That’s another garden clickbait promise. Geraniums don’t “bloom continuously for over a year” from a single trick—what’s really going on is a mix of good care habits that extend flowering periods.
What it’s referring to
Geranium (often actually Pelargoniums in home gardening) can bloom for long stretches, but only if conditions are right.
They naturally:
- Bloom in cycles, not nonstop
- Slow down in extreme heat or cold
- Rest periodically even in ideal care
So no single hack creates “nonstop blooms”—but good maintenance can keep flowers coming most of the year.
What actually helps geraniums bloom longer
1. Deadheading (most important)
Removing spent flowers:
- Prevents seed formation
- Encourages new buds
- This is the #1 reason some plants seem “continuous”
2. Plenty of sunlight
- At least 5–6 hours of direct sun
- Less light = more leaves, fewer flowers
3. Proper feeding
- Too much nitrogen → lots of leaves, few flowers
- Use a low-nitrogen, high-potassium fertilizer for blooms
4. Correct watering
- Let soil dry slightly between watering
- Overwatering reduces flowering and can rot roots
5. Light pruning
- Triggers fresh growth and more flowering stems
Why “year-round blooming” is exaggerated
Even with perfect care:
- Growth slows in winter (in many climates)
- Heat stress can pause flowering in summer
- Plants need natural rest cycles
So “almost continuous blooming” really means:
Long flowering periods with short breaks

