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Hawaii planting calendar

When to plant basil in Hawaii — sow, transplant & harvest dates

Hawaii is mostly USDA zone 12b (range 9a-13a). Dates below are derived from basil's frost tolerance and Hawaii's frost window — not generic national averages.

Basil planting timetable for Hawaii

StageWhen in HawaiiAnchor
Direct-sow / set out (spring crop)late January — early MarchFrost-free — plant as soon as nights stay above 10 °C
Spring-crop harvest~60 days later, before peak summer heat60-day crop — finishes before mid-summer
Plant the fall cropmid-August (August 15) — once the worst heat breaks~80 days before the first fall frost (no frost)
Fall-crop harvestmid-October into early winter60-day crop — often the more productive of the two

Dates are state-wide averages for the dominant zone. Local microclimates — elevation, urban heat, coastal moderation — can shift the window by 1-2 weeks. Use the frost-date calculator for a date tuned to your town.

Why Hawaii's climate shifts the basil dates

Hawaii's long hot summer shuts down fruit set, so locals run two short crops — a spring planting and a fall planting — around a deliberate mid-summer pause, instead of one long northern-style season. Hawaii is frost-free at sea level and tropical year-round. Elevation, rainfall, and microclimate matter far more than any cold zone.

Basil is one of the most cold-sensitive common herbs — it sulks below 10 °C and dies in light frost. Wait a full week after the last spring frost before moving transplants outside, or direct-sow two weeks after frost when soil hits 18 °C.

Frost-risk note

Frost is essentially absent — the limiting hazard here is summer heat, when basil plant pollen goes sterile above ~32 °C.

Regional variation within Hawaii

the coastal lowlands of all islands (zone 13a) can start the spring crop weeks earlier and may garden almost year-round; the upper slopes of Mauna Kea and Haleakala (zone 9a) runs a shorter, more northern-style single season.

What else to plant in Hawaii around then

Pair the spring slot with other heat-lovers (peppers, squash, beans); use the cool October–February window for greens and brassicas.

Quick-grow guide

Frequently asked questions

When is the best time to plant basil in Hawaii?

In Hawaii (mostly USDA zone 12b), set the spring crop out late January–March, harvest before peak summer heat, then plant a second crop mid-August for an autumn harvest. Avoid mid-summer. Basil are frost-tender — a single light frost kills seedlings, so they only go outside once frost danger has fully passed and the soil is warm.

What USDA zone is Hawaii?

Most of Hawaii sits in USDA hardiness zone 12b, with the state spanning roughly 9a-13a from the upper slopes of Mauna Kea and Haleakala (zone 9a) to the coastal lowlands of all islands (zone 13a). The last spring frost averages no frost and the first fall frost no frost.

Can you grow basil in Hawaii?

Yes. Hawaii's dominant zone 12b supports basil — the key is timing. Basil are frost-tender — a single light frost kills seedlings, so they only go outside once frost danger has fully passed and the soil is warm.

Does the planting date change across Hawaii?

the coastal lowlands of all islands (zone 13a) can start the spring crop weeks earlier and may garden almost year-round; the upper slopes of Mauna Kea and Haleakala (zone 9a) runs a shorter, more northern-style single season.

What else can I plant in Hawaii around the same time?

Pair the spring slot with other heat-lovers (peppers, squash, beans); use the cool October–February window for greens and brassicas.

Source and methodology

State zone spans from the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023); frost-date averages from NOAA Climate Data Online. Hot-state two-season timing cross-checked against the UF/IFAS Florida Gardening Calendar and the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension planting calendar. Curated by the Growli editorial team.

Keep going

Same crop, nearby states (Pacific)

Other crops for Hawaii