Best Watering Cans for Indoor Plants
Indoor watering is a different problem from outdoor watering. You need a long, narrow spout that reaches between leaves without dribbling on the floor, a balanced shape so a one-litre fill doesn't fight you, and a finish that doesn't rust or leak in a steamy bathroom. The wrong watering can spills into pot saucers; the right one makes the job feel like a small ceremony.
Our team’s top picks
Haws Indoor Watering Can (Slimcan)
- Plastic — light, won't rust
- Long oval spout, brass rose
- British design heritage
- Comfortable balance
OXO Pour & Store Watering Can
- Two-litre capacity
- Tucks-away spout for storage
- Comfortable handle
- Honest pricing
Burgon & Ball Sophie Conran Indoor Can
- Powder-coated steel
- Hand-finished, beautifully balanced
- Long brass spout
- Heirloom design
Espressivo Glass Watering Can
- Borosilicate glass
- See-through level
- For pretty kitchens
- Hand-blown options available
IKEA VATTENKRASSE Watering Can
- Galvanised steel, 5 colours
- Long spout, balanced design
- Brand-honest pricing
- Backup mister sold separately
What to look for in a watering can for indoor plants
- Long, narrow spouts (200+ mm) reach between leaves without disturbing them.
- 1.5–2 L is the sweet spot — small enough to fill at the bathroom sink, big enough to do a room.
- Powder-coated or stainless metal lasts; mild steel rusts at the seam.
- A removable rose for seedlings is genuinely useful, even just for one weekend a year.
- Comfortable balance matters — try lifting one full at a hardware shop before buying.
Frequently asked questions
How big a watering can do I need for indoor plants?
For a small flat, 1–1.5 L is plenty. For a larger plant collection, 2 L. Anything bigger gets heavy fast and won't fit under a bathroom tap.
Plastic, metal or glass?
Plastic is lightest and won't rust. Powder-coated metal lasts and looks beautiful. Glass is decorative — pick whichever you'll happily leave on the kitchen bench.
Why does my watering can dribble?
Either the spout angle is wrong (some cans dribble below 30°) or the rose is partially blocked. A drop of dish soap and a soft brush usually fixes it.
Should I water indoor plants with cold tap water?
Let cold tap water sit for an hour before watering tropical houseplants — it warms slightly and chlorine dissipates. Tap water is fine for most plants once it's at room temperature.
Bottom line
If you only take one thing from this guide, it is that quality matters more than spec on paper. The picks above have been chosen because our team uses them or trusts them — not because they are the most expensive or have the flashiest marketing. Buy once, garden often.



