All Seasons Beginner 📍 Phoenix / East Valley, AZ

Phoenix Vegetable Garden Planting Calendar

Phoenix doesn't follow a standard gardening calendar. We have two growing seasons — spring (January–May) and fall/winter (October–February) — and we completely skip the summer months that most gardeners consider peak season. This month-by-month guide tells you exactly what to do every month of the year in the greater Phoenix metro area, zones 9b–10a.

Phoenix's Two Growing Seasons

The single most important concept for Phoenix gardeners: we grow twice per year, not once. Our spring season runs roughly January through May. Our fall and winter season runs October through February. June, July, August, and September are mostly too hot for most vegetables — though a handful of heat-lovers thrive through our monsoon season.

Most gardening advice you'll find online is written for USDA Zones 5–7, where people plant tomatoes in May and harvest in August. In Phoenix, those tomatoes would fail. Understanding our two-season calendar is the foundation of everything.

January — Spring Season Begins

January is the single most important planting month in Phoenix. This is when spring crops go in the ground.

What to Plant in January in Phoenix:

Continue from Fall Planting:

February — Peak Spring Planting

February is your second critical spring planting month. The main window is February 1–15 for most warm-season crops.

March — Spring Garden Maintenance

By March your spring garden is established. Focus on care and early harvesting.

April — Peak Harvest Season

April is the best month in the Phoenix garden. Spring crops are producing heavily and temperatures are still manageable.

May — Late Spring Transition

May is the end of spring in Phoenix. Temperatures are rising toward 100°F and crops are winding down.

June, July, August — Summer Survival Mode

Most vegetables cannot survive Phoenix summers. A few can:

For most gardeners: cover your beds with 3–4 inches of mulch, run drip irrigation, and rest the garden until September. If you're keeping heat-lovers going, pair 30–40% shade cloth with a proper summer watering schedule to get them through.

September — Fall Garden Preparation

September is when you prepare for the fall season. Temperatures are still hot but starting to drop.

October — Fall Planting Window Opens

October is the second most important planting month in Phoenix. The heat breaks and a huge range of vegetables become plantable.

November & December — Cool Season Peak

November and December bring the best cool-season harvests of the year.

Frequently Asked Questions

When do you plant tomatoes in Phoenix?

Plant tomato transplants in Phoenix between January 15 and February 15. This is the opposite of most national gardening advice. Phoenix tomatoes need to be in the ground in January to produce a full harvest before summer heat exceeds 95°F in late May and shuts down fruit set.

How many growing seasons does Phoenix have?

Two: a spring season (January–May) for warm-season crops like tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash, and melons; and a fall/winter season (October–February) for cool-season crops like lettuce, kale, spinach, broccoli, carrots, and peas. June through September is mostly too hot for vegetables.

What can you grow in Phoenix in the summer?

Most vegetables cannot survive Phoenix summers. The crops that can include okra, Armenian cucumber, eggplant (with heavy mulch and drip), amaranth, sweet potato vines, and tepary beans. For most gardeners the practical advice is to mulch beds, run drip irrigation, and rest the garden from June through early September.

When do I start a fall garden in Phoenix?

October. October 1–15 is the main direct-sow window for leafy greens, carrots, radishes, and beets. October 15–31 is when snap peas and broccoli/cauliflower transplants go in. Use September to start brassica seedlings indoors and prepare your beds with fresh compost.

Get the Full Detailed Planting Calendar

The Phoenix Planting Calendar PDF covers every crop with specific seed-start dates, transplant dates, expected harvest windows, and variety recommendations — all formatted for printing and keeping in your garden shed.

Download the Planting Calendar — $7 →

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Phoenix Gardeners Community

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