Tech: 15 Best Gifts for Plant Lovers and Gardeners (2026)
Ostensibly, plant lovers and gardeners should be the easiest people to shop for. Just get them a plant, right? Wrong. (Well, most of the time.) I review indoor hydroponic gardens for WIRED and have been a proud plant parent for almost 30 years, so I can say that even if you have a running mental catalog of all your recipients' plants and know which ones they don't yet have, you may not know what they have space for, or what they're looking to switch up to this gardening season. In general, the best gifts are ones that work with the plants and garden they already have, or that help them care for them. I've dug through the dirt to vet, research, and real-world test gifts that will earn their keep, whether your recipient has a single cactus on a windowsill or a multi-acre farm. For more gift ideas, check out our other gift guides, including Gifts for Bird Lovers, Gifts for Coworkers, Gifts for Book Lovers, and the Best Flower Delivery Services. Updated May 2026: I've rewritten and reformatted this guide for the upcoming gardening season with 10 new gift ideas, and updated testing notes on existing gifts. Lettuce Grow is better known for its elaborate Farmstand models, but last year the brand released a no-fuss, no-pump, giftable setup that uses the Kratky method of hydroponic gardening. Just fill the three science-lab-looking amber beakers to the fill line, add a few drops of the included liquid nutrients, and set your seedlings on one of the included wicks. The wick will draw water up to the plant until its roots can grow down into it. That's all it takes—an optional 7-watt, 18-inch-tall LED lamp will shine for your choice of either 16 or 18 hours from when you first push the button, and you should have edible leaves within three weeks. (Note that Lettuce Grow says the set will fit beneath most kitchen cabinets, but the light precluded it from fitting under mine.) This is more of a decorative system than one that produces noteworthy yields—a typical weekly harves
Source: Wired