a number of other homemade rooting hormones that are promoted on social media, but they are not taken seriously by most people, and they probably don’t work. These include:
- Aloe vera juice
- Vitamin C
- Apple cider vinegar
If you disagree, post a link to a scientific study in the comments below.
What Should Gardeners Do?
Many plants root easily without any rooting hormone. If you do not have a commercial product, try rooting the cutting without it.
If you plan to do more difficult cuttings, buy a commercial powder. It will last at least 10 years and be worth the money. Fooling around with home remedies that either don’t work or don’t work very well is not worth your time.





Hi, I’d heard that placing a cutting in with another plant that roots easily, like a spider plant, will help because of the rooting hormones the spider puts out. This is similar to how the old folks used willow cuttings in with other tree scions to help root them. Appreciate any info on that?
I doubt anyone has tested spider plants. I assume this is done for water rooting, and most things that can be rooted in water root easily, so they don’t need any extra hormone.
I don’t see any benefits when rooting in soil.
Aloe has been studied. It contains salicylic acid, which enhances the oxidation of auxin.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/318299853_Aloe_vera_Leaf_Extract_as_a_Potential_Growth_Enhancer_for_Populus_Trees_Grown_Under_in_vitro_Conditions
That study does not even look at rooting cuttings – so can’t reach any conclusions from it about using Aloe as a rooting hormone.
https://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/uhmg/news/V21-honey-rooting-Firth.pdf
Not a published study.
In the following two videos rooting powder as well as a water control ‘group’ are being compared against the outcome of using either Aloe vera, cinnamon and honey.
It seems that the cuttings being used are of some sort of soft herb, but I have not been able to understand what the name of the plant is.
Aloe vera: A guy demonstrates in this video how effective Aloe vera is compared to just using water and compared to using rooting powder. It turns out that Aloe vera is not as effective as rooting powder, but only comparable to using water. Aloe Vera success: 6 out of 15, rooting powder: 100%, water: ~ 50 %
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Piu9xbQCntg
(It seems the guy says Aloe vera has 50 % or more success, but my eyes do not see that when he picks up the specimens, but please count.)
Cinnamon and Honey: The guy again makes a comparison. It seems that test with rooting powder and test with only water are the two with the lowest amount of fungal attack whereas cinnamon and honey tests have more problems with fungus. Results are: rooting powder = all plants are with roots, cinnamon = only 2 out of ten are with roots, honney = about 50 % of the cuttings are with roots, water control = 4 out of ten are with roots.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5U8xTgQmuhM
So the conclusion is that only rooting powder shows a clear advantage compared to just using water.
Aloe vera, cinnamon and honey do not show any significant advantage to just using water!
biology experiments using a small stem of a willow tree .more iba in the top it rooted easy with no rooting gel just by itself taking different cutting different days all took,rooted in 12 days so the rooting chemical is in the wood where you would find aspirin. many rooting powder sold on the market contain willow ,alusing young trees and adding willow bark under the plant makes it grow faster.next we tried earthworm fass manure which seems to work better the horse or cow manure ,rabbit manure is very good ,for vegetables
Yes – willow has a lot of natural rooting hormone.
The statement “many rooting powder sold on the market contain willow” is not correct. These hormones are produced synthetically.
I doubt that “willow bark under the plant makes it grow faster” is true – but I will look at any scientific studies you have on this.
I just stumbled upon your site & am really enjoying all the information. Thanks!! I’m a somewhat-newbie plantaholic, so having sources like this to find solid, helpful information is a lifesaver!
I use a very weak bleach solution to spray onto the layers of paper towels I use as a “sandwich” when sprouting Clivia seeds – ostensibly to counteract the mould that otherwise appears as I leave them in a partly covered container in a warm spot.
I suspect the spores drift in from the kitchen bench where the container rests. My success rate with the present batch is 7 out of ten – but that is just the first root sprout. But whether the sprouting is assisted by the bleach directly, or just by minimising the presence of mould, I can’t say.
Thanks again Robert!
What is the situation with rooting gels – do they have more/less/same effectiveness as powder?
Hi, I enjoy your science-based analysis of gardening issues, so thanks for that.
My question is, what do you think about adding a couple of drops of bleach to water that you’re trying to root something in?
Do you think it would hurt or help the rooting process?
Thanks, Leo
PS, corrected the spelling!
no idea.