A rooting hormone is used in plant propagation to grow new roots on cuttings.ย In a previous post, called Rooting Hormones – What Are They, I provided some background information. In this post I will help you understand how they should be used.

What Is a Cutting?
In plant propagation a ‘cutting’ is any piece of a plant that does not have roots. It can be part of a stem, or even just a leaf. The cutting is taken off the mother plant, treated with hormone and then planted in a rooting medium (soil). Over time the cutting will form roots.
Many plants will form roots without rooting hormone. For example you can take a piece of stem or leaf off most sedums and they will root. Most perennials will root quite easily without hormone as well. Some trees root easily, some only with rooting hormone, and some will not root at all even with rooting hormone.
Avoiding Diseases
When using rooting hormone it is best to take a bit of the hormone out of the container you bought, and place it in another small container, or flat dish. You will need very little for each cutting.
After applying the rooting hormone to your all of your cuttings, discard any that is left. This will minimize the potential for spreading diseases to future cuttings.

Powdered Rooting Hormones
Rooting hormones that are sold as powders normally contain something like talc – a very fine powder – along with the hormone. Dip the base of the cutting into the rooting hormone and tap it slightly on a hard surface. This will knock off excess powder leaving a very thin film of powder on the cutting. You only want a small amount of rooting hormone on the cutting. Too much can inhibit root growth.
Make a hole in the rooting medium (ie soil) with something like a pencil, and push the cutting into the hole. Firm the soil around the cutting. By making a hole first you reduce the chance removing the hormone as you push the cutting into the soil.
The above is the recommended way to apply the powder. To be honest I don’t do it this way. Instead I dip the cutting in the rooting hormone and instead of shaking the excess off, I just stick it into the soil. As the cutting is pushed into the soil, excess powder will be removed. I think that this method makes a better seal between the cutting and the soil.
Powdered forms of rooting hormone are a bit less effective than liquid forms, but they are easier to work with and are are less toxic. Powdered forms are a good choice for beginners.
Some popular powder rooting hormones include: Rootone, Fastroot, Takeroot, and Stim-root.
Liquid Rooting Hormones
Liquid forms of rooting hormone are available as a ready mixed solution or as a concentrate. If it is a concentrate you will have to dilute it, according to directions, before you use it. Once diluted it is only good for a day – discard unused liquid.
The liquids transfer hormone to the cutting more easily than powders. It is therefore important to control the amount of time the cutting stays in the liquid. Follow instructions, but it is usually no longer than a few seconds. Longer immersion may result in too much hormone getting into the cutting, which may prevent rooting. This timing issue is one reason that powders are easier to use.
Once treated, stick the cutting in the rooting medium following the procedure described above for powders.
Some popular liquid rooting hormones include: Dip’n Grow, Dip & Root, Roots, and Dyna-Grow. There are also gel formulations like Clonex, on the market. Some people really like the gel, but powdered rooting hormones are more popular.
Selecting the Right Concentration
As discussed in Rooting Hormones – What Are They , rooting hormones are available in different strengths (concentrations) to more closely match the kind of plant you are propagating. Some products come in only one strength, and some come in multiple strengths. The liquids can be diluted to the strength required, which is one of the main reasons for using liquids formulations.
If you think about how the hormone is applied to the cutting, you might realize that the amount added is quite variable. Some people will dip more or longer, and then shake off less. Some use a pencil to make a hole, some don’t – affecting how much is rubbed off. For the home gardener it does not have to be that precise.
I tend to use the higher concentrations recommended for woody plants for two reasons. I grow more woody cuttings, so I have the right one most of the time. Secondly, if I want less for herbaceous plants, I either apply less, shake harder, or stick them in soil without making a hole first. All of these steps cut down on the amount of hormone my cuttings get.
Old Rooting Hormone
For the average gardener, a bottle of rooting hormone is enough to last a lifetime. That sounds like a good deal. Unfortunately, the hormone has a expiration date. Some manufacturers suggest it should be discarded after 1 year. Some say it is good for two years. Hormex says this about their product, “As long as Hormex Products are kept at room temperature and out of direct sunlight, the shelf life is 3-4 years”. Chemical companies report that IBA is very stable suggesting it will last many years. No one seems to provide any real proof of how quickly it degrades. A lot of drugs are good well past their expiration date.
Solid chemicals (ie powders) are generally more stable than diluted chemicals, so powders probably last longer. I suspect the powder forms have a shelf life of at least 5 years and probably more than 10.
Storage of Rooting Hormones
All chemicals degrade over time. The best way to store rooting hormone is in the dark and cold. The containers are usually light proof so they are always dark. A fridge would be a perfect place for storage.





Robert Pavlis your help is greatly appreciated
My question is
Can you mix powder rooting hormone and beneficial bacteria with water and will this help with rooting or will the iba and beneficial bacteria have a negative reaction & will they be rendered useless by mixing
For example:
Hormex #8 rooting hormone
Azos benneficial bacteria/fungi
Distilled / r.o. Water
1:1 ratio on the Hormex/azos
Plus enough water to make it a thin/viscous paste for cuttings.
Any tips or help will be greatly appreciated.
Robert,
thank you very much on behalf of everybody you have helped in life.
Best regards,
Thomas
I can’t think of any benefit for doing that.
Forgive my ignorance, but is it that big a deal if I just dip the stems of whatever Iโm working with into my bottle of liquid hormone rather than pouring it out? Thanks.
You have the potential of transferring disease from plant to hormone to next plant. To be honest, I just dip the cuttings right into the container.
Good information here. I used liquid rooting solution twice on a fresh Moringa cutting. The cutting is yet to grow, yet to have any branches/ leaves. When the cutting grows will it be toxic?? Will the leaves and Moringa pod be toxic and unfit for human consumptions?
Genetically it is an exact duplicate of the parent.
Hi Robert I know I am very very late to join your discussion. I had an over whelming desire to make a comment. First of all I can’t stop laughing at how many people ask you the exact same question. “Using the rooting hormone in water cuttings”. I wasnt sure if it was possible or not either but I understood the first time you said “No” ..
Comical!!
Well I did want to add my little bit of knowledge to this few years old conversation. To my knowledge the fertilome liquid root stimulator is for new plants that our smaller in nature so they would have some roots already but not much. Also it says that it is very useful to use when transplanting your plants (from stores or cuttings that have developed new roots) it states that it works to not put the plant in shock while transplanting. It also helps smaller plants to grow stronger roots.
From my experience it does seem to work very well. I also used the fertilome liquid root stimulator on my grass plugs. I took a mortar pan of my fiance’s & put the rooting stimulator in it, diluted it (per instructions) & then placed my plug into the pan to soak just long enough to allow me to drill holes with my mini auger get those few planted and repeated the process until all done. Honestly I have noticed that all my flowers, plants & grass when using that particular product to transplant with have done very very well. Oppose to the times i didnt have this product & lost some newly planted flowers in my garden. I am not sure if it is coincidence or not.
Thank you for sharing all of you knowledge. I truly have been enjoying reading all of these questions & your comments.
I Garden Tech Root Boost Powder and wondering why it says to not use on food crops? I thought it would be harmless till i read the label and now Im wondering if I should discard my cuttings? It contains Haromdin 1 and Indole-3-butyric Acid.
Probably just a safety warning so they don’t get sued.
Does rooting hormone cause any harm to leaves if it accidentally slips on them? What would happen if I apply rooting hormone on a cutting and stays over on it before planting? Say 12 hrs?
probably nothing.
Very informative!
I cut my aglaonema and stick it in water for a month and it no sign of rooting. Can I stick it in root hormone and put it back in water again?
rooting hormone is not designed for water rooting.
I have lilac cuttings that I am trying to grow. I started with 10 cuttings, most have died and I am down to just 2. Of the ones that died none had started rooting even though I used a hormone powder. Is there anything I can do to help encourage the other two to root? We are moving soon and I really want to take a piece of this lilac with me, it was planted in memoriam for my mother in law
Lilacs can be tough to root. Not every cutting roots. All you can do is wait, or try again.
When using root hormones on cutting in water how often should the new leaf growth be clipped off or should it be clipped off…they have new leafs but no roots yet
root hormones are not designed for water culture. Don’t clip them off, but usually if leaves grow, it won’t root.