Growli

UK temperature

Keeping cauliflower warm in a UK home

Brassica oleracea var. botrytis

RHS H5USDA Grown as an annual in zones 3-10Mildly toxic to pets

The UK home, in plant terms

A typical UK home creates two opposite micro-problems at the same time. Radiator-driven heating spikes the air temperature and crashes humidity in the rooms where people actually sit; the older the housing stock the more likely a single-glazed window pane is sitting at near-freezing in January with a houseplant against it. Cold unheated bedrooms, north-facing rooms and conservatories without heating run far cooler than the thermostat suggests, and the British winter gives the lowest indoor daylight in any of Growli's markets. Cauliflower tolerates a wider band, but the worst-case UK winter placement (a cold single-glazed pane plus a hot dry radiator below it) still stresses it through repeated drying and chilling.

The actual numbers

Ideally cauliflower sits between 15-21°C. (That is 60-70°F in Fahrenheit.) Outdoor humidity rarely matters. Watch for the room dropping below about 15°C overnight — common in UK unheated bedrooms in January, and the point where growth stalls and leaves chill-mark.

For the RHS hardiness side of this, see is cauliflower hardy in the UK? (rating RHS H5, sourced from the RHS rating system). For the US/USDA framing of the same numbers, see the cauliflower temperature guide.

Winter placement in a UK home

For cauliflower through a UK winter, three placement rules clear up most problems: 1) keep it at least a hand's width back from the window pane on single-glazed or very cold double-glazed glass, especially overnight when curtains close behind the plant; 2) keep it out of the direct vertical updraft above a radiator — that column of hot dry air browns leaf tips even on tolerant species; 3) judge by the room you can actually feel, not the central thermostat — many UK rooms run several degrees below the hall reading in winter. Humidity drops to roughly 25–35% in a heated UK living room; a pebble tray, grouping with other plants, or a small humidifier puts that back to a level houseplants actually like.

Cauliflower temperature in the UK — frequently asked questions

What temperature does cauliflower need in the UK?

Cauliflower prefers 15-21°C (60-70°F). The British issue is rarely the average — it is the extremes: a cold single-glazed window in January, the hot dry air directly above a radiator, or a north-facing unheated room that runs far cooler than the hall thermostat.

Will cauliflower survive a cold UK winter room?

Cauliflower tolerates a wider winter band — see its RHS rating H5. Below about 15°C growth stalls; cold-wet roots, not cold air, are usually what kills it indoors.

Can cauliflower go on a UK windowsill in winter?

On a single-glazed or very cold pane, no — overnight the leaves pressed against the glass can drop below the plant's comfort band, especially behind drawn curtains. A small gap (a hand's width back) or thicker thermal curtains in front of the plant fixes it, and modern double-glazing usually solves it outright.

Does UK radiator-driven heating dry cauliflower out?

Yes — UK living rooms typically run at around 25–35% relative humidity in winter. That is well below what most houseplants prefer. Cauliflower tolerates this better than the calathea-and-fern family, but a pebble tray or grouping plants still helps.

What temperature range does cauliflower actually like?

15-21°C is the comfortable band (60-70°F in Fahrenheit for reference). That covers normal UK living-room temperatures all year; the work is making sure cold pockets (windowsills, unheated rooms) and hot pockets (radiator updrafts) do not push it outside that band.

More cauliflower care

See the full cauliflower care guide, its UK watering (hard vs soft tap water), and UK hardiness.