
VPD Chart for Grow Tents: Complete Guide with Printable Chart (2026)
A VPD chart (vapor pressure deficit chart) is a quick-reference grid that tells you whether your grow tent's temperature and humidity are dialed in for the growth stage you're in. Find your leaf temperature along the top of the chart, slide down to your humidity row, read the VPD value in kPa, and adjust until you're inside the target band — 0.4–0.8 kPa for seedlings, 0.8–1.2 kPa for veg, 1.0–1.5 kPa for flowering.
Live VPD, Automatically — in the Gorilla Grow Tent App
The Gorilla Grow Tent App reads VPD in real time from the GXi WiFi Temperature & Humidity Sensor, shows you exactly where you are on the chart, and tells you what to adjust. No screenshots, no lookups, no guesswork.
Understanding and properly using a VPD chart is the difference between average grows and exceptional harvests. Vapor Pressure Deficit charts give you a scientific roadmap for creating the perfect growing environment inside a grow tent, yet most growers struggle to interpret and apply the data effectively. This guide fixes that — with a full VPD chart for grow tents, step-by-step reading instructions, stage-by-stage targets, and integration tips for automated climate control.
On This Page
- The VPD Chart (printable)
- VPD Calculator (in-app)
- What Is a VPD Chart?
- How to Read a VPD Chart (6 Steps)
- VPD Targets by Growth Stage
- Why VPD Matters (and What Goes Wrong)
- How to Control VPD in Your Tent
- The VPD Formula
- Automated VPD Management with GXi
- 6 Common VPD Mistakes
- Essential Equipment
- Advanced Strategies
- Frequently Asked Questions
VPD Chart for Grow Tents (kPa by Temperature & Humidity)
The chart below shows VPD in kilopascals (kPa) for every combination of leaf temperature and relative humidity a typical indoor grower encounters. Find your temperature along the top, slide down to your humidity row, and read the VPD value — then match to the stage targets below.
| RH \ Temp | 65°F | 70°F | 75°F | 80°F | 85°F | 90°F |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40% | 1.26 | 1.49 | 1.75 | 2.05 | 2.39 | 2.78 |
| 45% | 1.15 | 1.36 | 1.60 | 1.88 | 2.19 | 2.55 |
| 50% | 1.05 | 1.24 | 1.46 | 1.71 | 1.99 | 2.32 |
| 55% | 0.94 | 1.12 | 1.31 | 1.54 | 1.79 | 2.09 |
| 60% | 0.84 | 0.99 | 1.17 | 1.37 | 1.59 | 1.86 |
| 65% | 0.73 | 0.87 | 1.02 | 1.20 | 1.39 | 1.62 |
| 70% | 0.63 | 0.74 | 0.87 | 1.03 | 1.19 | 1.39 |
| 75% | 0.52 | 0.62 | 0.73 | 0.86 | 0.99 | 1.16 |
| 80% | 0.42 | 0.50 | 0.58 | 0.68 | 0.80 | 0.93 |
| 85% | 0.31 | 0.37 | 0.44 | 0.51 | 0.60 | 0.70 |
| 90% | 0.21 | 0.25 | 0.29 | 0.34 | 0.40 | 0.46 |
Screenshot this chart and tape it to the outside of your tent. A 2-second glance during daily checks is faster than pulling up an app — and doesn't stress plants when you open the door repeatedly.
VPD Calculator: Skip the Chart Entirely
A VPD calculator does the lookup for you — enter your leaf temperature and relative humidity and it returns the VPD in kPa, plus whether you're inside the ideal band for your current growth stage. The Gorilla Grow Tent App includes a built-in VPD calculator that reads directly from the GXi WiFi Temperature & Humidity Sensor, so the number updates in real time as your tent climate shifts — no manual entry, no screenshots, no guesswork.
Pair the GXi WiFi Temp & Humidity Sensor with the Gorilla Grow Tent App, pick your growth stage, and the calculator auto-targets the right VPD band. The app then coordinates your smart inline duct fans and LED grow lights to hold that target.
What Is a VPD Chart and Why Every Grower Needs One
A VPD chart is a visual grid that displays the relationship between air temperature, relative humidity, and vapor pressure deficit values. Think of it as your plant's environmental GPS — it tells you exactly where your climate is and guides you to where it needs to be for optimal growth.
Vapor Pressure Deficit measures how much additional water vapor the air could hold before reaching saturation. When VPD is too high, plants transpire rapidly and stress; too low and transpiration slows, reducing nutrient uptake and raising disease risk. Professional growers rely on VPD charts because they provide precise targets for environmental control rather than relying on temperature and humidity ranges alone.
The same 60% relative humidity produces 1.17 kPa VPD at 75°F but 1.59 kPa VPD at 85°F — a 36% difference. That's why RH alone is a misleading metric, and why a VPD chart is essential.
VPD vs. Relative Humidity Alone
| Metric | VPD | Relative Humidity Only |
|---|---|---|
| Accounts for temperature | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Predicts transpiration rate | ✅ Directly | ⚠ Indirectly |
| Stage-specific targets | ✅ 4 clear bands | ⚠ Requires mental math |
| Works across climates | ✅ Universal | ❌ Breaks in hot/cold rooms |
| Used by commercial growers | ✅ Standard | ❌ Obsolete |
How to Read a VPD Chart (Step-by-Step)
Measure leaf temperature
Point an infrared thermometer at a mature fan leaf. Leaves run 2–5°F cooler than ambient air because of transpiration cooling — using air temperature alone gives a falsely low VPD reading.
Read relative humidity at canopy height
Place your sensor at the canopy, not the tent floor (skews humid) or ceiling (skews dry). Canopy-level readings match the air your leaves actually breathe.
Find the intersection on the chart
Locate your temperature column and your humidity row. The number in the cell is your current VPD in kPa.
Compare to the stage target
Seedling 0.4–0.8 kPa · Vegetative 0.8–1.2 kPa · Flowering 1.0–1.5 kPa · Late Flower 1.2–1.6 kPa.
Adjust one variable at a time
If VPD is too high, raise humidity or lower temperature. If too low, do the opposite. Never change both at once — you'll lose track of which fix worked.
Re-measure after 30 minutes
Give the tent time to stabilize before the next adjustment. Rapid back-to-back changes create yo-yo conditions that stress plants.
VPD Targets by Growth Stage
Plants have different VPD requirements depending on their development stage. Understanding these changing needs is essential for maximizing performance throughout the lifecycle.
🌱 Seedling & Cloning
0.4 – 0.8 kPa70–80% RH at 70–77°F. Underdeveloped root systems need low transpiration pressure to establish without water stress.
AUTO-TARGET WITH GXi🌿 Vegetative
0.8 – 1.2 kPa55–70% RH at 75–82°F. The sweet spot for rapid, stress-free growth and strong branch structure.
AUTO-TARGET WITH GXi🌸 Flowering / Fruiting
1.0 – 1.5 kPa45–60% RH at 75–85°F. Higher VPD prevents mold on dense flower clusters and drives nutrient uptake.
AUTO-TARGET WITH GXi🍇 Late Flower / Harvest
1.2 – 1.6 kPa35–50% RH at 75–80°F. Final 2–3 weeks — low RH reduces mold risk for a clean finish.
AUTO-TARGET WITH GXiWhy VPD Matters: The Impact on Transpiration
VPD directly drives transpiration — the process by which plants release water vapor through their stomata. Transpiration pulls water and nutrients from the roots up through the plant, cools the leaves, and keeps stomata open for CO₂ uptake. When VPD drifts outside the target band, every one of those processes slows down.
Reduced transpiration · sluggish growth · mold, powdery mildew, rot · calcium deficiency (curled edges, brown tips) · soft, stretchy stems.
Excessive transpiration · closed stomata (no photosynthesis) · nutrient burn on tips · wilting even when medium is moist · curling, crispy leaf edges.
How to Control VPD in Your Grow Tent
Adjusting Temperature
To raise: add lighting · add thermostat-controlled heater · slow exhaust during cool periods.
To lower: increase air exchange · add mini-split AC · run lights during the dark cycle · switch to cooler LED lighting.
Managing Humidity
To raise: humidifier sized for your cubic footage · open water trays inside the tent · temporarily slow exhaust fan.
To lower: dehumidifier · increase exhaust CFM · water at lights-on · slightly raise ambient temperature.
Airflow & Circulation
Oscillating fans break up microclimates so VPD stays consistent throughout the canopy. Aim for gentle leaf flutter — not wind-burn strength. Balance intake and exhaust, otherwise negative pressure pulls unconditioned air through seams and sabotages readings.
The VPD Formula
SVP = Saturated Vapor Pressure at current leaf temperature · RH = Relative humidity %
Most growers skip the math and use the chart above or a digital sensor. The Gorilla GXi WiFi Temperature and Humidity Sensor calculates VPD in real time and streams it to the Gorilla Grow Tent app, removing the lookup entirely.
Automated VPD Management with GXi
The Gorilla GXi system closes the loop: the WiFi Temp & Humidity Sensor feeds live VPD readings to GXi fans, humidifiers, and controllers, which adjust automatically to hold your target VPD for the current growth stage. You set the stage — the tent handles the rest. Start with a complete grow tent kit to get compatible components out of the box.
The Three Pillars of VPD Control
Each GXi device owns one lever that moves VPD — together they hold your target band automatically.
The GXi Ecosystem: Set Your Stage. Forget the Chart.
Every GXi device talks to the Gorilla Grow Tent App. Tell it you're in seedling, veg, flower, or late flower — the sensor, fans, and humidifier coordinate in real time to hold your target VPD band, night and day. No more babysitting the tent.
Laboratory-grade sensor accuracy (±0.3°C and ±2% RH) means the VPD value you see is the VPD your plants actually experience. Cheap hygrometers can be off by 5–10% — that's the difference between 0.9 and 1.4 kPa.
6 Common VPD Mistakes That Limit Growth
Using cheap hygrometers
Budget thermometers can be off by 5–10%, making VPD calculations worthless. Calibrated instruments are non-negotiable.
Measuring in the wrong spot
Readings near the ceiling or next to equipment are false data. Always measure at canopy level.
Ignoring day/night difference
Plants transpire during dark periods too. Night VPD should sit 0.2–0.4 kPa below day values.
Static targets seed-to-harvest
Each stage wants a different VPD band. Adjust your targets as plants develop — don't set it and forget it.
Using air instead of leaf temp
Leaves run 2–5°F cooler. An infrared thermometer closes the gap and gives you an honest VPD number.
Chasing exact numbers
Staying within the stage band matters more than hitting a specific kPa. Don't over-tune.
How the Gorilla App Solves Each Mistake
| The Mistake | How GXi + the Gorilla App Fixes It |
|---|---|
| Cheap hygrometers off by 5–10% | Lab-grade sensor: ±0.3°C and ±2% RH — the number you see is real. |
| Wrong measurement spot | Ship the sensor mounted at canopy height out of the box; app confirms signal strength. |
| Ignoring day/night difference | App auto-switches VPD target 0.3 kPa lower during dark cycle. |
| Static targets seed-to-harvest | Pick stage in app → targets update instantly; GXi devices re-tune automatically. |
| Air temp instead of leaf temp | App applies the 2–5°F offset so displayed VPD matches leaf-level reality. |
| Chasing exact numbers | Tolerance bands highlight the stage range visually — you stop over-adjusting. |
Essential Equipment for VPD Management
- GXi Temperature and Humidity Sensor — real-time VPD calculations, ±0.3°C accuracy
- Variable-speed inline fan and environmental controller
- A Gorilla Grow Tent with 1680D canvas for insulation and airflow stability
- Humidifier and dehumidifier sized for your cubic footage
- Infrared thermometer for accurate leaf-temperature readings
- Complete grow tent kits bundle everything together with component compatibility guaranteed
Advanced VPD Strategies
Day / Night VPD Differential
Run 1.0–1.5 kPa during lights-on and 0.6–1.0 kPa during lights-off. This mirrors outdoor conditions and has been correlated with better overall plant health in controlled grows.
CO₂ Enrichment
Under CO₂ supplementation (1,000–1,500 ppm) plants tolerate higher VPD. Shift flowering targets up to 1.3–1.6 kPa and push temperatures to 80–85°F to fully capitalize on the enrichment.
Variety-Specific Targets
Advanced growers develop variety-specific VPD protocols. Some plants perform better at the high end of their stage band (1.1–1.3 during flowering), others prefer the middle. Log your environment across cycles to find the sweet spot for each variety.
Troubleshooting VPD Issues
- High VPD: Increase humidity, reduce temperature, or improve air circulation.
- Low VPD: Decrease humidity, slightly raise temperature, or reduce airflow.
- Fluctuating VPD: Check for air leaks around zippers and ducting ports, improve insulation, or upgrade environmental controls.
Frequently Asked Questions About VPD
How often should I check my VPD?
Monitor VPD continuously with a digital sensor. If reading a chart manually, check at least twice daily — once mid-lights-on and once during the dark period.
What's the ideal VPD for flowering plants?
Flowering plants perform best at 1.0–1.5 kPa. Start near 1.0 early in flowering and push toward 1.2–1.5 as flowers mature to discourage mold while keeping nutrient uptake strong.
What VPD should seedlings be at?
Seedlings and clones should be kept at 0.4–0.8 kPa, which is 70–80% relative humidity at 70–77°F. Low VPD prevents water stress while underdeveloped roots establish.
Is 1.2 kPa too high for flowering?
No — 1.2 kPa sits inside the ideal flowering band of 1.0–1.5 kPa. It's only too high for seedlings and early vegetative plants.
How do I calculate VPD manually?
Use VPD = SVP × (1 − RH/100), where SVP is the saturated vapor pressure at current leaf temperature. In practice, use the VPD chart above — find your temperature column, slide down to your humidity row, and read the kPa value.
Does leaf temperature affect VPD?
Yes — leaf temperature is the temperature that actually drives VPD, and leaves typically run 2–5°F cooler than ambient air due to transpiration cooling. Use an infrared thermometer for precise readings.
What happens if VPD is too low?
Low VPD slows transpiration and nutrient uptake, stunts growth, and sharply raises the risk of mold, powdery mildew, and rot. Plants may also show calcium deficiency even when calcium is present in the feed.
Can I use a VPD chart for all plant types?
Core principles apply universally, but optimal ranges vary. Most common crops prefer 0.8–1.2 kPa during vegetative growth. Tropical plants often do well at 0.6–1.0 kPa; succulents tolerate higher VPD of 1.2–1.8 kPa.
Why is my VPD constantly changing?
Small fluctuations throughout the day are normal as temperature and humidity shift with lighting and ventilation cycles. Large swings mean inadequate environmental control — check for air leaks, upgrade insulation, or add variable-speed climate equipment.
Do I need a VPD sensor or is a chart enough?
A chart is enough for a small tent with stable conditions. For larger tents, hydroponic setups, or automated climate control, a dedicated sensor like the Gorilla GXi WiFi Temperature & Humidity Sensor saves time and catches drift before plants stress.
Build a VPD-Ready Grow Tent Setup
A premium grow tent with thick canvas (1680D or heavier) insulates against outside temperature swings — the single biggest contributor to stable VPD. Pair it with a Gorilla Grow Tent sized for your space (popular footprints include 2x2, 2x4, 3x3, 4x4, 4x8, and 5x5), a variable-speed exhaust fan with carbon filter, properly sized humidifier and dehumidifier, and the GXi WiFi Temp & Humidity Sensor for real-time VPD.
The VPD Advantage
Reading a VPD chart takes 10 seconds. Holding your tent inside the right band for the current growth stage removes the guesswork from climate control and compounds into faster growth, higher yields, and cleaner harvests. Pair the chart above with a Gorilla Grow Tent and a complete grow tent kit and you'll spend less time adjusting equipment and more time watching plants thrive.
Related guides: grow room temp & humidity chart · how to bring humidity down · 10 most common indoor growing problems.
Build Your VPD-Perfect Grow Tent
Start with a tent that holds climate like a vault, add the sensor that measures VPD like a lab, and control everything from one app. Everything you need — nothing you don't.




