About this product
Full description
The most useful natural pest spray in the cottage garden — a properly considered alternative to chemical insecticides for dealing with aphids, whitefly, scale, mealybugs and other soft-bodied sap-suckers. Horticultural Soap from Ladybird Plant Care is a highly refined potassium-salt soap made from natural oils that kills target pests on contact, then leaves no residual effects once dried — properly safe for bees, ladybirds and other beneficials returning to the plant once the spray has gone.
Sold as a concentrate at 1:100 dilution rate: a 250ml bottle makes 25 litres of finished spray, and the 1L Mega Bottle makes 100 litres — properly substantial coverage from each bottle. Spray bottle not included.
How it works
The active soap molecules (potassium salts of fatty acids) work by disrupting the cellular membranes of soft-bodied insects and stripping away their protective waxy coating, causing them to dehydrate and die. Properly different from chemical insecticides — there's no nerve-system attack, no systemic plant uptake, no long-lasting residue. The spray works only on contact, only on the insects it physically wets, and only while wet. Once dry (typically within an hour or two depending on conditions), the spray ceases to have any effect at all.
This is properly the point. The lack of residual action means returning beneficial insects — bees coming to forage, ladybirds and lacewings hunting aphids, hoverflies pollinating — aren't affected by yesterday's treatment. The pest control is properly targeted to the moment of application.
What it controls
Properly effective on soft-bodied sap-sucking insects, particularly in their younger life stages (eggs and adults of larger species are typically not affected):
- Aphids — properly the most reliable target. Greenfly, blackfly, root aphids on foliage, the lot
- Whitefly — both glasshouse whitefly indoors and outdoor varieties on brassicas
- Mealybug — particularly on houseplants and conservatory plants; needs thorough wetting because their waxy coating reduces spray penetration
- Scale insects (crawler stage) — the young mobile crawlers; adult armoured scales need more aggressive treatment
- Spider mites — effective on the motile stages; eggs less affected and may require repeated treatment
- Thrips — on flowers and foliage
- Psyllids — box-tree pests, jumping plant lice
- Young sawfly larvae — on roses and currants in early instar
What it doesn't control
Properly honest about what won't work:
- Caterpillars — their tougher exterior protects them; use companion biological controls for cabbage white caterpillars
- Beetles — hard-bodied insects are largely unaffected. Lily beetle and Japanese beetle need different approaches
- Slugs and snails — entirely the wrong tool. Use nematodes, beer traps or pellets
- Vine weevil — the adults are hard-bodied; the larvae live in soil. Use nematodes
- Insect eggs — not penetrated by the soap
- Soil-dwelling pests — soap doesn't move into soil. Use nematode treatments
How to use it
- Dilute at 1:100 — one part concentrate to one hundred parts water. A 10ml dose into a 1-litre spray bottle of water makes ready-to-use spray
- Spray thoroughly — the pest must be physically wetted by the spray. Turn leaves over to reach undersides where most aphids and whitefly congregate
- Apply in cool conditions — early morning or evening properly best. Avoid spraying in strong sunlight or hot temperatures (above 25°C) as scorching can occur
- Repeat treatment — typically needed every 5–7 days for two or three applications to catch successive hatchings. Soap doesn't kill eggs, so the population needs to be hit at each new emergence
- Time around pollinators — on plants in flower attracting bees, spray at dawn or dusk when pollinators aren't active. The treatment will be properly dry and harmless by the time they return
- Mix fresh each time — diluted soap doesn't store well. Make only what you'll use in the session
Plants to be careful with
Most plants tolerate horticultural soap properly well, but a small number can be sensitive — particularly when stressed, in hot weather, or with repeated applications. Properly worth testing on a single leaf and waiting 24 hours before treating the full plant if you're unsure. Plants reported as occasionally sensitive include:
- Hairy or finely-textured foliage (some ferns, gerbera, palms)
- Sweet peas in flower (flowers can mark)
- Fuchsias
- Plants under stress from drought or recent transplanting
- Young seedlings (test first or avoid)
- Plants in strong sunshine or above 25°C ambient
Limit treatments to two or three applications per plant per season where possible — repeated heavy use can accumulate damage even on tolerant species.
Pack size guidance
- 250ml bottle — makes 25 litres of finished spray; properly substantial for the average home gardener. A typical 1L spray bottle filled and used once a week through the growing season uses roughly 25 litres
- 1L Mega Bottle with pump — makes 100 litres; better value per ml and properly suited to serious allotment, larger garden or polytunnel use. Currently sold out — back-in-stock notification recommended if you need this size
The 1L is 33% better value per ml than the 250ml when both are available.
Where it fits in integrated pest management
Horticultural Soap pairs properly well with the wider Ladybird Plant Care biological control range to give you a complete pest-management approach:
- For sap-suckers above ground (aphids, whitefly, mealybug, spider mites) — this Horticultural Soap is the right tool
- For soil-dwelling pests (vine weevil larvae, slugs, leatherjackets) — nematode treatments from Ladybird Plant Care
- For caterpillars on brassicas — biological controls or physical barriers
- For chronic infestations — combine biological controls with physical removal, encouraging beneficials (ladybirds, lacewings, hoverflies), and good plant culture
Together these biological and organic approaches give you a properly considered alternative to chemical pesticides while keeping pollinators, pets and beneficial insects unharmed.
Specifications
- Brand: Ladybird Plant Care
- Type: Contact insecticide concentrate (potassium-salt soap from natural oils)
- Action: Disrupts insect cellular membranes; dehydrates and kills soft-bodied pests
- Dilution rate: 1:100 (one part concentrate to 100 parts water)
- Coverage: 250ml makes 25 litres of spray; 1L makes 100 litres
- Residual effect: None once dried — safe for returning beneficials
- Bee safety: Safe after drying; spray at dawn/dusk on flowering plants to avoid foragers
- Pet safety: Considered non-toxic; soap is unpalatable to pets
- Edible crop use: Suitable; no harvest interval restriction (rinse before eating)
- Spray bottle: Not included — supply your own 1L pressure or trigger sprayer
- Pack sizes: 250ml bottle or 1L Mega Bottle with pump
About Ladybird Plant Care
Ladybird Plant Care are UK specialists in biological and organic pest control, supplying live nematodes, beneficial insects and naturally-derived sprays direct to gardeners. We're proud to stock their range as one of our collective partners — their products dispatch directly to you at peak freshness, biological where possible, properly considered for the home gardener taking a chemical-free approach.
A small thought: chemical pesticides have a properly understandable appeal — spray something, problem gone. But the longer you garden, the more you notice what disappears alongside the pests: the ladybirds that would have eaten next week's aphids, the lacewings, the hoverflies, the songbirds that ate the lot. Horticultural soap is properly the considered version of the spray approach — it works on what's there now, it stops working when it's dry, and tomorrow's beneficial insects return to a properly unharmed garden. The kind of pest control that gardens with you rather than against everything.
What's included
- 1L variant includes pump dispenser
- Spray bottle NOT included (supply your own)
Care and use
- Once opened, use within 12 months
- Once diluted, use immediately (don't store mixed spray)
- Avoid eye contact and prolonged skin exposure

