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Best Indoor Plant Pots with Drainage

Indoor plant pots without drainage are a polite way to kill a plant. The decorative ceramic with no hole at the bottom traps water against the roots, and even the hardiest pothos eventually rots. The real trick is finding pots that have drainage AND look beautiful AND don't pour water onto your floorboards. Here are the ones our team uses.

Our team’s top picks

Editor's Pick

D'vine Dev Glazed Ceramic Pot with Saucer

  • Multiple sizes 6–12"
  • Matching glazed saucer
  • UV-stable colours
  • Honest pricing
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Best for: most indoor plants
Best Budget

La Jolíe Muse Ceramic Plant Pot

  • Decorative finish
  • Drainage hole and saucer
  • Good value mid-range
  • Multiple colours
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Best for: starter collections
Best Premium

Bergs Potter Hoff Series

  • Italian-made unglazed terracotta
  • Hand-finished, generations of craft
  • Beautiful patina with age
  • A heritage piece
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Best for: gift or display
Best Hanging

POTEY Ceramic Hanging Planter

  • Glazed ceramic with cord
  • Drainage hole + integrated tray
  • Multiple finishes
  • Strong adjustable cord
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Best for: hanging displays
Best for Big Plants

Costa Farms Ecopots Sustainable Planter

  • Made from recycled plastics
  • Built-in saucer with drain plug
  • Lightweight at scale
  • Multiple sizes 8–18"
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Best for: large floor plants

What to look for in a indoor plant pot with drainage

  • A matched saucer (sealed glaze, not raw terracotta) catches drips without ruining floors.
  • Look for unglazed inside surfaces if you're growing succulents — they breathe.
  • Cork or felt pad on the saucer base prevents furniture marks.
  • Stoneware is heavier but more stable than earthenware — less likely to tip with a tall plant.
  • A drainage hole at least 12 mm wide doesn't clog with potting mix.
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Frequently asked questions

Do indoor pots really need drainage holes?

Yes, with very few exceptions. Without drainage, you have to water perfectly every time — and most of us don't. Pots with drainage forgive over-watering by letting excess drain into the saucer.

Can I drill a drainage hole in a ceramic pot?

Yes — with a diamond-tipped masonry bit, water cooling, and patience. Or use the cachepot method: keep the plant in a plastic nursery pot, slip it inside the decorative ceramic, and lift it out for watering.

Glazed or unglazed pots?

Unglazed (terracotta) breathes through the wall and is best for cacti, succulents and Mediterranean plants. Glazed retains moisture and is best for tropicals and ferns.

Why do my pots leave marks on the floor?

Either the saucer is unglazed (it absorbs water and seeps onto the floor), or the saucer leaks at the seal. Use a sealed glazed saucer, and add a felt pad underneath as insurance.

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.

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Rosa Calloway

Rosa keeps the indoor-plant and small-space coverage at Garden Care. She lives in Marrickville, in Sydney's inner west, in a two-bedroom worker's cottage with a 60 sqm courtyard garden that she has cultivated obsessively for the last six years. The courtyard is north-facing, gets four hours of summer sun and almost none in winter, and currently houses four citrus pots, a wall of potted herbs, two figs, an espaliered pear, and a hand-built vertical strawberry tower made by her partner Adi. Rosa worked as a graphic designer for eight years before a balcony herb-garden Instagram experiment went viral in 2020 and she pivoted to writing. She still designs the occasional book cover when the deadlines line up. She is married to Adi (a ceramicist whose pots fill the courtyard and most of the kitchen) and has a rescue cat called Pesto who has personally shredded several seedling trays. Rosa is the one to ask about getting twenty plants into a balcony without it looking like a botanical hoarder, choosing pots that will actually last a decade outdoors, and which indoor plants forgive a forgetful waterer. Her current side project is a salad-greens microbed under a grow light in the laundry — at last count it was producing more salad leaves than she and Adi can reasonably eat.

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