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USDA hardiness zone lookup

Marquette, MI — USDA Zone 5a

Marquette, Michigan · 120-day growing season

Frost dates and growing season in Marquette

USDA hardiness zoneZone 5a
Average last spring frostMay 24
Average first fall frostSeptember 21
Growing season length~120 days
Temperature range (F)-20 to -10°F
Temperature range (C)-29 to -23°C

All of Marquette's mapped ZIP codes fall in the same hardiness band, Zone 5a.

These are 50%-probability averages modeled from Marquette's USDA hardiness zone and regional climate normals — not a single-station reading. In a typical year the last spring frost will have passed by May 24, but a colder-than-average year can run 1-2 weeks later. Plant tender crops (tomatoes, peppers, basil) once both soil and night temperatures are consistently warm — a thermometer beats the calendar.

Growing season in Marquette

Marquette, Michigan sits in USDA Zone 5a, with roughly 120 frost-free days between an average last spring frost around May 24 and a first fall frost around September 21. That is a standard temperate season — most common vegetables finish comfortably, and a single main planting plus one succession round works well.

What grows in Marquette

Marquette falls in USDA Zone 5a, so the same hardiness constraints apply as the full Zone 5 guide. Vegetables, herbs, and fruit trees rated to Zone 5a (or hardier) will overwinter here in a typical year.

What to plant in Marquette this week

Marquette's last frost is around May 24. This is the spring transplant window — start tomatoes and peppers indoors if you haven't, and direct-sow cold-tolerant crops now.

Full planting calendar for Marquette

Crop-by-crop sowing, transplant, and harvest dates calibrated to zone 5 averages:

ZIP codes in Marquette

Drill down to the precise frost window and planting calendar for a specific ZIP in Marquette:

Local microclimate notes

Zone tables give you the average — but Marquettegardens vary. South-facing walls and paved areas can run a full half-zone warmer than the published rating. Low-lying spots, frost pockets, and shaded north sides can run colder. If you've gardened here a few seasons, your own frost record — the last time you actually got frost damage — beats any national average.

Source and methodology

Hardiness zone from the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023 revision). Frost-date and growing-season figures are modeled from Marquette's USDA hardiness zone and regional NOAA 1991-2020 climate normals — zone-level estimates, not a per-station record, so treat them as planning guidance and confirm against your own local frost history. Crop recommendations draw on US Cooperative Extension references, curated by the Growli editorial team. Last reviewed June 2026.

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