If you’re over fungus gnats, mealybugs or mites chewing through your pride and joy, diatomaceous earth (DE) is one of the simplest low-toxicity tools to add to your kit. Used properly, it’s effective, doesn’t create resistance, and slots neatly into an integrated pest management (IPM) approach. This guide shows you exactly how to use it in Australian conditions — safely, and without clobbering pollinators.
Table of Contents
- What DE actually is (and why the type matters)
- Choosing the Right DE (Grades & Quality)
- Diatomaceous earth food grade Australia: what that label really means
- How DE works (and its biggest limitation)
- What DE Can Do — And What It Won’t
- Diatomaceous earth uses around the garden
- What is diatomaceous earth used for in pots and houseplants?
- When DE shines (and when it doesn’t)
- A Quick Note on Soil Health
- How to apply DE (two proven methods)
- Pest-by-pest playbooks (indoor & outdoor)
- Diatomaceous earth pest control for ants, earwigs and roaches
- Using DE Indoors & Keeping Dust Under Control
- Safety & compliance (Australia)
- DE Around Pets & Backyard Animals
- Why our Micronized & Sprayable DE is different
- FAQs
-
Next reads for smarter pest control with DE
If you want the quickest, no-guesswork pick, check this out:
What DE actually is (and why the type matters)
Diatomaceous earth is a powder milled from fossilised diatoms (hard-shelled algae). For plant use, choose amorphous silica — not the calcined pool-filter grade that contains higher crystalline silica and is unsuitable for plants or people. Even food-grade DE is a fine dust: avoid inhalation and protect your eyes during use.
Key point: Choose amorphous DE for plants. Never use pool-grade DE on or around plants, animals, or people.
Choosing the Right DE (Grades & Quality)
Not all DE sold on the internet or at bulk stores is the same. For garden and pest control use, here’s what matters:
-
Amorphous vs industrial: Always pick amorphous silica DE labelled for gardening/food-grade use — this is the type we recommend and stock because it’s milled for safe plant contact.
-
Purity counts: Cheap or unlabelled DE can include contaminants (e.g., rocks, heavy minerals) that don’t help your garden and might irritate you when you handle them.
- Correct labelling = peace of mind: A clearly labelled product with usage directions means you’re buying something intended for pest contact, not pool filtration or construction dust.
A quality DE product may cost a bit more, but it comes with clarity on safety, efficacy and what you’re actually applying around your plants and soil.
Diatomaceous earth food grade Australia: what that label really means
In Australia, “food grade” diatomaceous earth usually means the product is made from amorphous silica rather than calcined pool-filter DE. That matters because pool-grade DE is heat-treated and can contain higher crystalline silica, which is not what you want around plants, pets or people.
Food grade doesn’t mean “breathe it in”. It doesn’t mean “sprinkle it everywhere”. It just means you’re starting with the right type of DE for home, garden and animal-adjacent use.
Before buying, check:
- It clearly says food grade, amorphous silica or fossil shell flour
- It is not pool filter media
- It has proper directions for garden or pest use
- The powder is sealed, dry and labelled
- You still use a mask and eye protection when applying it
This is where cheap mystery bags are a false economy. If the label is vague, skip it. You’re applying this around soil, plants, pets and possibly food crops, so clarity matters.
Choose amorphous DE for plant use and never use pool-grade DE around plants, animals or people. That should stay the hard rule.
How DE works (and its biggest limitation)
DE works by physical contact. It abrades the insect’s protective cuticle and absorbs oils so the insect desiccates. It’s not a poison, and insects don’t develop resistance to it.
Limitation: it only works when dry and must contact the pest. Keep treated surfaces dry and re-apply after watering, heavy dew or rain.
What DE Can Do — And What It Won’t
DE is brilliant in the situations it’s designed for — dry contact and crawling pests — but it’s not a set-and-forget barrier or a blitz treatment for big infestations. Think of it as one tool in an integrated pest management (IPM) kit:
-
DE doesn’t persist indefinitely — moisture (dew, watering, rain) neutralises the film and you’ll need to reapply.
-
If pests are tucked deep in soil crevices or in large numbers, DE might slow them but won’t wipe them out alone.
- It’s great for low-to-medium pressure scenarios and preventative use, but high-pressure outbreaks often call for layering with biological controls, habitat tweaks, or organic sprays.
Treat it like maintenance — keep paths dry, reapply after weather events, and use it in concert with pruning, sanitation and your other IPM strategies for best results.
Diatomaceous earth uses around the garden
Diatomaceous earth gets talked about like it does everything. It doesn’t. But in the right spot, it’s a handy little tool.
The best diatomaceous earth uses in the garden are dry, targeted and pest-focused:
- Light dusting on soil surfaces for fungus gnat larvae and crawling pests
- Thin barriers around pots, benches, greenhouse legs and propagation areas
- Targeted dusting on stems and leaf undersides where pests actually crawl
- Dry cracks, edges and protected areas where ants, roaches or earwigs travel
- Small pest-pressure jobs where you don’t want to jump straight to sprays
Where it falls over is wet soil, heavy rain, overhead watering and pests that never touch the powder. It also isn’t a fertiliser, even though it contains silica. Don’t expect it to feed hungry plants or fix poor potting mix.
Think of DE as a dry-contact pest tool. Use it where pests move. Keep it off flowers. Keep it thin. Reapply after moisture. That’s the whole game.
For a garden-grade option that can be dusted or mixed as a slurry, Diatomaceous Earth Micronized & Sprayable is the better fit than random bulk DE with unclear labelling.
What is diatomaceous earth used for in pots and houseplants?
In pots and houseplants, diatomaceous earth is mainly used for pests that move across dry surfaces.
The classic one is fungus gnats. A thin dry layer across the top of the pot makes life harder for larvae and adults moving through the surface zone. It works even better when you bottom-water for a while so the top stays dry.
It can also help with ants nesting around pots, crawling pests on plant stands, or mealybugs and mites when applied carefully to contact zones. But don’t dust the whole lounge room like you’re seasoning chips. Indoor DE needs to be targeted.
Good houseplant use looks like this:
- Apply a light top-dress for fungus gnats.
- Keep the surface dry between waterings.
- Use sticky traps to catch adults.
- Dust pot rims, shelf edges or saucers only where pests travel.
- Avoid applying near fans, heaters or high-traffic areas.
- Wipe leaves clean once pest pressure is under control.
DE won’t fix overwatering, soggy potting mix or a fungus gnat problem caused by constantly wet soil. It buys you control while you fix the conditions that caused the outbreak.
When DE shines (and when it doesn’t)
Great for: soft-bodied crawlers — fungus gnats (top of soil), aphids (contact), mealybugs, spider mites, thrips (on surfaces), ants, cockroaches, slugs (when dry).
Not great for: pests shielded under thick waxy coatings you can’t reach, situations that stay wet, or flying pests that don’t land on treated surfaces. Re-apply after watering.
Pollinators & beneficials: DE is non-selective — it can harm beneficial insects on contact. Keep it off open flowers and avoid broadcasting dust on blooms. Target only the pest zones.
A Quick Note on Soil Health
While diatomaceous earth is mostly used as a pest tool, its silica-rich nature can subtly support soil structure. Many seasoned organic growers find that mixing a thin layer into topsoil helps:
-
Silica supports stronger plant cell walls, which can mean more resilient leaves and stems.
- A light amendment can add minor grit and pore space, helping soil resist compaction in heavy conditions.
This isn’t a fertiliser and it won’t replace organic matter, but when combined with mulches and compost, a little DE can quietly build an environment where roots breathe and soil biology thrives.
How to apply DE (two proven methods)
Target first (so you use less product and spare the good bugs), then choose one of the methods below.
1) Dry dusting (fastest)
- Isolate the plant if feasible.
- With a puffer or shaker, dust a light film on upper/lower leaf surfaces where pests crawl, stems, and the soil surface (for gnats).
- Leave dry for 24–48 hours; re-dust after watering or if the powder gets disturbed.
2) Micronised spray/slurry (best coverage on ornamentals)
Micronised DE can be mixed into water, sprayed for coverage, then allowed to dry so it leaves a fine film.
Nursery-tested recipe
- 1 tbsp DE per 1 L water + 1 tsp soft/horticultural soap
- Shake and keep agitating (DE settles).
- Spray to full coverage, including undersides of leaves and the soil surface.
- Let it dry completely so the film forms.
- Repeat twice weekly for 2–3 weeks.
This slurry works because the kill happens after it dries — a fine film remains on surfaces the pests crawl over. Micronised, sprayable DE is designed for this.
Pest-by-pest playbooks (indoor & outdoor)
Fungus gnats (houseplants)
- Top-dress 2–3 mm of DE on the soil. For two weeks, bottom-water so the top stays dry.
- Add yellow sticky traps to catch adults; re-apply DE after any top watering.
Mealybugs & scale (citrus/ornamentals)
- Use the micronised slurry; spray to full coverage (leaf undersides, petioles, stems, soil).
- Repeat twice weekly for 2–3 weeks; wipe off dead residue after 3 days.
Spider mites & thrips (leaf undersides)
- Combine targeted dusting of leaf undersides plus the slurry to reach crevices.
- Allow plants to dry quickly in shade; re-treat weekly until pressure drops.
Aphids (veg & roses)
- First hose off colonies with water.
- Then dust stems/leaf undersides or apply slurry; keep away from open blooms.
Ants, roaches & slugs
- Perimeter dust where they travel (patios, pot feet, thresholds).
- Refresh after dew or rain and keep the powder dry.
Diatomaceous earth pest control for ants, earwigs and roaches
Diatomaceous earth pest control works best when you treat traffic routes, not the whole garden.
Ants, earwigs and roaches don’t need a mountain of powder dumped on them. They need to walk through a dry, fine film. Once DE gets on their bodies, it damages the waxy outer layer and dries them out over time.
Use it like this:
- Find where they’re moving — pot feet, pavers, shed edges, greenhouse corners, bench legs or wall gaps.
- Apply a thin line or light dusting across the path.
- Keep it dry for as long as possible.
- Refresh after rain, dew, cleaning or irrigation.
- Vacuum or sweep excess powder indoors once the pressure drops.
The mistake is making big fluffy piles. Insects often walk around them, pets stick their nose in them, and you create more airborne dust than needed. A barely visible layer is usually better.
For ants, DE is good for slowing movement and disrupting trails. For roaches and earwigs, focus on dry hiding edges and night-time travel paths. If the area is damp all the time, fix that first or DE will keep failing.
Using DE Indoors & Keeping Dust Under Control
One thing growers often ask is how to use DE safely inside the home or in close-quarters pot plant setups. DE is a very fine powder — it’s low-toxicity but not inert in the air. When you apply it indoors, think like a pest scout and a tidy gardener: aim for the narrowest path pests take, not broad broadcast dust.
If you’re treating floor-level houseplants or shelves, avoid stirring up clouds of powder. Work with a shaker or puffer, and plan your cleanup before application:
-
Ventilate first: crack a window or turn on a fan so any stray dust doesn’t hang around.
-
Target, don’t cloud: apply a light film where pests crawl (soil surface, leaf undersides) instead of sweeping big piles.
-
Wet-wipe after work: once the DE has done its job (usually 48–72 hours), use a damp cloth to wipe surfaces — this kills dust in place without sending it airborne.
- Vacuum with a HEPA/filter: for fallen DE on floors, a filtered vacuum is way safer than sweeping — this keeps particles out of the air.
These little rituals make DE practical indoors while minimising dust stress for you, your family, and curious pets.
Safety & compliance (Australia)
- Follow the label. Use only products sold and labelled for pest control; follow all directions and local regulations.
- Respiratory/eye protection: Wear a P2/N95 mask and eye protection when handling fine DE; avoid creating airborne dust; use outdoors or in well-ventilated spaces.
- Keep it off flowers to protect bees and beneficials. Target only pest pathways.
- Store sealed & dry. DE clumps when wet; efficacy returns once fully dry.
DE Around Pets & Backyard Animals
While DE is a favourite organic pest tool, keep in mind that pets and chooks sniff low and close — exactly where the dust settles. Using amorphous food-grade DE is one thing, but we still treat it with respect:
-
Keep curious noses out of the dust cloud during application.
-
Apply DE in thin, targeted lines or spots, not big piles, so animals don’t snuffle it up.
- Avoid applying DE on heavily trafficked run-through areas unless you can brush or mop excess up quickly.
This isn’t because DE is highly toxic — it’s because fine dust can irritate tiny lungs. A little precaution keeps everyone happy and healthy.
Why our Micronized & Sprayable DE is different
- Micronised particle size for smooth slurries and even films once dry.
- Works brilliantly for soil top-dress against gnats and as a dust for mealybugs/aphids/mites/ants.
- Free shaker with 5 L for easy perimeter dusting.
Shop: Dr Greenthumbs Diatomaceous Earth – Micronized & Sprayable (Pure Silica)
FAQs
Does diatomaceous earth really work on houseplant pests?
Yes — when it stays dry and contacts the pest. It kills by desiccation. Re-apply after watering.
Is it safe around kids and pets?
Use food-grade DE, avoid inhalation, and apply targeted amounts. Wear a mask/eye protection and keep out of reach of children and pets during application.
Can I spray DE? Doesn’t it need to be dry?
You can spray a slurry for coverage (micronised DE helps). The effect begins after it dries and leaves a film on surfaces.
Will DE hurt bees?
DE is non-selective and can harm beneficial insects on contact. Keep it off flowers and use it where pests travel (soil, stems), not on blooms.
How quickly does it work?
Expect results within about 48 hours when it’s dry and in contact with the insect. Coverage, humidity and pest pressure all play a role.
Next reads for smarter pest control with DE
Still narrowing down the pest or building a better IPM routine? These guides will help you identify the problem faster and pair DE with the right next step.
- How to Get Rid of Fungus Gnats Australia Guide
- How to Get Rid of Mealybugs Australia
- Spider Mite Control Australia
- Pest Control IPM Stack: Top 10 Organic Solutions
About the Author

