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MagazineJuly 6, 2026 · 5 min read

Acidic soil for berries: site, substrate and iron chlorosis

Blueberry, lingonberry and cranberry need acidic soil. How to lower the pH, water lime-free and recognise iron chlorosis in time.

The Gartenkern team
Garden & editorial
Schale mit reifen Heidelbeeren und Wassertropfen
Der Lohn des richtigen sauren Bodens: eine gesunde, reiche Ernte bei Heidelbeere und anderen Moorbeetbeeren. · Foto: THOR, CC BY 2.0 (via Wikimedia Commons)
Contents

There is a small group of berries that often fail in the garden without the gardener knowing why: blueberry, lingonberry and cranberry. They stand there planted, watered and fed and yet sulk along, get yellow leaves and barely bear. The reason is almost always the same and has nothing to do with care in the usual sense: these berries need acidic soil, and normal garden soil does not offer it.

Whoever has once understood the principle turns these berries from a problem child into a grateful permanent crop. It is about the pH, the right substrate and lime-free water. This article explains why acidic soil is so important, how to create and maintain it and how to recognise that something is wrong.

Why some berries want it acidic

Blueberry, lingonberry, cranberry and some other bog-bed plants come by nature from acidic, humus-rich, nutrient-poor sites like bogs and heaths. Their roots are adapted to these conditions and often live in symbiosis with special fungi. On a neutral or chalky soil this adaptation no longer works: the plant cannot take up important elements like iron despite them being present.

The pH measures how acidic or alkaline a soil is. Most garden plants like a neutral range, but the acidic berries want it clearly more acidic, about in the range of four to five. Exactly here lies the problem: most garden soils in Central Europe are neutral to chalky, so far too basic for these berries.

Recognising iron chlorosis

The clearest sign that the soil is too little acidic is iron chlorosis. It is easy to recognise and a clear cry for help from the plant.

Blueberry shoot with yellow leaves and green veins
The classic warning sign: yellow leaves with strikingly green veins. This iron chlorosis shows the pH is too high.· Photo: Reznil, Public Domain

With iron chlorosis the leaves turn yellow while the veins stay strikingly green. This pattern is typical and distinguishes lime excess from other deficiency symptoms. The cause is not necessarily too little iron in the soil, but a too high pH that blocks iron uptake. Whoever sees the chlorosis knows: the soil has become too basic, and it is time to act.

Creating and maintaining an acidic site

Keeping soil permanently acidic in the open bed is difficult, because lime constantly pushes in from the surrounding soil and the watering water. Therefore the container is often the better solution: there you fill in acidic bog-bed or rhododendron soil and have the substrate fully under control.

How the acidic site succeeds

  • Use acidic substrate

    Plant in special bog-bed or rhododendron soil. It is acidic and humus-rich by nature. Normal garden compost and lime are taboo.

  • Water with rainwater

    Hard tap water raises the pH with every watering. Rainwater is soft and lime-free and keeps the soil permanently acidic. A rain barrel is worth gold here.

  • Mulch acidic

    A mulch layer of pine litter, bark mulch or sawdust keeps the soil moist and additionally has a slightly acidifying effect. That stabilises the low pH.

  • Control the pH in the pot

    In a container the acidic site is easiest. You determine the substrate, can measure and adjust the pH if needed and keep lime from the soil away.

How to cultivate blueberries specifically in acidic soil and container correctly is covered in detail in Blueberries, acidic soil and container. The lingonberry and the cranberry too belong to this group and want the same acidic site.

Feeding correctly, but acidic

For feeding too, acidic berries have their own rules. Normal compost and many universal fertilisers contain lime and would neutralise the laboriously acidic-kept soil. So use special fertilisers for bog-bed plants or acidic organic fertilisers that do not raise the low pH. Fundamentally these berries, as inhabitants of nutrient-poor sites, need little fertiliser anyway. How to supply berries moderately and correctly explains Feeding berries correctly.

Blueberry, lingonberry and cranberry want it acidic. Acidic substrate, rainwater and no lime are the key, and yellow leaves with green veins the warning sign that something is missing.

The core rule for acidic soil

Frequently asked questions

Which berries need acidic soil?

Above all blueberry, lingonberry and cranberry as well as other bog-bed plants. They come from acidic, humus-rich sites like bogs and heaths and cannot take up nutrients on normal, chalky garden soil.

How do I recognise that the soil is too little acidic?

By the classic sign of iron chlorosis: the leaves turn yellow while the veins stay strikingly green. That shows the pH is too high and the plant cannot take up iron despite it being present.

How do I make the soil more acidic for berries?

Most easily in a container with acidic bog-bed or rhododendron soil. In the bed it helps to work in acidic substrate, mulch with pine litter and water consistently with rainwater. You should avoid lime and normal compost.

Why is rainwater so important for acidic berries?

Because hard tap water contains lime and raises the pH with every watering. After some time the acidic soil is neutralised and the plant gets chlorosis. Soft, lime-free rainwater keeps the soil permanently acidic.

Can I plant acidic berries in normal garden soil?

Only if your soil is naturally acidic, which is rare. On neutral or chalky soil, cultivation in the open bed is laborious because lime constantly pushes in. The container with acidic substrate is usually the more reliable solution.

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