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By the HydroGrow UK – Your Home Hydroponics Authority Team · Updated May 2026 · Independent, reader-supported

Best Cheap Hydroponic Systems Under £100 UK (2025): Budget Picks That Actually Work

If you want to try hydroponics without dropping several hundred quid on premium setups, good news: there are genuinely functional systems under £100 on Amazon UK. They won't beat commercial greenhouse rigs, but they'll grow decent herbs, salads, and smaller veg if you set them up right.

Why start cheap with hydroponics?

Budget systems let you test whether you actually enjoy running hydroponics before investing in the expensive stuff. Most people find out within three months whether soil-free growing suits their space and patience. For a beginner, that's worth the £40–£80 entry point. You'll also learn the fundamentals—nutrient balancing, water temperature, light cycles—on a small scale where mistakes don't cost much.

What you actually get for under £100

At this price point, expect smaller growing trays (typically 6–12 plant sites), hand-assembled plastic components, and cheap but usable air pumps. Most come with basic rockwool and nutrient starter packs; water testing kits are often absent. Build quality is honest rather than industrial—hoses crack, connectors leak—but they're repairable.

The real limitation isn't cost; it's space and electricity. A £60 ebb-and-flow tray uses about as much power as a desk lamp. A £45 aeroponic mister uses less. Neither will spike your bills, but they do need mains power and a decent windowsill or grow light.

Six budget hydroponic systems worth buying

1. Simple passive (Kratky) kits – £35–£50

Basically a bucket with holes and a net-pot holder. No pump, no electrics. You mix nutrients into water, suspend roots in it, and let plants drink it down over 3–4 weeks. Lettuces and basil thrive. Tomatoes are slow. Upside: nearly silent, zero running costs once you buy it, genuinely foolproof for leafy greens. Downside: you can't re-oxygenate the water, so growth slows after week two, and you're limited to fast-growing crops.

2. Deep-water culture (DWC) with air pump – £50–£75

A 5–10 litre bucket, an air pump (USB or mains), and an air stone. Roots sit in oxygenated nutrient water. Faster growth than Kratky because the air keeps roots fed with oxygen. Good for lettuce, spinach, basil, and dwarf peppers if you add a small grow light. Downside: if the pump fails, roots suffocate in hours. You need to watch water temperature (keep it 18–22°C) or algae blooms.

3. Ebb-and-flow trays – £60–£90

A plastic tray on a stand with a small pump that floods the tray every 15 minutes, then drains. You fill individual net pots with rockwool and clay pellets. Roots cycle between wet and air, which is ideal for oxygen. Better growth than DWC for herbs and greens; small fruiting plants (strawberries, peppers) work if you add LED lights. Pump noise is minimal. Downside: more parts mean more leaks. You need to check water levels and clean the pump intake weekly.

4. Aeroponic misters – £40–£70

A vertical tower or wall-mounted system with spray nozzles. Roots hang in air and get misted every few minutes. Growth is fast—sometimes visibly faster than soil. Looks impressive and takes minimal floor space. Works well for leafy crops and herbs. Downside: misters clog easily on hard-water areas; you'll spend time descaling with white vinegar. If the timer fails, roots dry out in hours.

5. NFT (nutrient film technique) kits – £55–£85

Thin pipes angled downward with a pump pushing nutrient solution along the bottom. Roots sit on the wet channel. Growth is quick because roots are constantly touched by moving, oxygenated water. Excellent for lettuce, basil, and chard. Downside: any blockage (mineral buildup, algae) stops water flow, and roots dry out fast. Requires weekly cleaning of pipes.

6. Combo grow-kit bundles – £70–£95

Some sellers bundle a small DWC or ebb-and-flow system with nutrients, pH test strips, a small LED grow light, and rockwool. Quality is mixed—the lights are weak (10–30W), and the nutrient packs are tiny—but you get everything in one order. Useful if you want zero guesswork on what to buy. Downside: you're locked into whatever light and nutrients came with it; upgrading later means buying separately.

What does it cost to run?

Once you've bought the system, ongoing costs are modest:

Total running cost: roughly £15–£30 monthly for a small system with supplemental lighting.

Getting started without wasting money

Budget hydroponic systems genuinely work. They're not toys—gardeners across the UK use them to extend seasons and grow food in tight spaces. The trick is starting small, learning the basics, and upgrading only when you know what you're doing.