Water Testing for Beginners: Hardness, pH & Alkalinity Explained

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Quick answer: what water test kit should a beginner buy?

For most self-sufficient gardeners, start with a dual-range test strip kit that covers hardness (GH), alkalinity (KH), and pH. A 15–25 euro kit from a reputable aquarium brand (JBL, Sera, JHE) gives you actionable numbers without lab costs.

If you want digital precision, add a pen-style pH meter (25–40 euro). Skip cheap “3-in-1” soil probes — they’re unreliable for water.

Why test your water at all?

You cannot fix what you do not measure. Water chemistry silently shapes your garden:

  • Hardness (GH) — calcium + magnesium. High GH = hard water. Good for brassicas, bad for blueberries.
  • Alkalinity (KH) — bicarbonates. High KH buffers pH up. Hard to lower without acid.
  • pH — acidity. Most vegetables want 6.0–7.0. Acid-lovers want 4.5–6.0.

These three numbers tell you which plants will thrive, which will struggle, and whether you need rainwater, soil amendments, or different varieties.

The three testing methods compared

Method Cost Measures Best for Limitations
test strips (GH/KH/pH) 10–25 euro / 50–100 tests GH, KH, pH, sometimes NO₂/NO₃ Beginners, quick checks, multiple tanks Color matching subjective; ±1–2 dH accuracy
liquid drop kits (titration) 15–30 euro / 50–100 tests GH, KH separately; sometimes pH Better accuracy, learning the method Takes 2–3 min per test; reagents expire
digital pH meter 25–60 euro + calibration fluid pH only (0.01 resolution) Precision, hydroponics, frequent tests Needs calibration; probe wears out
Lab test 50–150 euro Full mineral panel, heavy metals, bacteria Well water, new property, compliance Slow; overkill for garden decisions

Our beginner recommendation: JBL ProScan or Sera Quick Test

These aquarium brands are widely available in Europe, use standardized color charts, and include GH, KH, and pH on one strip.

  • JBL ProScan — app reads strip via phone camera, logs history. ~20 euro for 24 strips.
  • Sera Quick Test 6in1 — GH, KH, pH, NO₂, NO₃, Cl₂. ~15 euro for 50 strips.
  • JHE 7-in-1 — budget option, includes chlorine. ~12 euro for 100 strips.

All three are sold in garden centres, aquarium shops, and online across the EU.

If you want digital: pen-style pH meter

For containers, hydroponics, or blueberries, a pen meter pays off in one season.

  • Apera PH20 — auto-calibration, ±0.01, replaceable probe. ~40 euro.
  • Bluelab pH Pen — industry standard, rugged, ±0.1. ~85 euro.
  • Generic pen meter — budget, ±0.01, needs frequent calibration. ~25 euro.

Must buy with any meter: pH 4.01 & 7.00 calibration solutions (5–10 euro) and 3M KCl storage solution (5 euro). Dry probes die.

How to test (step by step)

  1. Sample cold. Run tap 30 seconds. Fill clean glass.
  2. Dip test strips. 1–2 seconds, horizontal. Do not shake.
  3. Wait exactly the time on bottle (usually 30–60s).
  4. Compare in daylight. Indoor light shifts colours.
  5. Record. Date, source (tap/rain/well), GH (dH or ppm), KH, pH.
  6. Test rainwater separately. It’s usually pH 5.5–6.5, GH 0–1, KH 0–1.
  7. Test compost slurry. 1:5 compost:water, settle, test liquid. This matters more than water pH.

Interpreting your numbers

Parameter Soft / Low Moderate High / Hard
GH (general hardness) < 4 dH / < 70 ppm 4–8 dH / 70–140 ppm > 8 dH / > 140 ppm
KH (carbonate hardness) < 3 dH / < 50 ppm 3–6 dH / 50–100 ppm > 6 dH / > 100 ppm
pH < 6.5 6.5–7.5 > 7.5

If GH > 8 dH and KH > 6 dH: You have hard, buffered water. Acid-lovers need rainwater.

If GH < 4 dH and KH < 3 dH: Soft water. Most plants happy. Hydroponics need added Cal-Mag.

What to do with the results

Hard water + high KH (most of southern/eastern England, Netherlands, Germany, France)

  • Use rainwater for blueberries, azaleas, camellias, rhododendrons.
  • Grow brassicas, lavender, rosemary, kale with tap water.
  • Flush pots monthly with rainwater to prevent mineral crust.

Soft water + low KH (Scotland, Wales, Scandinavia, mountains)

  • Tap water fine for almost everything.
  • Hydroponics/inert media: add Cal-Mag supplement.
  • Acid-lovers thrive — blueberries, rhododendrons easy.

High pH (> 8) regardless of hardness

  • Often from concrete tanks, new mortar, or limestone aquifers.
  • Rainwater essential for containers.
  • Test compost pH — it matters more.

Quick product links (EU stores)

  • test strips: JBL ProScan / Sera Quick Test / JHE 7-in-1
  • digital pH meter: Apera PH20 / Bluelab pH Pen / budget pen
  • calibration fluids: pH 4.01 / 7.00 buffer + KCl storage
  • rain barrel: 200L–1000L water butt with diverter

FAQ

How often should I test?

Tap water: once per season (supplier changes sources). Rainwater: monthly. Compost: monthly during growing season. New source: test immediately.

Are cheap 3-in-1 soil probes any good?

No. They measure electrical conductivity, not pH accurately. Use for “wet/dry” only.

My test strips expired. Do they still work?

Expired strips drift. If the control pad looks faded, replace. 15 euro/year is cheap insurance.

Can I use pool test strips?

Pool strips measure free chlorine, not GH/KH precisely. Aquarium test strips are better for plants.

What if my water is “perfect” but plants still struggle?

Test compost pH. Water is only half the equation. Root zone pH often differs by 1–2 points from irrigation water.

Next step

Grab a test strips kit, test your tap and rainwater this weekend, and record the numbers. Then read Best Water for Self-Sufficient Gardens to match plants to your results.

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