How Much Does Hydroponics Cost? Realistic Budget Breakdown

Last updated: March 23, 2026

How Much Does Hydroponics Cost? Realistic Budget Breakdown

A beginner hydroponic setup for growing lettuce and herbs costs £50–£150 to start and roughly £5–£15 per month to run. A more capable intermediate setup for fruiting crops costs £200–£500 upfront. These figures pay back in fresh produce within 6–12 months for active growers.


What does a beginner hydroponic setup actually cost?

The cheapest possible starting point for hydroponic growing is the Kratky passive method — a no-pump, no-electricity approach where a plant sits in a net pot over a sealed reservoir of nutrient solution. The total cost breakdown for a single Kratky jar setup is:

ItemApproximate cost
1-litre Mason jar or food-safe container£2–£5
50mm net pot£0.50–£1
Bag of clay pebbles (1 kg)£3–£6
Hydroponic nutrient solution (starter bottle)£8–£15
pH test kit or basic pen£5–£20
LED clip-on grow light (optional but recommended)£15–£35
Total£35–£80

This setup grows one plant of lettuce or an herb. For most beginners, this is genuinely enough to learn the fundamentals — pH management, EC monitoring, observing plant growth — without committing significant money before knowing whether hydroponics suits your lifestyle.

Scaling up to a six-plant NFT or ebb and flow system costs more but produces meaningfully more food. A basic six-plant lettuce system including a small NFT channel kit or ebb and flow tray, reservoir, pump, timer, LED panel (30–45 watts), nutrients, pH pen, and EC meter runs £120–£250 depending on brand choices and whether you buy a kit or assemble components individually. Kits from hydroponic suppliers include everything needed but cost a premium; sourcing components separately is cheaper if you are comfortable doing so.

What are the ongoing monthly costs of running a hydroponic system?

Once the initial equipment is purchased, the running costs of a home hydroponic system are modest. The main ongoing expenses are nutrients, electricity, and occasional replacement of consumables like growing medium, net pots, and pH buffer solution.

Nutrients: A quality 1-litre bottle of two-part or three-part hydroponic nutrient concentrate makes approximately 200–500 litres of working solution depending on concentration. At £15–£25 per litre of concentrate, a small home system uses £3–£8 of nutrients per month. A larger system growing fruiting crops at higher EC uses more — budget £8–£15 per month.

Electricity: A 40-watt LED panel running 16 hours per day uses 0.64 kWh per day, or approximately 19 kWh per month. At a UK electricity rate of 24p per kWh (as of early 2026), this costs about £4.60 per month. A pump running continuously at 5–10 watts adds another £1.50–£3 per month. Total electricity for a small LED system is approximately £6–£8 per month.

Water: In most UK regions, the water cost for a small hydroponic system is negligible — less than £1 per month. Growers using RO filtration systems add £0.01–£0.03 per litre filtered, plus filter replacement costs of £20–£40 every 6–12 months.

Monthly total for a basic system: £10–£20 per month. For a larger fruiting crop system with more powerful lighting: £25–£50 per month.

How quickly does hydroponic growing pay for itself?

The payback calculation depends on what you grow and how much comparable produce costs at retail. Leafy greens and fresh herbs offer the fastest payback because their retail price is high relative to their growing cost.

A six-plant lettuce system producing a fresh head every 5–6 days yields approximately 60 heads of lettuce per year. At £1.50–£2.50 per head at retail (organic premium), this represents £90–£150 of lettuce annually. Against a system cost of £150–£200 and running costs of £150 per year, the first year may not fully break even — but from year two onwards, the £150 annual operating cost produces £90–£150 in lettuce with no additional capital outlay.

Herbs are more compelling financially. A 500g bunch of fresh basil costs £3–£4 at a supermarket and wilts within days. A hydroponic basil plant producing fresh leaves for 3 months represents 15–20+ supermarket basil bunches — £45–£80 of equivalent retail value from a £2 packet of seeds and minimal additional variable cost. Restaurants and catering operations looking at hydroponic systems see payback in 3–6 months specifically because of herb values.

Cherry tomatoes grown hydroponically produce 1–2 kg of fruit per week at peak production. At £4–£6 per 250g punnet of premium cherry tomatoes, a single plant producing for 8 months represents enormous value. However, the electricity cost of the high-intensity lighting required for tomato production (200+ watts for productive fruiting) significantly increases running costs — budget £20–£35 per month in electricity for a tomato-focused system.

What should you budget for intermediate and advanced setups?

Moving beyond basic lettuce and herbs into a productive all-season growing space requires a more significant upfront investment. Here is a realistic budget for a well-equipped intermediate indoor growing setup capable of producing lettuce, herbs, and small fruiting crops simultaneously:

ComponentBudget range
Grow tent (60×60×140 cm or 80×80×160 cm)£50–£100
Full-spectrum LED grow light (100–200W)£80–£200
NFT channel kit or ebb and flow tray£40–£80
Reservoir (40–60 litres)£15–£30
Submersible pump£15–£30
Timer (digital)£10–£20
Air pump and stones£10–£20
Digital pH pen (quality)£25–£50
Digital EC/TDS pen£15–£30
Clay pebbles (10 kg)£10–£18
Net pots (pack of 50)£5–£10
Starter nutrient kit (3-part system)£25–£50
pH Up and pH Down£8–£15
Total£308–£653

A well-chosen setup in the £350–£450 range is capable of growing 12–18 lettuce plants in rotation alongside 6–8 herb plants and 1–2 fruiting plants. This is a genuinely productive urban farm in a footprint of less than 1 square metre.

For complete growing rooms or dedicated shed setups, costs scale accordingly — multiple grow tents, CO₂ supplementation, environmental controllers, and higher-wattage lighting can push investment to £1,000–£5,000. At this scale, the economics become compelling for a household that consumes significant quantities of fresh produce year-round or for small-scale commercial sales.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it cheaper to buy a complete hydroponic kit or build a system from components?
Complete kits from reputable hydroponic suppliers typically cost 20–40% more than buying equivalent individual components. However, kits include everything you need and reduce the risk of buying incompatible or under-specified components. For first-time buyers without experience, a kit is often better value despite the higher price — the guidance and compatibility assurance is worth the premium. Experienced growers sourcing components separately can reduce costs significantly, particularly by purchasing nutrient solution, growing medium, and basic hardware from non-specialist suppliers.
What are the biggest mistakes beginners make that waste money?
The three most common expensive mistakes are: buying inadequate lighting (cheap LED panels that cannot drive photosynthesis effectively), using the wrong growing medium for the chosen system (soil in a hydroponic system, or insufficient depth for the crop), and neglecting to buy a quality pH pen (cheap colour-change kits miss pH problems until they become serious). Spending £25–£50 on a decent digital pH pen at the outset prevents much more expensive crop losses and system failures later.
Can I start with just a windowsill and no grow light?
Yes, but only for the most light-tolerant crops in the sunniest windows during summer months. A south-facing window in the UK receives approximately 4–6 hours of direct sun on clear summer days, which is marginal for lettuce and insufficient for herbs like basil that need 6+ hours of strong light. In autumn and winter, natural light in the UK is inadequate for almost all hydroponic crops without supplemental lighting. A small LED grow light costing £20–£40 transforms a windowsill system from a slow, disappointing grow into a genuinely productive one year-round.

Use AI to summarize this article

← Back to all farming methods