Arizona planting calendar
When to plant tomatoes in Arizona — sow, transplant & harvest dates
Arizona is mostly USDA zone 9a (range 4b-10b). Dates below are derived from tomatoes's frost tolerance and Arizona's frost window — not generic national averages.
Tomatoes planting timetable for Arizona
| Stage | When in Arizona | Anchor |
|---|---|---|
| Start seeds indoors (spring crop) | early January (January 4) | 6 weeks before the last frost (mid-February (low desert)) |
| Transplant outside (spring crop) | late February (February 25) | 10 days after the last frost (mid-February (low desert)) |
| Spring-crop harvest | mid-May onward, before peak summer heat | 75-day crop — finishes before mid-summer |
| Plant the fall crop | early September (September 7) — once the worst heat breaks | ~89 days before the first fall frost (early December (low desert)) |
| Fall-crop harvest | late November into early winter | 75-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 Arizona's climate shifts the tomatoes dates
Arizona'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. Arizona ranges from snowy mountain forest to frost-free low desert. In the desert, summer heat is the binding constraint and winter is the prime growing season.
Wait until soil has warmed to at least 16 °C and night temperatures stay above 10 °C. Tomatoes set fruit poorly below 13 °C at night and stop above 32 °C, which is why hot-zone gardeners run a spring + fall crop instead of one long summer.
Frost-risk note
A light frost in the high country around Flagstaff (zone 4b-6a) can clip an early spring planting; the bigger risk is mid-summer heat sterilising flowers.
Regional variation within Arizona
the low desert around Yuma and Phoenix (zone 10b) can start the spring crop weeks earlier and may garden almost year-round; the high country around Flagstaff (zone 4b-6a) runs a shorter, more northern-style single season.
- Phoenix — USDA zone 10a
- Tucson — USDA zone 9b
- Flagstaff — USDA zone 6a
- Yuma — USDA zone 10b
- Mesa — USDA zone 10a
What else to plant in Arizona 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
- Sun: Full sun — 6+ hours direct.
- Soil temperature for germination: 21-27 °C (70-80 °F).
- Spacing: 24-36 inches (60-90 cm) between plants.
- Days to harvest: ~75 days from planting out.
Frequently asked questions
When is the best time to plant tomatoes in Arizona?
In Arizona (mostly USDA zone 9a), sow tomatoes indoors around early January, set the spring crop out late February, harvest before peak summer heat, then plant a second crop early September for an autumn harvest. Avoid mid-summer. Tomatoes 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 Arizona?
Most of Arizona sits in USDA hardiness zone 9a, with the state spanning roughly 4b-10b from the high country around Flagstaff (zone 4b-6a) to the low desert around Yuma and Phoenix (zone 10b). The last spring frost averages mid-February (low desert) and the first fall frost early December (low desert).
Can you grow tomatoes in Arizona?
Yes. Arizona's dominant zone 9a supports tomatoes — the key is timing. Tomatoes 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 Arizona?
the low desert around Yuma and Phoenix (zone 10b) can start the spring crop weeks earlier and may garden almost year-round; the high country around Flagstaff (zone 4b-6a) runs a shorter, more northern-style single season.
What else can I plant in Arizona 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
- How to grow tomatoes — full guide
- When to plant tomatoes — the deep dive
- USDA zone 9 — frost dates and what else to plant
- Average frost dates by zone
- Frost-date calculator
- Month-by-month planting calendar
- When to plant tomatoes in every US state
Same crop, nearby states (Southwest)
- When to plant tomatoes in Nevada
- When to plant tomatoes in New Mexico
- When to plant tomatoes in Oklahoma
- When to plant tomatoes in Texas