Companion planting · Bush beans + Tomatoes
Bush beans and tomatoes — avoid this pairing
The verdict — and the evidence behind it
Bush beans and tomatoes are best kept apart. The reason: tomatoes are heavy feeders that compete with beans for water and nutrients in dry stretches. not a hard incompatibility, but most planning charts recommend separate beds for these two.
Evidence level: Traditional pairing — limited formal evidence, observational.
What bush beans brings to the pairing
Warm-season legume. Nitrogen-fixing via Rhizobium bacteria. Susceptible to Mexican bean beetle, aphids, and bean rust. Wants well-drained soil and consistent moisture.
What tomatoes brings to the pairing
Heavy feeder, warm-season, prone to early and late blight. Hosts hornworms, aphids, and whiteflies. Self-pollinating but produces more fruit when pollinator activity is high.
How to plant bush beans and tomatoes together
- Use separate beds. The simplest fix is to grow bush beans and tomatoes in different beds, ideally with a non-host crop in between.
- If same bed is unavoidable. Keep at least 3 feet of root separation, and place a non-host buffer (carrots, lettuce, or radishes) in the gap. For shared-disease pairings (e.g. nightshade family), 10+ feet or separate raised beds entirely.
- Rotation. If you have grown the antagonistic pair in the same bed before, rotate the bed to a non-host family (alliums or legumes are often the right next step) for 2-3 seasons before replanting either crop.
- Watch for residual effects. Some allelopathic compounds (anethole from fennel, juglone from walnut) linger in soil. If you suspect a residual issue, sow a green-manure cover crop (clover, vetch, mustard) for a season to reset.
Common mistakes
- Treating companion effects as a substitute for good basics. Companion planting can't fix wrong-zone planting dates, depleted soil, or insufficient sun. Get the fundamentals right first — see the 5-step vegetable garden plan.
- Crowding for the effect. Planting closer than the recommended spacing in pursuit of a stronger companion effect creates humidity that drives fungal disease faster than the companion benefit prevents pest damage.
- Ignoring family rotation.Companion planting helps within a season; family rotation matters across seasons. Don't grow nightshades (tomato, pepper, eggplant, potato) in the same bed two years running, regardless of companions.
- Skipping the timing match. A cool-season + warm-season pairing only works if you stagger the sowing dates so the seasons overlap rather than coincide.
Frequently asked questions
- Can you plant bush beans and tomatoes together?
- Not recommended. Tomatoes are heavy feeders that compete with beans for water and nutrients in dry stretches. Not a hard incompatibility, but most planning charts recommend separate beds for these two.
- What is the science behind the bush beans-tomatoes pairing?
- Tomatoes are heavy feeders that compete with beans for water and nutrients in dry stretches. Not a hard incompatibility, but most planning charts recommend separate beds for these two. Evidence level: traditional pairing — limited formal evidence, observational.
- How far apart should bush beans and tomatoes be planted?
- At least 3 feet of separation, ideally a different raised bed. For shared-disease pairings (e.g. nightshade family) 10+ feet or separate beds entirely.
- Should bush beans and tomatoes be planted at the same time?
- Different beds is the simpler solution — but if you must use the same bed, separate by season (cool-season crop first, warm-season after) rather than risking the overlap.
- Does this pairing work in raised beds and containers?
- Yes. The volatile and scent-based effects actually work better in dense raised-bed plantings because the volatile cloud stays concentrated. Container pairings work for any non-allelopathic combination — keep root depth in mind and use a container at least 12 inches deep for two-crop plantings.
Sources
Pairing claims sourced from peer-reviewed horticultural literature, US Cooperative Extension publications (Cornell, UMN, WVU, UF/IFAS, UVM), the Royal Horticultural Society's vegetable companion guidance, and the evidence reviews maintained at garden-myths.com. Pairings labelled traditional represent gardener consensus without controlled-trial confirmation. Curated by the Growli editorial team, last reviewed May 2026.
Keep going
- All bush beans companion plants
- All tomatoes companion plants
- The full companion planting chart
- How to grow bush beans
- How to grow tomatoes
- Complete companion planting guide
- Monthly planting calendar
- USDA hardiness zone map
Build the bed in Growli
Tell Growli your bed size, your zone, and the crops you want to grow — including bush beans and tomatoes — and the app lays out the spacing, neighbours, and rotation for you.
Get Growli