Growing Deutzia in a pot
For balcony, patio or terrace — Deutzia gracilis
deutzia grows well in a pot of at least Ø 48 cm (87 L capacity), in a position with full sun or partial shade. Watering: every 2 days in summer, once every 2 weeks in winter.

Which pot?
Ø 48 cm
~ 87 L potting soil
Choose a generous pot with good drainage — small pots restrict root development.
Watering
every 2 days
once every 2 weeks
Always use a pot with drainage holes. Water dries out faster in pots — or the plant drowns. Check weekly with your finger: only water when the top 2 cm of soil is dry.
Pot care
Deutzia gracilis is genuinely low-maintenance once established. Water regularly during the first growing season to help roots settle, then only during prolonged dry spells in spring and summer. Established plants have moderate water needs and tolerate short periods of drought, though flowering and foliage quality suffer if the soil becomes too dry when buds are forming in late spring. Feed in March or April with a general-purpose granular fertiliser such as Growmore or blood, fish, and bone, scattering a generous handful around the base of each shrub and lightly forking it into the soil surface. Alternatively, apply a 5 cm layer of well-rotted garden compost or manure as a mulch in early spring; this feeds the soil, conserves moisture, and suppresses weeds in one go. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds after June, as soft late growth is more vulnerable to frost damage. Deutzia is hardy in zones 5a–8b and needs no winter protection in temperate European gardens. Mulch helps insulate roots during cold snaps, but the woody stems are tough and recover well even after harsh winters. Pests are rare. Occasionally aphids cluster on soft new growth in May; a strong jet of water or an insecticidal soap usually resolves the problem. Deutzia is generally disease-free, though poor air circulation or overhead watering can encourage powdery mildew on the foliage in humid summers. If mildew appears, improve spacing and avoid wetting leaves when watering. Remove and bin any affected foliage rather than composting it. Beyond the annual post-flowering prune and a spring feed, deutzia asks very little of you.
Pot-specific tip: add slow-release fertiliser pellets in March — potting soil exhausts much faster than open ground.