Care guide beginner #humidity#maintenance

When to open vs keep your terrarium sealed

The art of air exchange. How to know when to crack the lid, when to keep it sealed, and how long to air out.

By Mossroom Team · · 4 min read

The single most common maintenance question: “When should I open my closed terrarium?” The answer depends on what’s happening inside.

The default: keep it sealed

Closed terrariums work BECAUSE they’re sealed. Opening them too often defeats the purpose.

Default schedule: Open for 30 minutes every 2 weeks. That’s it.

When to open MORE

Heavy fog that doesn’t clear

If condensation is so thick you can’t see in after 24 hours, air exchange is needed.

Action: Open the lid for 2-4 hours, or until fog clears. Resume normal schedule.

Plants are wilting or rotting

Over-humid conditions can cause rot. If you see:

  • Mushy stems
  • Yellow leaves with soft texture
  • Bad smell

Action: Open for several hours, even overnight. Improve air exchange going forward.

Just added new plants

New plants sometimes bring stress (repotting shock). Air exchange helps them adjust.

Action: Leave open for 24 hours after adding new plants. Then resume sealed.

Hot weather / heat wave

High temperatures increase evaporation and condensation. More air exchange needed.

Action: Open more frequently during heat waves (every few days instead of biweekly).

When to open LESS

Substrate is drying out

If your substrate is pulling from the glass or plants are wilting:

Action: Open less frequently. Or mist very lightly with distilled water.

Low humidity environment

If your room is very dry (winter heating):

Action: Open less. Maybe once a month instead of biweekly.

Dormant season (winter)

Plants grow slowly in winter. Less evaporation. Less air exchange needed.

Action: Reduce to monthly or as needed.

The signs your air exchange schedule is right

Healthy schedule indicators

  • Light fog in morning, clear by afternoon
  • Plants growing steadily
  • No mold issues
  • No smell
  • Substrate stays consistently moist

Need more air exchange if

  • Constant heavy fog
  • Plant decline
  • Smell
  • Visible mold
  • Slow plant growth despite good light

Need less air exchange if

  • Substrate pulling from glass
  • Plants wilting between waterings
  • Crispy leaf edges
  • Slow growth from dryness

The “long open” troubleshooting

Sometimes a problem requires extended airing out:

  • Mold outbreak: open 24-48 hours, treat, then resume
  • Bad smell: open 24+ hours, consider rebuild
  • Plant added with bugs: open until you can treat pests

For most issues, 2-4 hours of air exchange is enough.

Air exchange technique

When you do open:

  1. Remove lid completely
  2. Set aside (don’t put it on a surface that might contaminate)
  3. Use this time to inspect plants, remove dead material
  4. Mist only if needed
  5. Wipe inside of glass if needed
  6. Replace lid

Don’t leave the jar open for “a few hours” indefinitely — just long enough for the specific issue to resolve.

The cheat sheet

SituationAir exchange frequency
Healthy, stableEvery 2 weeks, 30 min
Heavy fogUntil fog clears (2-4 hrs)
Plant declineDaily for a week
Heat waveEvery 3-5 days
Just added plants24 hours after addition
Winter / dry roomMonthly or less

For more on humidity management, see our condensation guide.

Questions about your specific jar? Ask in the Discord.