Kentucky planting calendar
When to plant garlic in Kentucky — sow, transplant & harvest dates
Kentucky is mostly USDA zone 6b (range 6a-7b). Dates below are derived from garlic's frost tolerance and Kentucky's frost window — not generic national averages.
Garlic planting timetable for Kentucky
| Stage | When in Kentucky | Anchor |
|---|---|---|
| Plant cloves outdoors | late August — mid-September (September 10) | ~35 days before Kentucky's first fall frost (mid-October) |
| First harvest | early May the following year | ~240 days from autumn planting |
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 Kentucky's climate shifts the garlic dates
Kentucky's first fall frost averages mid-October, which sets the autumn planting clock — cloves need 4-6 weeks of root growth before the ground freezes. Kentucky has a mild four-season climate with a long, humid summer and a winter that rarely tests hardy perennials.
Garlic is the unusual one — plant cloves in autumn (4-6 weeks before the first hard fall frost) so they put down roots before winter, then break dormancy in spring and bulb up over the long days of early summer. Cold-winter zones grow hardneck varieties; mild-winter zones do better with softneck.
Frost-risk note
Get cloves in before the ground freezes solid; in the eastern Appalachian highlands (zone 6a) mulch heavily with 10-15 cm of straw to stop freeze-thaw heaving.
Regional variation within Kentucky
the eastern Appalachian highlands (zone 6a) should plant at the earlier end of the window and grow hardneck types; the Ohio River valley around Louisville (zone 7b) can plant later and lean on softneck varieties.
- Louisville — USDA zone 7a
- Lexington — USDA zone 6b
- Bowling Green — USDA zone 7a
- Covington — USDA zone 6b
What else to plant in Kentucky around then
The same autumn slot suits overwintering onions, shallots, and a final sowing of spinach or mache.
Quick-grow guide
- Sun: Full sun — 6+ hours direct.
- Soil temperature for germination: Soil 10-15 °C (50-60 °F) at planting.
- Spacing: 4-6 inches (10-15 cm) between plants.
- Days to harvest: ~240 days from autumn planting.
Frequently asked questions
When is the best time to plant garlic in Kentucky?
In Kentucky (mostly USDA zone 6b), plant garlic cloves outdoors around late August — mid-September — roughly 35 days before the first fall frost (mid-October). Cloves root through autumn, overwinter, then bulb up by early May next year. Garlic is fall-planted — cloves need winter chilling, so they go in the ground in autumn, root before the freeze, and bulb up the following summer.
What USDA zone is Kentucky?
Most of Kentucky sits in USDA hardiness zone 6b, with the state spanning roughly 6a-7b from the eastern Appalachian highlands (zone 6a) to the Ohio River valley around Louisville (zone 7b). The last spring frost averages mid-April and the first fall frost mid-October.
Can you grow garlic in Kentucky?
Yes. Kentucky's dominant zone 6b supports garlic — the key is timing. Garlic is fall-planted — cloves need winter chilling, so they go in the ground in autumn, root before the freeze, and bulb up the following summer.
Does the planting date change across Kentucky?
the eastern Appalachian highlands (zone 6a) should plant at the earlier end of the window and grow hardneck types; the Ohio River valley around Louisville (zone 7b) can plant later and lean on softneck varieties.
What else can I plant in Kentucky around the same time?
The same autumn slot suits overwintering onions, shallots, and a final sowing of spinach or mache.
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
- How to grow garlic — full guide
- When to plant garlic — the deep dive
- USDA zone 6 — frost dates and what else to plant
- Average frost dates by zone
- Frost-date calculator
- Month-by-month planting calendar
- When to plant garlic in every US state
Same crop, nearby states (Southeast)
- When to plant garlic in Alabama
- When to plant garlic in Arkansas
- When to plant garlic in Florida
- When to plant garlic in Georgia
- When to plant garlic in Louisiana
- When to plant garlic in Mississippi
- When to plant garlic in North Carolina
- When to plant garlic in South Carolina