Spring · Beginner · Phoenix / East Valley, AZ
Tomatoes are the holy grail of Phoenix gardening. Everyone wants them, and everyone has a neighbor who insists they're impossible here. They're wrong. But they do require you to respect our calendar above everything else.
The key insight: Phoenix tomatoes are a spring crop, not a summer crop. You plant in January and February, and you harvest in April and May — before the June heat shuts everything down. Miss that window by even a few weeks and you'll get flowers but no fruit, because tomatoes stop setting fruit once daytime temps push past 95°F consistently.
Set out transplants between January 15 and February 15. Earlier than that and you risk cold snaps damaging young plants. Later than mid-February and you're racing against the heat. If you're planning out the rest of your beds at the same time, our best month-by-month Phoenix planting calendar shows what should be going in alongside your tomatoes.
If you want to start from seed, begin indoors 6–8 weeks before your transplant date — so late November through December. Use a heat mat, because germination stalls below 65°F.
Not all tomatoes are created equal in our climate. You need varieties that set fruit quickly (short days-to-maturity) and can handle our dry heat.
Avoid most large beefsteak heirlooms unless you plant very early — they need too many days to mature and often get caught by the heat.
Great for trialing multiple varieties in your first season to find your Phoenix favorites.
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Tomatoes are heavy feeders. Before planting, amend your soil generously:
Raised beds are strongly recommended for Phoenix tomatoes. They drain well, warm up faster in January, and let you control your soil mix completely.
Space tomato plants 24–36 inches apart. Dig your hole deep enough to bury the stem up to the lowest set of leaves — tomatoes root along buried stems, which creates a stronger plant.
Install your cage or trellis at planting time, not later. Disturbing roots once plants are established stunts them.
Consistent moisture is critical for tomatoes. Irregular watering causes blossom end rot and cracking. In January and February, water 2–3 times per week. As temps rise in March and April, increase to daily if needed.
Drip irrigation is ideal — it delivers water directly to roots and keeps foliage dry, which reduces disease.
Easy raised bed drip setup — set it and forget it. A game-changer for consistent tomato watering.
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Feed every 2–3 weeks once plants are established. Use a tomato-specific fertilizer or a balanced NPK through the vegetative stage, then switch to a lower-nitrogen, higher-phosphorus formula once flowers appear to encourage fruit set.
Pick tomatoes when they're fully colored but still slightly firm. They'll continue to ripen off the vine at room temperature. Don't refrigerate — cold destroys flavor and texture.
Toward the end of the season as heat builds, you can pick tomatoes at the "breaker" stage (just starting to color) and ripen them indoors before the heat damages them on the vine.
My Best Tomato Varieties for Arizona guide covers 8 specific varieties with heat tolerance ratings, days to maturity for our climate, and exactly where to source seeds locally and online. It's $5 and it'll save you a lot of trial and error.
The main planting window in Phoenix (zones 9b–10a) is January 15 through February 15 for the spring crop, and again from late August through mid-September for the fall crop. Avoid planting between April and August — daytime highs above 95°F shut down fruit set. For exact dates, see our when-to-plant-tomatoes guide.
The most common cause is heat. Tomato pollen becomes sterile when daytime temperatures consistently exceed 95°F or nighttime temperatures stay above 75°F. Once May arrives, expect existing fruit to ripen but new fruit to stop forming until fall. Irregular watering is the second most common cause.
Early Girl, Celebrity, and Solar Fire are the most reliable for our climate because they set fruit fast — before the heat hits. Cherry varieties like Sweet 100 and Sun Gold also handle Phoenix conditions well and produce until temperatures push past 100°F.
Deep water 2–3 times per week in January and February, increasing to daily once March temperatures climb. Use 3 inches of mulch to conserve moisture, and run drip irrigation at the base of the plant — overhead watering invites disease in our dry climate. Full details on our how-to-water-a-Phoenix-vegetable-garden page.
Yes — 30–40% shade cloth from May through September protects leaves from sun scald and can extend fruit set by a few weeks in spring. Hang it on the south and west sides; leave the east open for morning sun. It's the single biggest difference between a 4-week harvest and a 6-week harvest in Phoenix.