Nutrients
Runoff EC Too High or Too Low? Causes, Target Values, and Solutions
What Is Runoff EC?
The runoff EC (also called drain EC) is the electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution that exits the bottom of the pot after watering. It reveals how much salt has accumulated in the substrate and whether the plant is actually absorbing the nutrients being supplied.
The key metric is the delta EC — the difference between the input EC (what goes in) and the runoff EC (what comes out):
A positive delta means salts are accumulating in the substrate. A negative delta means the plant is consuming more than is being supplied. Both have implications for your nutrient management.
Why runoff EC matters more than input EC alone
The input EC only shows what you are offering the plant. The runoff EC shows what is actually happening in the substrate. Two identical input EC values can produce entirely different root zone conditions — depending on drain fraction, transpiration rate, substrate type, and plant age.
Runoff EC Target Values by Growth Phase
The following values apply to coco/perlite substrates. In rockwool or pure hydro, tolerances may be tighter.
| Phase | Input EC (mS/cm) | Runoff EC (mS/cm) | Max. Delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seedling / Clone | 0.4 – 0.6 | 0.5 – 0.8 | 0.3 |
| Vegetative | 0.8 – 1.2 | 1.0 – 1.5 | 0.4 |
| Early Flower | 1.2 – 1.6 | 1.4 – 2.0 | 0.5 |
| Full Flower | 1.4 – 1.8 | 1.6 – 2.2 | 0.5 |
| Late Flower / Flush | 0.2 – 0.4 | < 1.0 | — |
Runoff EC Too High — Causes and Corrective Steps
A runoff EC that sits significantly above the input (delta > 0.5 mS/cm) signals salt accumulation in the substrate. The most common causes:
Causes
- Insufficient drain: If less than 10-15% of the watering volume exits as drain, salts are not being flushed out adequately.
- Input EC too high: The plant cannot absorb all the nutrients being supplied — the remainder accumulates.
- Evaporation at the substrate surface: Especially in warm, dry environments, nutrient solution wicks upward through capillary action and leaves salt crusts behind.
- Declining plant activity: Under stress (root issues, heat stress, insufficient light), nutrient uptake drops — salts remain in the substrate.
- Frequent watering without drain: Watering often with small volumes and negligible drain is a classic recipe for salt buildup.
Corrective Steps
- Measure current status Measure the runoff EC during the next regular watering. Record the input EC and runoff EC, and calculate the delta. Also measure the runoff pH.
- Increase drain fraction Raise the drain to 25-30% for the next 2-3 waterings. This passively flushes out excess salts without stressing the plant.
- Targeted flush if needed If the delta is still above 0.5 mS/cm after 2 days: flush with pH-adjusted water (pH 5.8-6.0) at EC 0.4-0.6 until the runoff EC drops below the target value.
- Adjust input EC After the flush, resume the regular nutrient solution at a slightly reduced EC (0.2 below the previous value). Monitor runoff EC daily.
Runoff EC Too Low — Causes and Corrective Steps
A runoff EC below the input EC (negative delta) means the plant is pulling more nutrients from the substrate than are being supplied. This is not a problem in the short term, but over time it points to underfeeding.
Causes
- Input EC too low: The plant has a bigger appetite than you might expect — especially during the stretch phase and full flower.
- High transpiration rate: Under high VPD and strong light, nutrient uptake increases disproportionately.
- Overwatering: Excess water dilutes the nutrients in the substrate without the plant absorbing more.
- Fresh coco: Unbuffered coco binds calcium and magnesium from the nutrient solution through cation exchange, which lowers the runoff EC.
Corrective Steps
- Increase input EC gradually — by 0.1-0.2 mS/cm per watering cycle, no more.
- Maintain drain fraction at 15-20% — do not reduce it even if the runoff EC is low.
- For fresh coco: buffer the substrate before planting with a CalMag solution (EC 0.8-1.0).
- Check VPD — at values above 1.5 kPa, transpiration rises sharply and can amplify nutrient stress.
Flush Strategy: When, How, and How Much
A flush is not a cure-all but a targeted intervention. When done correctly, it lowers the salt concentration in the root zone without stressing the plant.
When to flush
- Delta EC persistently above 0.5 mS/cm (across 2-3 measurements)
- Visible symptoms: leaf tip burn, chlorosis, stunted growth
- Before harvest (final 7-14 days, depending on genetics and substrate)
- After a nutrient lockout (pH-related)
Flush Protocol
- Prepare the flush solution pH-adjusted water (5.8-6.0) with a light base feed (EC 0.3-0.6). Never use pure RO water.
- Determine volume Use 2-3 times the pot volume. For a 10-litre pot, that means 20-30 litres. Pour slowly — do not flood.
- Measure runoff during the flush Check the EC every 5 litres. Stop once the runoff EC drops below your target value (typically below 1.0 in veg, below 1.5 in flower).
- Resume nutrient solution After the flush, wait 4-6 hours, then continue with the regular nutrient solution at a slightly reduced EC. Check the runoff EC the following day.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a normal runoff EC value?
The runoff EC should be no more than 0.3-0.5 mS/cm above the input EC. During the vegetative phase, runoff values of 1.0-1.5 mS/cm are normal; during flowering, 1.4-2.2 mS/cm. What matters is not the absolute value but the delta relative to the input.
How often should you measure the runoff EC?
At least every other watering, ideally daily. Measurement is especially important after nutrient changes, temperature shifts, and transitions into new growth phases. Document the values so you can spot trends.
Runoff EC keeps rising steadily — what should I do?
A steadily rising runoff EC indicates salt accumulation. First, increase the drain fraction to 20-30%. If the value exceeds a 0.5 mS/cm delta, perform a targeted flush with a low-strength nutrient solution (EC 0.4-0.6). Afterwards, slightly reduce the regular input EC.
Can a runoff EC that is too low be problematic?
Yes. A runoff EC significantly below the input EC means the plant is hungry and absorbing more nutrients than are being supplied. Gradually increase the input EC by 0.1-0.2 mS/cm per cycle and monitor the response. Underfeeding is a particularly common issue during full flower.