Amaryllis bulbs are known for their spectacular blooms, but what many people don’t realize is that with proper care, they can bloom again year after year. Knowing how to store amaryllis bulbs correctly allows the plant to rest, restore energy, and prepare for its next season of growth. At Gardenuity, we love this part of the cycle most — because it reminds us that rest is not the end of growth, it’s where growth begins.
An amaryllis bulb teaches us something most of us forget.
Blooming is not the end of the story.
Rest is.
Each winter, amaryllis bulbs give us something extraordinary — tall stems, impossible flowers, color when we need it most. And then, just as suddenly, the blooms fade. What’s left behind can look unremarkable. A thick bulb. A few strappy leaves. Nothing dramatic.
But inside, everything that matters is still happening.
If you know how to store an amaryllis bulb properly, it will bloom again. Not because you forced it. Because you honored its cycle.
Here’s how.
After your amaryllis finishes blooming, resist the urge to cut everything back.
Those long green leaves are not messy—they are essential.
They are actively collecting sunlight and converting it into energy that the bulb stores for next year’s flowers.
What to do:
Think of this as the bulb’s recovery and strengthening phase.
In early fall, typically September or October, it’s time to help your bulb transition into dormancy.
This rest period is what triggers future blooming.
Here’s how:
This signals to the bulb that it’s time to sleep.
Once the foliage has died back, carefully remove the bulb from its pot.
Prepare it for storage by:
You want the bulb clean—but dry.
Amaryllis bulbs need 8–10 weeks of dormancy in the right conditions.
Ideal storage conditions:
Avoid plastic bags, which can trap moisture and cause rot.
This rest period is not optional. It’s what makes reblooming possible.
When you’re ready—usually in late fall or early winter—bring your bulb out of storage.
To restart growth:
Within weeks, you’ll see new growth emerge.
And soon after, flowers.
Wax-dipped amaryllis bulbs are designed to bloom without water or soil, making them beautifully simple and accessible. Because of that, they don’t always rebloom the same way traditionally planted bulbs do.
But their purpose is something else entirely.
They remind us how little it takes to grow something extraordinary.
And sometimes, that’s enough.
We save amaryllis bulbs because they remind us that growth isn’t constant.
It’s cyclical.
There are seasons when everything is visible. And seasons when nothing is.
Both matter.
Both are necessary.
And when the bloom returns — as it so often does — it feels earned.
Not just by the bulb.
But by you.
Saving an amaryllis bulb is an act of optimism — a quiet belief that something beautiful is already preparing to bloom again
If you’ve never saved an amaryllis bulb before, this is the year to try. And if you’re new to amaryllis entirely, there’s nothing quite like watching one bloom for the very first time.
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