Replanting problem is a common and serious issue hindering the continuous cultivation of Panax plants. Changes in soil microbial community driven by plant species of different ages and developmental stages are speculated to cause this problem. Inoculation of microbial antagonists is proposed to alleviate replanting issues efficiently. High-throughput sequencing revealed that bacterial diversity evidently decreased, and fungal diversity markedly increased in soils of adult ginseng plants in the root growth stage. Relatively few beneficial microbe agents, such as Luteolibacter, Cytophagaceae, Luteibacter, Sphingomonas, Sphingomonadaceae, and Zygomycota, were observed. On the contrary, the relative abundance of harmful microorganism agents, namely, Brevundimonas, Enterobacteriaceae, Pandoraea, Cantharellales, Dendryphion, Fusarium, and Chytridiomycota, increased with pant age. Furthermore, Bacillus subtilis 50-1 was isolated and served as microbial antagonists against pathogenic Fusarium oxysporum of ginseng root-rot, and its biocontrol efficacy was 67.8% using a dual culture assay. The ginseng death rate and relative abundance of Fusarium decreased by 63.3% and 46.1%, respectively, after inoculation with 50-1 in replanting soils. Data revealed that changes in the diversity and composition of rhizospheric microbial communities driven by ginseng of different ages and developmental stages could cause microecological degradation. Biocontrol using microbial antagonists was an effective method for alleviating the replanting problem.