Skip to content
Free shipping over €25
Azarius
pH & NPK Soil Test Kit
Click to zoom

pH & NPK Soil Test Kit

Growshop

by Hanna Instruments

€ 39,95
Temporarily out of stock
Test soil pH, nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium in minutes with this pH NPK soil test kit. No batteries, no calibration — just reagents and colour cards. Includes materials for 10 complete rounds of testing with printed expiry dates on every reagent.
Quantity

We'll only email you about this product — no marketing.

Free shipping included

pH and NPK Soil Test Kit for Cannabis Growing

The pH and NPK Soil Test Kit is a chemical testing kit that lets you measure the four values your cannabis soil absolutely must get right: pH, nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K). Each kit contains enough reagents for 10 separate tests — so you can track a single plant through its entire lifecycle or check multiple pots in one session. No batteries, no calibration, no apps. Just reagents, test tubes, and colour cards that give you a clear reading in minutes.

10 Tests Per Kit Measures pH, N, P and K Colour-Match Analysis No Electronics Needed Clear Expiry Dates on Reagents
SpecificationDetail
SKUHS1504
Tests Included10 pH, 10 N, 10 P, 10 K (40 individual reagent capsules)
Test MethodChemical reagent with colour comparison card
ComponentsPre-made reagents, test tubes, colour comparison cards
Lot TrackingClear lot numbers and expiration dates on each reagent
Power RequiredNone — fully analogue
Intended UseSoil testing for cannabis and other plants

Complete your grow setup: pair this soil test kit with pH Up and pH Down solutions so you can actually correct what you find. If you're running living soil, a quality organic fertiliser keeps your NPK values where they need to be between tests.

Why You Need a Soil Test Kit for Cannabis

A soil pH and NPK test kit is the cheapest insurance policy in your grow room. According to a study published in PMC, soil content of NPK can significantly affect plant growth, development, and the accumulation of medicinal substances (PMC, 2022). That applies directly to cannabis — if your soil is short on phosphorus during flowering, your buds won't fill out no matter how good your light is.

Cannabis is particularly fussy about pH. The sweet spot for soil grows sits between 6.0 and 7.0, and even half a point outside that range starts blocking nutrient uptake. Your plant can be sitting in perfectly balanced soil and still starve because the pH is wrong. That's not a feeding problem — it's an access problem. And you won't spot it by looking at the soil. You need to test it.

The honest limitation here: this is a colour-match kit, not a digital meter. You're comparing a liquid colour against a printed card, which means your reading is approximate — accurate enough to catch problems and guide corrections, but not laboratory-grade. For most home growers running 1–10 plants, that's more than enough. If you're managing a commercial operation and need readings down to 0.1 pH, you'll want a digital meter instead. But at this price point, there's no reason not to have one of these on the shelf.

What's in the Soil Test Kit

Each pH and NPK soil test kit arrives ready to use with no additional purchases needed. Here's exactly what you get:

ComponentQuantity / Detail
pH Reagents10 pre-made capsules
Nitrogen (N) Reagents10 pre-made capsules
Phosphorus (P) Reagents10 pre-made capsules
Potassium (K) Reagents10 pre-made capsules
Test TubesSeparate tube for each test type
Colour Comparison Cards1 per nutrient + 1 for pH
Lot NumbersPrinted on each reagent packet with expiry date

The fact that every reagent carries a clear lot number and expiration date is a detail worth noting. Expired reagents give false readings, and false readings lead to bad decisions. With dated reagents, you always know whether your kit is still reliable. We'd suggest writing the date you opened the kit on the box — reagents last longer sealed than open.

How to Use the pH and NPK Soil Test Kit

  1. Collect a soil sample from about 5–10 cm below the surface of your pot or bed. Avoid the very top layer — it dries out faster and won't give you a representative reading. Take samples from 2–3 spots if you're testing a large container.
  2. Fill the test tube to the indicated line with your soil sample. Break up any clumps — compacted soil won't dissolve properly in the reagent solution.
  3. Add the appropriate reagent capsule. Use the pH reagent for pH testing, the N reagent for nitrogen, and so on. Each capsule is clearly labelled.
  4. Add distilled or deionised water to the fill line. Tap water contains minerals that will skew your results — especially the pH reading. A bottle of distilled water costs almost nothing and lasts dozens of tests.
  5. Cap the tube, shake it thoroughly for about 30 seconds, then let it settle. pH tests typically show a clear colour within 1–2 minutes. NPK tests may need 5–10 minutes for the colour to fully develop.
  6. Hold the test tube against the colour comparison card in natural daylight. Artificial lighting — especially LED grow lights — shifts colour perception and can throw off your reading. Match the liquid colour to the closest value on the card.
  7. Record your results. A simple notebook with date, plant, and values is enough. Over 3–4 tests across a grow cycle, you'll start seeing patterns that tell you exactly when your soil needs amending.

pH and NPK: Why Both Matter for Cannabis

Testing pH alone is a half-measure. A reading of 6.5 tells you your soil is in the right acidity range, but it says nothing about whether there's actually food in there. Conversely, dumping nutrients into soil with a pH of 5.0 is like stocking a fridge your plant can't open — the food is technically present but completely inaccessible.

Here's what each value tells you in practical terms:

  • pH (6.0–7.0 for soil): Controls nutrient availability. Below 6.0, calcium and magnesium lock out. Above 7.0, iron and manganese become unavailable. Most nutrient deficiency symptoms are actually pH problems in disguise.
  • Nitrogen (N): Drives vegetative growth — leaves, stems, overall plant structure. Deficiency shows as yellowing lower leaves. Excess causes dark, clawed leaves and delays flowering.
  • Phosphorus (P): Critical during flowering for bud development and root growth. Deficiency shows as purple stems and stunted flowers. One of the most common mid-flower shortfalls we see.
  • Potassium (K): Regulates water uptake and enzyme activation. Deficiency causes brown, crispy leaf edges that look like light burn but aren't.

The kit tests all 4 values independently, so you can pinpoint exactly which variable needs adjusting rather than guessing and over-correcting. Over-feeding is just as damaging as under-feeding — according to research, NPK toxicity in plants can cause nutrient imbalances that compound over time, making each subsequent correction harder.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use this soil test kit for plants other than cannabis?

Yes. The reagents measure universal soil chemistry — pH, nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium — which applies to vegetables, herbs, flowers, and houseplants equally. The colour comparison cards aren't species-specific.

How accurate is a colour-match soil test compared to a digital meter?

Colour-match kits are accurate within roughly 0.5 pH units and give a good/adequate/deficient reading for NPK rather than a precise ppm number. For home grows of 1–10 plants, that's enough to catch and correct problems. Digital meters offer finer resolution but cost significantly more and need regular calibration.

Do I need distilled water for the tests?

Yes. Tap water contains dissolved minerals and has its own pH, both of which will skew your results. A 1-litre bottle of distilled water is cheap and will last you well beyond 10 tests.

How long do the reagents last once the kit is opened?

Each reagent packet is stamped with a lot number and expiration date. Unopened capsules typically last 1–2 years from manufacture. Once the kit is open, store it in a cool, dry place away from direct light to preserve accuracy.

What do I do if my soil pH is too low or too high?

If pH is below 6.0, add dolomite lime or a pH Up solution to raise it. If above 7.0, elemental sulphur or a pH Down solution brings it back. Test again 48 hours after amending to confirm the correction took hold.

Can I reuse the test tubes?

You can rinse and reuse them with distilled water between tests. Make sure they're completely clean — residue from a previous reagent will contaminate the next reading. If in doubt, a quick rinse with distilled water and a shake-dry is enough.

Is 10 tests enough for a full grow cycle?

For a single plant, 10 tests covers the full cycle with room to spare — 4 scheduled tests (pre-plant, early veg, flip, mid-flower) leaves 6 for follow-up checks or additional plants. For larger grows, grab a second kit.

Last updated: April 2026

Related products

Sign up for our newsletter-10%