Calculator inputs
Formula used
This calculator targets RH from a chosen VPD and temperature.
- Saturation vapor pressure (SVP) from temperature (kPa):
SVP = 0.6108 × e^(17.27×T / (T+237.3))
- Target RH from VPD (kPa):
RH% = 100 × (1 − VPD / SVP)
- Absolute humidity (optional estimate):
AH(g/m3) = 216.7 × e(hPa) / T(K)
Leaf temperature is estimated as air temperature minus your offset.
How to use this calculator
- Select your growth stage or choose a custom VPD.
- Enter air temperature and a realistic leaf offset.
- Input your current RH to see the suggested adjustment.
- Optionally add room dimensions for a rough moisture estimate.
- Press Calculate, then export results as CSV or PDF.
Example data table
Sample scenarios to show how targets change with stage and temperature.
| Stage | Air temp (C) | VPD target (kPa) | Target RH (%) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seedlings / Clones | 24.0 | 0.60 | ~72 | Higher RH supports gentle transpiration. |
| Vegetative | 26.0 | 1.00 | ~63 | Balanced growth with steady airflow. |
| Flowering / Fruiting | 24.0 | 1.40 | ~52 | Lower RH helps reduce mold risk. |
Your results may differ based on leaf temperature and sensor placement.
What this calculator is optimizing
Garden plants regulate water loss through stomata. Air that is too dry can spike transpiration, stress leaves, and push uneven nutrient uptake. Air that is too humid can stall transpiration and raise condensation risk. This calculator converts temperature and a target vapor pressure deficit (VPD) into a practical relative humidity (RH) goal you can control and measure.
Stage-based VPD targets and why they differ
Young plants usually prefer gentler VPD because roots and leaf area are still developing, so higher RH supports steadier water balance. Vegetative growth often performs well at moderate VPD that supports faster metabolism and consistent transpiration. Flowering or fruiting commonly runs higher VPD to reduce prolonged surface moisture while maintaining hydration.
Temperature and leaf offset effects
Warm air holds more moisture, so the same RH can feel much “drier” at higher temperatures. Leaves can run cooler than surrounding air due to evaporative cooling and canopy airflow. The leaf offset input improves accuracy by basing saturation vapor pressure on leaf temperature, which is the surface where transpiration occurs. Small offsets can shift RH targets enough to matter.
Reading the dew point and moisture estimates
Dew point indicates how close the air is to condensation. When dew point approaches surface temperatures, you may see wet walls, dripping ducting, and higher disease pressure. The optional room-volume estimate translates the difference between current and target absolute humidity into an approximate amount of water vapor to add or remove. Treat it as planning guidance because ventilation and plant transpiration change outcomes.
Actionable adjustments and monitoring
Use the target RH range as a control band, not a single point. Increase humidity with clean humidification and stable night temperatures. Decrease humidity with balanced exhaust and appropriately sized dehumidification. Measure at canopy height, recalibrate sensors periodically, and reassess after changes to lighting, airflow, or plant density. Log trends over a full light cycle, and adjust slowly so equipment and plants stabilize before you change setpoints again with fewer surprises.
FAQs
1) Is RH alone enough to control plant comfort?
RH helps, but VPD ties humidity to temperature. Holding a stable VPD usually produces steadier transpiration than chasing one RH number across day and night swings.
2) What leaf offset should I use without a leaf sensor?
Start at 1.0C cooler than air. Increase it slightly if airflow is weak or leaves feel cool. Reduce it if airflow is strong and leaf temperature tracks air closely.
3) Why does the calculator cap target RH below 100%?
Near-saturation air increases condensation and disease pressure and can slow transpiration. The cap prevents unrealistic targets that are difficult to maintain safely in real grow spaces.
4) How often should I revisit targets?
Recheck when your stage changes, lights are adjusted, or plant density shifts. Also revisit after changing fans, filters, humidifiers, or dehumidifiers because mixing and leaf temperature can change.
5) Why is the room-volume moisture estimate approximate?
It does not include ventilation rate, equipment efficiency, or plant transpiration. Use it for rough sizing, then fine-tune with sensor readings after conditions stabilize.
6) Where should humidity sensors be placed?
Place sensors at canopy height, away from direct spray and not in a fan blast. If possible, use two sensors and compare to reduce errors from local hot or humid pockets.