Planting calendar

Tomato Planting Calendar for Georgia

Estimate spring and fall tomato planting windows for Georgia, including seed starting, transplanting, outdoor sowing, harvest timing, and risk notes.

Tomato plant with ripe red tomatoes in a home vegetable garden

Quick planting window

Start indoorsFebruary to March
TransplantApril to May
Sow seedsUsually not recommended for this crop in a short-season garden
Estimated harvestJune to July
RiskMedium risk

Month calendar

Scan the year by month to see seed starting, sowing, transplanting, and harvest timing.

Jan
Watch
Feb
Start indoors
Mar
Start indoors
Apr
Transplant
May
Transplant
Jun
Harvest
Jul
Harvest
Aug
Watch
Sep
Watch
Oct
Watch
Nov
Watch
Dec
Watch

Tomato is frost sensitive. Wait until the conservative transplant or sowing window for Georgia.

Next: ZIP code personalization

This is a state-level planning window based on typical frost timing and crop rules. Use local Extension guidance or a ZIP code frost-date tool before planting.

Planning notes

Days to maturity

75

Covered states

Georgia

Frost window

March to April / October to November

North Georgia is cooler than central and coastal Georgia.

Tomato growing notes

The calendar window is only the first step. These growing details affect survival, plant vigor, and harvest quality.

Sun

Full sun, ideally 6-8+ hours.

Soil

Rich, well-drained soil with compost.

Spacing

18-24 inches for compact types; 24-36 inches for vigorous vines.

Container

Use a 5+ gallon container for patio types; larger is better.

Watering

Water deeply and consistently; avoid wetting leaves late in the day.

Common mistake

Transplanting before nights are warm enough.

Beginner tip

Harden seedlings off for 7-10 days before planting outside.

Month window table

CropSpring transplant / sowSpring harvestFall transplant / sowFall harvest
TomatoApril to MayJune to JulyJuly to AugustOctober to November

Sources and limits

This page uses Georgia state-level frost windows, USDA zone ranges, and crop rules for planning. It does not replace local Extension or county-level guidance.

FAQ

When should I start tomato seeds indoors in Georgia?

For spring, the indoor seed-starting window is about February to March. Move later if your local frost date is later than the state average.

When should I transplant tomato in Georgia?

For spring, the transplant window is about April to May. Harden seedlings off before planting outside.

Can I sow tomato outdoors in Georgia?

Outdoor sowing is usually riskier for tomato in short-season gardens.

When can I harvest tomato in Georgia?

Spring planting estimates a harvest around June to July; fall planting estimates about October to November. Variety and weather can shift this by several weeks.

Is tomato risky in Georgia?

Tomato is frost sensitive. Wait until the conservative transplant or sowing window for Georgia. For fall: Tomato is frost sensitive. Fall planting in Georgia needs enough warm days before first frost.

Do local differences inside Georgia matter?

North Georgia is cooler than central and coastal Georgia. Treat this as a state-level starter window and confirm with a local Extension or frost-date tool before planting.

What growing details matter most for tomato?

Full sun, ideally 6-8+ hours. Rich, well-drained soil with compost. Common mistake: Transplanting before nights are warm enough.

Is this ZIP-code accurate?

No. This page uses state-level windows; ZIP-code frost dates, USDA zone matching, and reminder calendars are planned for the next phase.