Feeding Your Vegetables: What Actually Works
Walk into any garden centre and the fertiliser section will offer you dozens of products promising spectacular results. Most of them work to some degree. Very few are necessary if your soil is in good condition. Here is an honest guide to feeding that cuts through the noise.
Understand what plants need
Plants need three primary nutrients in significant quantities:
- Nitrogen (N): drives leafy growth. Most important for brassicas, leafy salads, and sweet corn.
- Phosphorus (P): supports root development and flowering.
- Potassium (K): promotes fruit and flower development and improves disease resistance.
Fertiliser labels show NPK ratios (the proportions of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium). A high-nitrogen feed like dried blood or chicken pellets drives green growth. A high-potassium feed like liquid seaweed or tomato fertiliser drives fruit development.
Start with the soil
A soil regularly amended with compost and organic matter will supply most of what your vegetables need without additional feeding. Feeding a poor soil is less efficient than building a better soil. The compost approach is covered in detail in Composting Masterclass.
That said, even in a good soil, some crops benefit from additional feeding during their productive peak.

When to feed and with what
Tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers: switch to a high-potassium liquid feed (tomato feed) once the first flowers appear. Feed weekly throughout the fruiting season. This is the most important feeding regime in the vegetable garden for most UK growers.
Brassicas: benefit from a nitrogen-rich feed if plants look pale or growth is slow. A top dressing of chicken pellets or a liquid feed of diluted seaweed works well.
Hungry crops in containers: container compost depletes quickly. Plants in containers need regular liquid feeding from mid-season onwards regardless of soil quality.
Root vegetables: generally do not need additional feeding if planted into well-prepared ground. Excess nitrogen causes forking in carrots and soft, leafy growth rather than root development in most roots.
Organic versus synthetic fertilisers
Organic fertilisers (fish, blood, bone, seaweed, chicken pellets) release nutrients slowly as soil organisms break them down. They also feed soil biology and improve soil structure over time.
Synthetic fertilisers release nutrients immediately but do nothing for soil health and in excess can damage soil biology. They have their place for quick corrections but should not be the primary feeding strategy in a vegetable garden.

Watch the plants, not the calendar
Plants tell you what they need. Pale, yellow-green leaves on leafy crops suggest nitrogen deficiency. Purple-tinted leaves often indicate phosphorus deficiency. Brown leaf edges can suggest potassium shortage or overwatering. Learn to read these signals and respond to them rather than applying a fixed feeding schedule regardless of what the plant is telling you.
Tony O’Neill is a vegetable growing expert at Simplify Gardening.