Is your strawberry plant drooping? 5 things you're doing wrong (and how to fix it)

Watering strawberry plant
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

If you’re wondering: "why is my strawberry plant drooping?", you aren't alone.

This is the most common cry for help from backyard gardeners, and it usually comes down to five culprits. A wilting strawberry plant doesn't mean it’s time to give up, it just means something is off. The real challenge is playing detective to figure out what.

Overwatering causes the same drooping as underwatering. Fungal diseases mimic pest damage. Weather stress looks like disease stress. But each problem has different warning signs if you know where to look.

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Catch the issue early and your plant bounces back. Wait too long and you lose the harvest. Here's how to identify what's actually happening and fix it fast.

1. Overwatering (soggy soil)

Strawberry plants need consistent moisture, not constant wetness. Overwatering is the most common reason plants droop in containers or compacted garden soil. Roots suffocate in waterlogged conditions and can't absorb water properly.

Signs of overwatering is drooping leaves despite wet soil, brown circular spots on leaves, moldy fruit, or soil that smells sour and funky.

Check by sticking your finger two inches into the soil. If it's soggy and compacted, you're watering too much. The soil should feel moist like a wrung-out sponge, not like mud.

If you feel soggy soil, stop watering for several days and let the soil dry out. For container plants, repot into better-draining soil mixed with sand or vermiculite.

In garden beds, work compost or sand into the top few inches to improve drainage. Going forward, water deeply but less frequently rather than frequent shallow watering.

2. Underwatering (dry soil)

Strawberries need about an inch of water per week to produce fruit. Without it, leaves dry out, turn crispy brown, and the plant droops as it struggles to move water from roots to leaves.

If your strawberry plant is underwatered, you'll notice crispy, brown leaf edges, withered stems, and drooping that improves temporarily after watering but returns quickly.

Check by feeling the soil. If it's dry several inches down and hasn't been watered in days, underwatering is the problem.

To fix this, water more frequently and deeply. A soaker hose or drip system is ideal because it delivers water directly to roots while keeping leaves dry, preventing fungal issues.

For container plants, check the soil daily and water whenever the top inch feels dry. Water in the early morning before the sun heats the soil.

3. Leaf spot fungus (circular red/purple spots)

Phomopsis leaf spot fungus causes small circular spots on leaves that enlarge and develop gray centers. The affected leaves wilt and eventually die. The disease spreads rapidly in cool, wet conditions and is especially common in spring after planting or in fall.

Signs of leaf spit fungus are red or purple circular spots on leaves that grow larger over days. Gray centers develop, infected leaves wilt and drop off, and spots spread to multiple leaves quickly.

If you suspect your strawberry plant has this, remove infected leaves immediately and dispose of them (don't compost). Apply fungicide when spots first appear, following product label directions.

If leaf spot was a problem last year, apply fungicide preventively as new growth emerges in spring before the disease even starts. And remember, good airflow around plants reduces fungal spread.

4. Fusarium wilt (soil fungus)

Fusarium wilt is a soil-borne fungus that causes permanent wilting, stunted growth, and gradual death of older leaves from the bottom up. Plants under stress from heavy fruit loads or heat are most severely affected. There's no cure for infected plants.

If you notice wilting that doesn't improve with watering, older leaves drying and dying while new growth looks okay, plant stops producing fruit, and stunted growth despite good care, this is the likely culprit.

Unfortunately, no fungicide kills Fusarium in soil. Instead, plant Fusarium-resistant varieties, rotate planting locations every four years, maintain proper watering, and eliminate spider mites that weaken plants.

If your strawberry plant has Fusarium wilt, remove and discard it entirely but don't compost. Also, avoid planting strawberries in that location for at least four years.

5. Powdery mildew (white coating)

Powdery mildew appears as fluffy white patches on stems and leaves. If ignored, the fungus causes leaf edges to curl up and the plant to droop as leaves become too damaged to function.

This presents as white powdery coating on leaves and stems (even in dry conditions), leaf edges curl upward, leaves wilt despite adequate water, white patches spread quickly.

At the first sign of disease, apply fungicide. Elemental sulfur works well as a preventive fungicide. If powdery mildew was a problem last year, start applying fungicide preventively in early spring before symptoms appear.

Also improve airflow around plants by spacing them properly and removing lower dead leaves to reduce humidity around the base.


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Kaycee Hill
How-to Editor

Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.

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