🧅🌱 Sowing Onion Seeds: Mistakes That Reduce Bulb Size (UK Guide)
🌱 Introduction: Big Bulbs Are Built Early
Small onions at harvest are almost never caused by “bad weather at the end.” In reality, bulb size is largely decided in the first 6–8 weeks after sowing. Mistakes made during germination and early growth permanently limit how big an onion can get—no amount of feeding later will fix it.
Keter Manor Outdoor Apex Double Door Garden Storage Shed (6 x 8ft)
A durable and stylish beige and brown garden storage shed perfect for storing garden tools, equipment, bikes, and outdoor essentials. Weather-resistant, low maintenance, and ideal for any garden or allotment setup.
Vegetable Plants & Seedlings
Browse Plants
All-Purpose Compost & Soil Improvers
View Compost
Plant Feed & Fertiliser for Strong Growth
Shop Fertiliser
This guide explains the most common sowing and early-stage mistakes that reduce onion bulb size, and how to avoid them in UK conditions.
⭐ Check Out Our Recommended Products
• Onion Seeds
Starting onions from seed at the correct time avoids common mistakes like sowing too late or relying only on sets. Ideal for early sowing under cover to get strong plants before spring planting.
Click here to see them
• Seed Trays & Module Pots
Essential for avoiding early planting failures caused by cold, wet soil. Seed trays allow you to start vegetables under cover and transplant at the right moment.
Click here to see them
• Seed Compost & Propagator
Using proper seed compost in a propagator gives reliable warmth and drainage, preventing poor germination, damping off, and weak seedlings—a common monthly mistake for beginners.
Click here to see them
🚫 Mistake 1: Sowing Too Late
Why it reduces bulb size
Onions need time early on to build leaf mass before increasing day length triggers bulbing.
Late-sown onions:
- Grow fewer leaves
- Start bulbing too soon
- Stop growing earlier
Fix
- Sow mid–late February (ideal)
- Early March at the latest for decent bulbs
Late sowing = permanently smaller onions.
🚫 Mistake 2: Not Enough Light Early On
Why it matters
Weak light causes:
- Thin leaves
- Weak stems
- Reduced photosynthesis
Fewer strong leaves = smaller bulbs.
Fix
- Bright south-facing windowsill or grow lights
- 12–14 hours of light after germination
- Lights close to seedlings if using LEDs
Light matters more than warmth.
🚫 Mistake 3: Growing Seedlings Too Warm
What happens
Warm indoor conditions push fast but soft growth, which:
- Weakens roots
- Increases stress later
- Limits bulb density
Fix
- Germinate warm (15–20°C)
- Grow on cool (10–15°C) after sprouting
Cool growth builds thicker stems and stronger bulbs.
🚫 Mistake 4: Overcrowding Seedlings
Why this is critical
Crowding causes early competition for:
- Light
- Nutrients
- Root space
Once onions compete early, they never fully recover.
Fix
- Sow 1 seed per cell (best)
- Or thin early to give each plant space
- Never leave clumps growing for bulb onions
Each onion needs its own space from the start.
🚫 Mistake 5: Sowing Too Deep
What goes wrong
Deep-sown onions:
- Take longer to emerge
- Use energy reaching the surface
- Start life already weakened
Fix
- Sow shallow: 5–10 mm deep
- Just cover seeds—don’t bury them
🚫 Mistake 6: Overwatering Early
Why it limits bulb size
Wet compost causes:
- Weak root systems
- Reduced oxygen
- Early stress
Stressed roots = reduced nutrient uptake for the rest of the season.
Fix
- Keep compost just moist
- Let the surface dry slightly between watering
- Ensure excellent drainage
Most bulb-size problems start with soggy compost.
🚫 Mistake 7: Using Rich Compost Too Early
Why it backfires
High-nitrogen compost early:
- Encourages soft, leafy growth
- Weakens structure
- Leads to poorer bulb formation later
Fix
- Use fine seed compost only at sowing
- Switch to general compost later if potting on
Strong roots first, bulk later.
🚫 Mistake 8: Skipping Trimming
What happens
Untrimmed seedlings:
- Tangle
- Bend
- Waste energy supporting excess leaf length
Fix
- Trim to 8–10 cm when seedlings reach 12–15 cm
- Repeat if needed
Trimming strengthens stems and improves final bulb size.
🚫 Mistake 9: Root Restriction Indoors
Why it matters
Roots that become tangled or pot-bound:
- Can’t expand properly later
- Permanently limit bulb size
Fix
- Pot on if roots fill containers
- Don’t leave crowded seedlings too long
- Avoid tiny cells for extended periods
Root space = bulb potential.
🚫 Mistake 10: Planting Out Into Cold, Wet Soil
What goes wrong
Cold shock causes:
- Growth checks
- Increased bolting risk
- Reduced leaf production
Once growth is checked, size is lost forever.
Fix
- Plant out when soil is workable and warming
- Avoid waterlogged beds
- Harden off properly
🧠 The Big Truth About Onion Size
Onion bulbs are built from leaf bases.
More healthy leaves early = bigger bulbs later.
Anything that:
- Reduces early leaf growth
- Causes stress
- Limits roots
- Slows development
…will permanently reduce bulb size.
🧠 Key Takeaway
If your onions are always small, the problem almost certainly happened at sowing or during early seedling growth. The biggest bulb-reducing mistakes are late sowing, poor light, overcrowding, overwatering, and early stress.
Get the first 6–8 weeks right—bright light, cool steady growth, space, and patience—and onions will reward you with significantly larger, heavier bulbs at harvest.