lokeisna Set of 8 Plastic Planter, 10/9/8/7.5/6.5/5.7/5/4inch Plastic Planter, Flower Pot Indoor Decorative Large Plant Pot, Plant Pots Indoor with Drainage and Saucer for All House Plants

Set of 8 Plastic Planter, 10/9/8/7.5/6.5/5.7/5/4inch Plastic Planter, Flower Pot Indoor Decorative Large Plant Pot, Plant Pots Indoor with Drainage and Saucer for All House Plants

Features

  • 8 Sizes of Plant Pots: This set of plant pots has 8 sizes of 10//9/8/7.5/6.5/5.7/5/4 Inch, which are suitable for planting most small and medium-sized plants indoor or outdoor, adding different vitality to your home or office.
  • Multiple Drainage Holes Design and Saucer: There are multiple drainage holes at the bottom of flower pots, which can drain excess water, allow the plant roots to circulate naturally.
  • Perfectly Matched Saucer: Each size plant pot has a suitable saucer for water storage, which is more conducive to the healthy growth of plants. It can prevent water from spilling.
  • Sturdiness, High Quality Material, Odorless: Planters for indoor plants are made of 4 mm ultra-thick PP material. Lightweight, odorless, and durability, not easy to deform or break.
  • Minimalist Modern Style: Spray spots on the beautiful planter appearance, simple and distinctive. The minimalist and modern style can be a good decoration for your home. Choose a unique flower pot for your plants and flowers, which can be placed on the balcony or living room, bedroom, shelf, dining table, etc.

Specifications

Color Set of 8
Size 4 to 10 inches
Unit Count 8

A set of eight plastic plant pots in sizes ranging from 4 to 10 inches for growing small to medium indoor or outdoor plants. Each pot includes multiple drainage holes and a matching saucer to collect excess water; pots are molded from 4 mm thick polypropylene for lightweight, durable, and odorless use. The pots have a simple, minimalist appearance suitable for shelves, tables, balconies, or other indoor displays.

Model Number: B0CNR9N7P7

lokeisna Set of 8 Plastic Planter, 10/9/8/7.5/6.5/5.7/5/4inch Plastic Planter, Flower Pot Indoor Decorative Large Plant Pot, Plant Pots Indoor with Drainage and Saucer for All House Plants Review

4.6 out of 5

Why I reached for this planter set

After a round of repotting left my shelves looking like a patchwork of mismatched nursery pots, I wanted a cohesive, lightweight solution that wouldn’t punish me (or my shelves) the way ceramic does. The lokeisna planter set promised a minimalist look, a full run of sizes, proper drainage, and saucers that actually fit. I’ve been using the set across a mix of pothos, spider plants, a ZZ, and a couple of small succulents, and it’s been a genuinely practical upgrade for day‑to‑day plant care.

Design and build quality

These are polypropylene pots, about 4 mm thick, and that thickness matters. They don’t feel flimsy when you pick them up, and they hold their shape when you press the sides to loosen a rootball. There’s no chemical smell out of the box. The finish is a matte, slightly speckled gray that reads as “stone” from a few feet away; up close, you can tell it’s plastic, but the texture goes a long way to avoid the shiny, cheap look that plagues most plastic planters.

There are eight sizes from 4 inches up to 10, with sensible increments in between. Each pot comes with a matching saucer. The saucers are basic—flat-bottomed, slightly raised lip—but they’re sized correctly, catch runoff without drama, and tuck under cleanly so the silhouette stays minimal. The pots nest for storage, and the light weight makes them easy to shuffle around during watering or rearranging.

Shape-wise, they’re classic cylinders with a gentle taper. The rim is smooth enough to grip without biting into your fingers, which sounds minor until you’re carrying a freshly watered 10‑inch plant across a hardwood floor.

Drainage and watering experience

Drainage is where these shine for indoor use. The base of each pot is peppered with small holes rather than a few large ones. That design disperses water quickly while keeping potting mix from washing out, so I’ve had no reason to line the bottom with mesh or gravel. For plants that prefer a thorough flush, the water exits fast, and the saucers catch the overflow reliably.

I also like that the saucers enable bottom watering for plants that prefer it (African violets, some succulents). The plastic material is easy to wipe dry afterward, and I’ve had no issues with mineral stains setting in, provided I don’t leave standing water for days. If you’re heavy-handed with the watering can, the smallest sizes can fill their saucers quickly; I just empty them after 10–15 minutes to avoid keeping roots soggy.

If you need even more aggressive drainage—say for cacti in a very moisture-retentive mix—it’s straightforward to widen a couple of holes with a drill. I didn’t need to for general houseplant mixes.

Sizing that actually helps with repotting

The main advantage of an eight-pot set is choice. I used the 7.5- and 9-inch pots for established foliage plants and the 4–6.5 inch range for up-potting cuttings. Having sensible increments meant I wasn’t forced to jump a plant from a tight 5-inch into a cavernous 8-inch, which can encourage overwatering. The volumes track closely with their labeled sizes, and the footprints fit neatly on standard shelves and window ledges.

These sizes also map well to common nursery pot dimensions, so if you prefer slip-caching (hiding a plastic grow pot inside a decorative one), you can do that too—just mind that these aren’t watertight and shouldn’t be used as cachepots without the included saucer.

Aesthetics and how they live in a room

This set hits a clean, modern look without shouting for attention. The speckled gray pairs well with both warm woods and metal shelving. On open shelving, the repeat of shape and finish across different sizes looks intentional and pulls the plants into a cohesive whole.

Do they pass for stone? From across the room, yes. Up close, you’ll notice the plastic, particularly at the rim. That’s not a knock—just the reality of plastic. The finish does a decent job hiding scuffs and hard water marks, and a sponge brings them back to looking fresh in a minute or two.

Indoor vs. outdoor use

Indoors is where these are at their best. Lightweight, no risk of shattering, easy cleanup—it’s the right combination for apartments and shelves. Outdoors, I’d be more cautious. Polypropylene in direct sun and harsh weather will eventually fade and can become brittle over multiple seasons. I wouldn’t leave them exposed on a south-facing patio for a full summer, and I’d bring them in during freeze-thaw cycles to avoid stress cracks. Used on a covered balcony or in bright shade, they’ll likely be fine, but if you need pots to live outside year-round, I’d look to UV-stabilized or heavier-duty options.

One more practical note: the larger sizes are light enough that a tall, top-heavy plant can feel tippy outside in wind. Adding a layer of decorative pebble or lava rock at the bottom helps stabilize without stifling drainage.

Day-to-day use and maintenance

  • Repotting is straightforward; the walls flex just enough to slip a root-bound plant out without wrestling.
  • Cleaning is easy: a bit of dish soap removes fertilizer residue, and the matte finish doesn’t show scratches readily.
  • The small drainage holes resist clogging; I haven’t had to poke them out, even with finer mixes.
  • The saucers sit securely, but they don’t “lock” to the pot. That’s normal for this style—just lift from the pot, not the saucer.

After a few months, plant health has been good across the board. The combination of multiple drainage holes and correctly sized containers makes it easier to keep a consistent moisture profile. My fiddle-leaf cutting put on new growth in the 6.5-inch pot, and a pothos moved into the 9-inch has put out a healthy flush of leaves without any signs of staying too wet.

Where these shine, and where they don’t

What I like:
- Full, sensible size progression from 4 to 10 inches
- Lightweight but sturdy 4 mm walls; no wobble or creaking
- Excellent drainage design; soil stays put, water exits fast
- Clean, minimalist look that reads as stone at a distance
- Matching saucers that actually fit and make bottom watering easy
- Good value relative to buying individual planters

Trade-offs to consider:
- Still plastic up close; if you want true ceramic or concrete presence, these won’t replace that
- Not ideal for long-term, uncovered outdoor exposure in harsh sun or freezes
- Saucers are simple and not watertight “reservoirs”—plan to empty them after watering

Value and who they’re for

As a set, this is priced smartly for anyone building out a plant collection or refreshing mismatched pots. You’re getting cohesive design, the practical benefits of plastic (lightweight, durable, easy to clean), and the plant-friendly functionality that matters most indoors: good drainage and right-sized containers. For new plant owners, the range of sizes removes guesswork; for more experienced collectors, it’s a flexible toolkit for propagation and upsizing without hunting down individual pots.

If your aesthetic demands the heft and patina of terracotta or concrete, or your plants live outdoors year-round, you’ll likely want to mix in other materials. But for indoor houseplants and covered spaces, this set is a very functional backbone.

Recommendation

I recommend the lokeisna planter set for indoor growers who want a cohesive look, reliable drainage, and sensible sizing without the weight and cost of ceramic. It strikes the right balance between form and function: sturdy enough to use for years, tasteful enough to blend into most interiors, and thoughtfully designed for healthy plant care. If you’re outfitting a shelf, a living room corner, or a small balcony with houseplants, this set is an easy choice.



Project Ideas

Business

DIY Planter Gift Kits (Etsy / Shopify)

Package a set with one planted sample or bare pots plus soil discs, seeds, labels, paint pens, and step-by-step instructions. Offer variants: 'herb kit', 'succulent kit', 'paint-your-own' and premium gift-wrap. Profit drivers: upsell soil mixes, branded stickers, and personalization; market for housewarmings and holidays.


Microgreens / Fresh Herb Subscription

Use the pots to grow and ship weekly microgreens or potted culinary herbs to subscribers. Send plants in 4–6" pots for single servings and rotate varieties seasonally. Revenue model: weekly/biweekly subscriptions, introductory boxes, add-ons like harvesting scissors and recipe cards, with local delivery or partner shipping.


Event Styling & Centerpiece Rentals

Offer sets as short-term decor rentals for weddings, corporate events, and pop-ups. Provide styling options (painted themes, plant selection, saucer liners) and charge per-table or per-set plus delivery/collection and cleaning fees. Scale by maintaining an inventory of clean, identical sets and a damage deposit policy.


Hands-On Plant Bar / Workshops

Host pop-up workshops where customers choose a pot, plant, and decorate it while you teach care basics. Charge per attendee for class materials (pot, plant, soil, decorations), and sell extra sets or bundled take-home kits. Corporate team-building and birthday parties are high-margin bookings.


Corporate Branded Gifting & Bulk Sales

Offer bulk-branded planter sets as corporate gifts — add logo decals, a custom care card, and premium packaging. Target real estate closings, employee welcome kits, and client thank-yous. Provide tiered pricing, fulfillment, and white-label options; consider subscription reorders (refill soil/seeds) for recurring revenue.

Creative

Mini Herb Kitchen Rack

Use the 8 pot sizes to build a tiered windowsill herb rack: larger pots (9–10") for basil and rosemary, smaller ones (4–6") for thyme, chives, and microherbs. Line saucers with decorative stones, add potting mix and labels, and arrange by water needs so maintenance is simple. The set's drainage holes keep roots healthy and make it easy to rotate plants to catch sun.


Succulent Gradient Display

Create a visually striking gradient by planting succulents by color and height in the different pot sizes, then arranging them from largest to smallest on a stepped shelf. Use gritty cactus mix for fast drainage and group similar light-water needs together. Optionally paint the pots in ombré tones or use spray-spot accents to match your decor.


Terraced Fairy / Bonsai Garden

Build a miniature landscape across the set: a bonsai or dwarf plant in the largest pot, moss and groundcover in midsize pots, and tiny succulents or figurines in the smallest. Use stones, driftwood, and miniature furniture to create paths and terraces — the matching saucers help contain soil and water for indoor display.


Propagation and Seedling Station

Turn the smaller pots into a propagation/seed-starting station: use the 4–6" pots for cuttings and seedlings, the larger ones as nursery pots for plants ready to be potted on. Keep trays together for humidity control, label each pot, and move them to larger sizes as roots develop. The lightweight PP material makes frequent repotting easy and durable.


Custom Painted / Mosaic Planter Set

Use paints, decoupage, or mosaic tiles to transform each pot into a coordinated art set — great as gifts or decor. Seal painted surfaces with an outdoor sealant for longevity, and use the saucers to create two-tone or inverted-color effects. This is a satisfying weekend craft that yields a polished, matching collection.