You can put almost any regular Minecraft item into a decorated pot, but with some specific rules about how it works and how much it holds.

Quick Scoop

A decorated pot in Minecraft is basically a tiny hidden container that can store exactly one item type at a time. Think of it as a secret stash disguised as decoration.

What You Can Put Inside

Here’s how item storage in decorated pots works as of the more recent updates and snapshots.

  • You can put:
    • One full stack of any stackable item (like cobblestone, arrows, bread, etc.).
* One single **non‑stackable** item (like a sword, pickaxe, bow, armor piece, potion, etc.).
  • The pot only holds one item type at a time:
    • 64 dirt, or 16 ender pearls, or 1 diamond sword, etc., but not a mix.
  • If you try to use an invalid item or interact incorrectly, the pot gives a little “shake” animation to show it won’t accept that action.

In practice, that means you can hide things like:

  • Tools (pickaxes, shovels, swords).
  • Valuable items (diamonds, emeralds, netherite ingots).
  • Food stacks (bread, steak, carrots).
  • Redstone components (dust, repeaters, comparators).
  • Arrows or other ammo-type items.

How You Put Items In

You don’t open a GUI like a chest; you interact directly.

  1. Hold the item in your hand.
  2. Right‑click (use) on the decorated pot to insert it.
  1. The pot “fills” that slot with either:
    • One non‑stackable item, or
    • Up to a full stack of that stackable item.

To get the item back out:

  • Break the pot normally, and it drops whatever was inside along with the pot or shards depending on tool and Silk Touch.
  • In some versions/snapshots you can also interact and use redstone/automation (droppers, hoppers) to move items in and out.

Fun / Hidden Uses

Players and creators often use decorated pots as:

  • Hidden loot containers in adventure maps (one sword, one special key item, etc.).
  • Mini “treasure pots” in temples or ruins with a single special item inside.
  • Redstone puzzle components where breaking or looting the pot triggers something via comparators.
  • Aesthetic storage in builds, like putting a stack of arrows or food in pots near a camp or kitchen.

In forum builds and YouTube showcases, people love using decorated pots as sneaky one-slot chests that look purely decorative but actually hold an important item.

Decorated Pot + Flower Pot

One popular building trick is to place a flower pot on top of a decorated pot, creating a double‑pot look. You still use the decorated pot as a decorative block (and potentially storage) while the top flower pot holds a plant for extra style.

TL;DR: You can put either one full stack of a single stackable item or one non‑stackable item inside a decorated pot (but only one item type at a time), turning it into a tiny hidden container that’s also a decorative block.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.