The Right Way to Use Coffee Grounds to Fertilize Your Lawn and Garden

Coffee grounds are rich in nitrogen, an essential soil nutrient that boosts plant health.

Coffee cup with coffee grounds in garden
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  • Coffee grounds are rich in nitrogen, which helps plants grow strong and healthy when added to soil or compost.
  • Add coffee grounds to your compost, or spread dry coffee grounds directly on your lawn or garden each month to slowly nourish plants and improve soil quality.
  • Acid-loving plants, such as azaleas and blueberries, thrive with coffee grounds, but they may harm other plants.

Don’t toss those used coffee grounds after brewing your morning cup of joe. The humble leftovers can do more than perk you up—they can also give your lawn and garden a boost. Coffee grounds are rich in nitrogen, an essential nutrient that helps grass and plants thrive. Instead of reaching for commercial fertilizers, consider putting those grounds to work in your yard. Ahead, garden and lawn experts explain why coffee grounds can benefit your greenery and how to use them effectively.

  • Rob Palmer, lawn expert, landscaper, and brand president at Lawn Squad
  • Tammy Sons, master gardener and founder of TN Nursery, a leading tree and plant nursery
  • Lucie Bradley, a gardening and greenhouse expert at Easy Garden Irrigation

Benefits of Using Coffee Grounds as Fertilizer

Coffee grounds can be used in unexpected ways, including in the garden. Rob Palmer, lawn expert, landscaper, and brand president at Lawn Squad, explains that coffee grounds are rich in nitrogen, a key nutrient grasses and other plants need to thrive. Used, dried coffee grounds can be sprinkled lightly into garden soil or added to compost, but fresh or wet grounds are best avoided, as they can compact and cause drainage issues.

This nutrient can help improve soil structure when composted or lightly worked into the soil, while the grounds themselves add a small amount of nutrients and organic matter. However, coffee grounds are not a complete fertilizer and should be used alongside other soil amendments as needed. Nitrogen also helps plants with photosynthesis, the process by which plants use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to create energy.

How to Use Coffee Grounds as Fertilizer

You can use coffee grounds right after brewing a cup of coffee. "After they’ve cooled and dried, sprinkle a thin, even layer of coffee grounds (about 1/2 cup per square yard) over the grass," says Tammy Sons, master gardener and founder of TN Nursery. Then, water the ground lightly so the grounds settle into the grass thatch. You can follow these same steps in your garden beds. "As the coffee grounds break down, they drip-feed nitrogen, improving soil texture and inviting earthworms to aerate the turf for free," says Sons. "I toss coffee grounds on every month during the growing season."

Scatter the coffee grounds widely to prevent potential issues. "Clumpy piles can form a water-repelling crust," Sons warns. This will prevent water from reaching the roots, which may negatively impact the growth and health of your landscape.

Alternatively, you can add coffee grounds to your compost pile. Once the compost is ready, mix it into your soil as a natural fertilizer. Palmer prefers this method to sprinkling coffee grounds directly on your lawn or garden, noting that it helps balance acidity and prevent compaction, which can block water and air from reaching the roots.

Plants That Like Coffee Grounds

Aside from lawn grass, several plants enjoy coffee grounds as fertilizer. "Plants such as azaleas, camellias, hollies, hydrangeas, lilies, lupines, magnolia trees, and rhododendrons like coffee grounds for their slight acidity," says Lucie Bradley, a gardening and greenhouse expert at Easy Garden Irrigation. The acidity helps maintain the soil pH levels, these acid-loving plants thrive in. "Simply mixing dried coffee grounds into the top few inches of their soil will help boost it to suit these plants," she says.

Many edible plants also enjoy the nitrogen in coffee grounds, including blackberries, blueberries, carrots, cucumbers, leafy greens (think kale, lettuce, spinach, Swiss chard), peppers, potatoes, roses, sweet peas, and tomatoes. "However, coffee grounds should only be used to supplement other forms of fertilizer as they don’t contain sufficient nutrients on their own to feed cropping plants," says Bradley.

Bradley says to avoid using coffee grounds when planting seeds or when plants are seedlings as the grounds can inhibit seed germination and stunt the growth of young plants.

Plants That Don't Like Coffee Grounds

While some plants like acidic soil, others prefer alkaline conditions and will not want coffee grounds in their soil. "Plants that fall into this category include achillea, lavender, leeks, lilacs, rosemary, sunflowers, and thyme," says Bradley.

And although coffee grounds contain very little caffeine, plants sensitive to caffeine could be negatively affected by an abundance of coffee grounds in the soil, Bradley warns. "Plants such as asparagus, geraniums, Russian sage, and yucca plants can all show stunted growth by repeated use of coffee grounds," she says.

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