State planting calendar

When to plant in Virginia

Virginia spans USDA hardiness zones 5b-8a. Average last spring frost: mid April. Average first fall frost: late October. This calendar is anchored to Virginia Cooperative Extension's recommendations, with timing adjusted for the dominant climate zone of the state.

By Thomas Joseph Published 2026-06-10 Updated 2026-06-10

Virginia at a glance

USDA hardiness zones5b-8a
RegionMid-Atlantic
Average last spring frostmid April
Average first fall frostlate October
Primary Extension serviceVirginia Cooperative Extension

What grows particularly well in Virginia

These are the crops, ornamentals, and trees Virginia Cooperative Extension highlights as well-suited to Virginia's climate:

Virginia planting calendar

Dates are approximate and based on the dominant USDA zone for the state. For zone-specific timing, use the zone finder by ZIP code and frost date lookup tools.

Spring planting (after last frost: mid April)

Cool-season vegetables (start 2-6 weeks before last frost outdoors): lettuce, spinach, peas, radishes, carrots, beets, kale, broccoli transplants, cabbage transplants.

Warm-season vegetables (after last frost, soil 60F+): tomato transplants, pepper transplants, beans (direct sow), cucumbers, squash, melons. See the seed starting timeline tool for indoor start dates.

Annual flowers (after last frost): zinnia, marigold, cosmos, sunflower, nasturtium.

Perennials, shrubs, trees: Plant in spring after soil thaws but before summer heat. Best window in Virginia: 4-6 weeks after last frost.

Summer (June - August)

Maintenance season for most Virginia gardens. Mulch heavily, water deeply (1 inch per week), pinch back mums for fall bloom, hand-pull weeds, harvest summer vegetables. Plant fall vegetable starts indoors by mid-July.

Fall planting (before first frost: late October)

Cool-season vegetables (6-8 weeks before first frost): lettuce, spinach, radish, kale, broccoli, cabbage transplants. Per Penn State Extension, fall vegetable production can equal or exceed spring production with proper timing.

Spring-flowering bulbs: tulip, daffodil, allium, crocus, hyacinth. Plant 4-6 weeks before ground freezes. In Virginia: typically October-November.

Perennials, shrubs, trees: Fall is the best planting season for woody plants in most of Virginia - cooler temperatures + autumn rains reduce transplant stress. Plant 6+ weeks before first hard freeze.

Garlic: Plant cloves in October-November. Harvest the following July.

Winter (December - February)

Most of Virginia is in dormancy. Tasks: order seeds, plan next year, dormant prune fruit trees (February), order bare-root plants for spring delivery. Avoid foot traffic on frozen lawns.

Common Virginia challenges

Humid summers; clay piedmont soil; very high deer pressure; spotted lanternfly; emerald ash borer; tropical storm risk. For region-specific guidance, see our Mid-Atlantic regional gardening guide.

Where to get Virginia-specific advice

The most reliable source for local growing advice is your county Extension office. Virginia Cooperative Extension has county offices that provide free soil testing, plant disease diagnosis, and growing recommendations specific to your microclimate.

Visit Virginia Cooperative Extension for the office nearest you.

Related tools and guides

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