Spider Mites in Your Grow Room: How to Identify, Kill & Prevent Them

Tiny pests that can wipe out a crop in 2 weeks — here is how to stop them before they stop you

Grow Tent & RoomOrganic & Chemical OptionsPrevention ProtocolEmergency Treatment

Spider mites are the most devastating pest in indoor cultivation. A single female can lay 100 eggs per week, and a full infestation can kill a plant in 14 days. In a sealed grow tent with no natural predators, they multiply unchecked. Speed is everything — identification and treatment within the first 72 hours gives you a fighting chance to save your crop.

How to Identify Spider Mites

🔍 Tiny Yellow Dots

First sign: tiny yellow or white stippling on upper leaf surfaces. Looks like bleached dots, often dismissed as light stress.

🕸️ Webbing

Fine webbing on undersides of leaves and between stems. If you see webbing, infestation is already moderate-to-severe.

🔴 Visible Mites

Tiny (0.5mm) eight-legged bugs on leaf undersides. Appear as moving red, brown, or white dots under a jeweler's loupe.

🍂 Leaf Bronzing

Advanced infestation: leaves take on a bronze or rusty appearance as cell damage accumulates across the whole leaf surface.

Treatment Protocol — 4 Rounds in 14 Days

💡 Key Strategy: Rotating Products Spider mites develop pesticide resistance within 3–5 generations (1–2 weeks). Never apply the same product twice in a row — always rotate between different modes of action.
1
Day 0 — Neem oil or spinosad spray — Cover all leaf surfaces including undersides. Work in lights-off. Remove any heavily infested leaves first. Lower humidity to 40%.
2
Day 3 — Pyrethrin or insecticidal soap — Different mode of action from round 1. Pyrethrin (Captain Jack's) kills on contact. Cover every surface.
3
Day 7 — Predatory mites (Phytoseiulus persimilis) — Release beneficial predators that hunt and eat spider mites. Available in sachets. Most effective organic solution.
4
Day 10–14 — Final neem or spinosad sweep — Mop up survivors after predator activity. Check weekly after treatment concludes.

Recommended Products

Captain Jack's Deadbug (Spinosad)
OMRI-certified organic — kills mites, thrips, caterpillars. Safe in flower.
From $18Shop Now
Azamax (Azadirachtin)
Neem-derived IGR — disrupts mite life cycle. Best for veg-stage prevention.
From $34Shop Now

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use neem oil during flowering?
Neem oil is not recommended after week 3 of flower due to potential residue on buds and taste/smell impact. Switch to spinosad (Captain Jack's Deadbug) which is approved for use in flower and does not leave residues.
How do spider mites get into a sealed grow tent?
Spider mites enter on clothing, clones from other grows, new plants, or even through air intake vents. Always quarantine new clones for 7 days before introducing them to your grow space and inspect every plant you bring home from a garden center.
What temperature and humidity discourages spider mites?
Spider mites thrive in hot, dry conditions (above 80°F, below 40% RH). Keeping temperatures at 75–78°F and humidity at 50–60% RH in veg significantly slows reproduction. In flower, maintain 45–55% RH. A quality dehumidifier and fan controller are essential.
How do I know if the spider mites are gone?
Check leaf undersides with a jeweler's loupe (30x) every 3 days for 2 weeks after your last treatment. No visible movement and no new stippling for 14 days = clean. Keep monitoring for one full week after that to confirm.

Get Everything You Need — Shipped Fast

Toledo Indoor Garden carries expert-grade products for every grow. UPS & FedEx shipping options at checkout.

Shop Nutrients Shop Grow Lights