Can you reuse living soil?
Can You Reuse Living Soil? | Easy Guide to Recycling Living Soil Between Crops
Short answer: Yes, absolutely, and you should.
Long answer: With the right care, living soil not only can be reused, it gets better over time.
At Easy As Organics, we’re often asked whether living soil can be reused after a crop cycle. While many growers toss their mix after harvest, that approach is wasteful, expensive, and unnecessary. Properly maintained, living soil improves with age, offering better plant health, bigger yields, and stronger resilience over time.
In this guide, we’ll show you how to recycle and revitalise your living soil using proven methods built around compost, organic amendments, and soil structure restoration.

Why Reuse Living Soil?
Living soil is a biologically rich ecosystem. Reusing it allows you to:
- Save money on soil and nutrients
- Reduce waste and environmental impact
- Improve soil structure and microbial life over time
- Maintain consistent yields and plant health
With proper care, your soil becomes stronger and more productive each cycle. This leads to increased crop quality, consistency and yield.
Why Growers Throw Soil Away (and Why You Don’t Need To)
Some growers discard soil after a harvest due to:
- Compacted or hydrophobic soil
- Depleted nutrient levels
- Pest or disease concerns
But with the right process, these issues are easily fixed, no need to start from scratch.
How to Revitalise Living Soil Between Crops
This method works for raised beds and large containers. Based on years of testing, it’s also outlined in our free PDF amendment guide.
1. Remove Large Root Masses
Leave fine roots—they decompose and feed microbes. Remove thick stems and root balls to reduce compaction and prepare soil for planting your next crop.
2. Rebalance Nutrients with Organic Amendments
Mix in a balanced blend of organic amendments such as Regenerate to restore fertility and ensure slow, steady nutrient availability throughout the crop cycle. The best method is to pre-blend with high quality worm castings and then apply to the top few inches of soil with a cultivation tool or your hands. Don't use more worm castings than 5% volume of your container or raised bed. This will ensure rapid breakdown of organic amendments into plant available forms of nutrients right in the rhizosphere. This will replenish what was used in the previous run and support healthy microbial activity.
- Fish bone meal and soft rock phosphate supply phosphorus and calcium, two essential nutrients for strong root development, flower formation, and microbial symbiosis. These amendments break down slowly, ensuring sustained phosphorus availability in living soil systems where P often becomes locked up over time.
- Neem meal, insect frass, and fish meal provide slow to medium release nitrogen. This diverse nitrogen blend feeds both plants and soil microbes, ensuring a steady supply of N as microbial breakdown occurs naturally throughout the cycle. This supports healthy vegetative growth and maintains soil biology.
- Potassium sulfate contributes potassium in a highly available form. Potassium is vital for flowering, fruit quality, water regulation, and disease resistance. Replenishing potassium is essential in reused soil, especially if the previous crop was heavy-feeding during the bloom phase. Potassium is highly mobile and can easily be leached from soil. Be mindful if overwatering or excessive runoff occurred in the previous cycle, extra potassium may need to be applied. Quality worm castings can be a good source.
- Micronised gypsum supplies calcium and sulphur. Calcium supports strong cell walls and nutrient transport, sulfur is needed for enzymes and terpene production. These nutrients help restore balance after each crop cycle.
- Worm castings contribute beneficial biology, enzymes, trace minerals, and humic substances. They help inoculate the soil after disturbance, improving nutrient availability and supporting microbial cycling as the amended soil rests and reactivates.
3. Restore Structure and Drainage
If the soil feels heavy or compacted, mix in perlite or small sized scoria. The goal is a well-aerated texture that holds moisture but drains freely.
4. Add Microbial Inoculants
To further strengthen beneficial biological activity and nutrient cycling, microbial inoculants such as MycoBiome and Bacterra can be applied. MycoBiome introduces beneficial mycorrhizal fungi that form symbiotic relationships with plant roots, improving phosphorus uptake and water efficiency as well as general resilience to environmental and other sources of stress. Bacterra delivers a consortium of Bacillus species that aid in decomposing organic matter, releasing bound nutrients, and providing natural resistance to common soil-borne pathogens. Both are ideal tools for boosting resilience and nutrient efficiency in recycled living soil. Remember that mycorrhizal fungi should be applied directly to plant roots or seeds when you transplant. Refer to our Soil Amendment Guide for recommended application rates and timing.
5. Let Soil Cycle Before Planting
Let your soil rest for a few days prior to planting.
- Keep it moist but not soaked
- Cover with a light mulch layer. Very light layer as the breakdown of moist organic material can attract fungus gnats.
- Apply 1 or 2 compost teas or a simple worm castings extract with added Bacterra to inoculate.
When Should You Not Reuse Soil?
There are a few exceptions where replacement or deep remediation may be needed:
- Severe pest infestations (e.g. root aphids, root knot nematodes)
- Persistent soil-borne pathogens
- Toxic salt or heavy metal build-up
But in most cases, soil can be brought back to life with rest and balanced inputs. We have tested all of our inputs for heavy metals and recommend EAL Laboratories at the Southern Cross University in Lismore NSW. Please reach out if you are interested in getting your own soil or inputs tested. Additionally, for the serious organic cultivator, we can assist with data driven amending based on Logan Labs Melich 3 and Saturated Paste tests.
Conclusion: Reusing Living Soil Is Smart Growing
With every cycle, your soil fertility becomes richer, the microbiome more resilient, and input requirement reduced, becoming more cost-effective.
👉 Download our full Soil Amendment Guide here
Or explore our flagship soil and nutrient blend:
New Products: For re-amending no till gardens and recycling old soil.
No till, organic gardening is our passion and we are really excited to launch Southern No Till, a brand that is fully dedicated to all natural cultivation styles. Our product range will include organic, minimally processed raw soil amendments, high quality compost and worm castings and many more living organic soil building inputs.
Southern No Till’s focus is on the soil food web: the complex microbial community responsible for effective nutrient cycling and ultimate plant health in optimal soil. All of our organic gardening inputs are carefully considered for soil microbiome health and are mostly plant and rock mineral derived. We’ve chosen plant and mineral sources that bring maximum benefits to the table per square centimetre, hence why we’ve introduced the following 3, highly effect organic and no till gardening products for availability in our store.
Neem Meal and Kelp Meal provide a huge array of plant and microbe-promoting benefits beyond the NPK profile. Neem meal is an amazing botanical source of nutrients with a balanced macro and micro nutrient profile. Neem meal is created after the oil is pressed from the seed and is a true sustainable source of green manure. It contains pest-resisting limonoids which act as an anti-feedent and also disrupts breeding and laying of pest eggs. Our kelp meal is minimally processed. This preserves the many secondary metabolites present in kelp that stimulate plant health and growth. These beneficial secondary metabolites are destroyed during the processing of concentrated kelp extracts. Powerful growth promoting hormones naturally contained in kelp include cytokinins, gibberellins, auxins, indoles and many others. This whole kelp meal will provide a balanced spectrum of minerals and micro-nutrients. Kelp contains over 60 trace elements.
Recharge Nutrient and Mineral Blend is a great way to topdress, build new soil or recycle old soil from a single blend of carefully selected ingredients. It is a plant-based amendment and rock dust mineral blend which is perfect for re-amending soil beds and containers in between growing cycles, especially for people who don’t have the resources to get their soil tested as it contains a wide array of slow and quick release nutrients and minerals in organic form for microbial stimulation and long term soil fertility throughout the growing cycle. We’ve also added an Australian made mycorrhizal inoculant. I’ll save the massive benefits of adding mycorrhizal inoculants to containers and raised beds in living soils for another blog article!
Recharge contains:
Neem Meal: pest resistance, macro nutrients. Certified Organic
Kelp Meal: Growth hormones and micronutrients. Certified Organic
Malted Barley: Enzymes for faster microbial action
Paramagnetic Basalt Rock Dust: Raises soil fertility and provides slow release trace elements
Gypsum: Certified Organic. Provides sulfur and calcium and does not affect pH. If building your own soil, add appropriate amount of calcium carbonate if correcting acidic soil from the addition of sphagnum peat moss. We left out lime so your soil pH will not shift over time and become more alkaline.
Soft Rock Phosphate: Naturally sourced, un-processed rock phosphate high in trace elements, calcium and phosphorus as well as silica - a cell strengthening element.
Mycorrhizae: Contains 4 species of endomycorrhizal fungal spores. Made in Australia

