Last Frost Dates by Grow Zone - Spring Planting Guide 2026

Published March 2026 · 10 min read

🌱 Quick Answer: Your last frost date is the average date of the last killing frost (32°F/0°C) in spring. Plant tender plants AFTER this date, and frost-hardy plants 2-4 weeks BEFORE.

Average Last Frost Dates by USDA Hardiness Zone

Use this table to estimate your last spring frost. Remember: these are averages based on 30 years of data. Actual frost can occur 1-2 weeks earlier or later in any given year.

USDA Zone Average Last Frost Example Locations
Zone 3a May 15 - June 1 Northern MN, ND, MT, AK
Zone 3b May 10 - May 25 Northern WI, Upper MI
Zone 4a May 5 - May 20 Central MN, WI, Northern NY
Zone 4b May 1 - May 15 Minneapolis, Buffalo, VT
Zone 5a April 25 - May 10 Chicago, Boston, Denver
Zone 5b April 20 - May 5 Detroit, Portland ME, UT
Zone 6a April 15 - May 1 Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, KS
Zone 6b April 10 - April 25 St. Louis, NYC, Seattle
Zone 7a April 5 - April 20 Oklahoma City, Richmond VA
Zone 7b April 1 - April 15 Washington DC, Memphis, AR
Zone 8a March 25 - April 10 Dallas, Atlanta, Portland OR
Zone 8b March 15 - April 1 Austin, Charleston, Coastal CA
Zone 9a March 1 - March 15 Houston, Phoenix, Coastal FL
Zone 9b February 15 - March 1 Tampa, San Diego, Southern AZ
Zone 10a February 1 - 15 Miami, Naples FL, SoCal coast
Zone 10b+ Rare/None South FL, HI - frost-free

How to Use Your Last Frost Date

📅 Count Backwards for Indoor Seed Starting

Most seed packets say "start 6-8 weeks before last frost." Here's how to time it:

  • Tomatoes, Peppers: Start 6-8 weeks before last frost
  • Herbs (Basil, Parsley): Start 6 weeks before
  • Flowers (Marigolds, Zinnias): Start 4-6 weeks before
  • Squash, Cucumbers: Start 3-4 weeks before (transplant poorly)

🌱 Direct Sowing Schedule

Plant Type When to Plant
Hardy vegetables
(Peas, lettuce, spinach, kale)
4-6 weeks before last frost
Semi-hardy
(Potatoes, carrots, beets)
2-4 weeks before last frost
Tender transplants
(Tomatoes, peppers, basil)
After last frost date
Very tender
(Cucumbers, squash, melons)
1-2 weeks after last frost
Heat lovers
(Eggplant, okra, sweet potato)
2-3 weeks after last frost
(Soil must be warm)

Understanding "Average" vs "Last Safe" Frost Date

📊 Statistical Reality: The "average last frost" means there's a 50% chance of frost after that date. For safety, many gardeners add 1-2 weeks. For the ultra-safe "90% frost-free" date, add 2-3 weeks.

Risk Tolerance:

  • 🎲 Gamblers: Plant 1-2 weeks early, use row covers if frost threatens
  • ⚖️ Balanced: Plant on average last frost date
  • 🛡️ Safe: Wait 1-2 weeks after last frost date
  • 🚫 Very cautious: Wait until "frost-free date" (90% chance, usually 2-3 weeks later)

Regional & Microclimate Variations

Your actual last frost can vary from the zone average due to:

🏔️ Elevation

  • Every 1,000 feet in elevation = ~3-5 days later frost
  • Mountain valleys hold cold air → later frosts
  • Hilltops = earlier frost-free dates

🌊 Water Bodies

  • Near lakes/oceans = moderated temperatures, earlier safe planting
  • Large bodies of water delay spring warm-up by 1-2 weeks

🏙️ Urban Heat Islands

  • Cities are 5-10°F warmer than rural areas
  • Last frost can be 1-2 weeks earlier in urban cores

🌲 Frost Pockets

  • Low-lying areas, valleys = cold air sinks → later frosts
  • Northern slopes = colder, later frosts
  • Southern slopes = warmer, earlier safe planting

Protecting Plants from Late Frosts

Planted early and a late frost is forecasted? Protect your plants:

🛡️ Physical Protection

  • Row covers / frost cloth: Best option (5-10°F protection)
  • Cloches / plastic jugs: Individual plant protection
  • Blankets / sheets: Emergency coverage (drape over stakes, don't let touch plants)
  • Water-filled walls (Wall O' Water): Protects tomatoes to 20°F

💧 Water Before Frost

  • Moist soil releases heat overnight → warmer microclimate
  • Water plants in the afternoon before a frost night
  • Don't water frozen plants in the morning (let them thaw naturally)

🔥 Heat Sources (Use with Caution)

  • String lights (incandescent, not LED) under row covers
  • Jugs of hot water placed near plants
  • ⚠️ Never: Use heaters/candles near fabric or in enclosed spaces (fire hazard)

Finding Your Exact Last Frost Date

Best Resources:

  1. NOAA Frost Maps: NCDC Climate Data Online (most accurate)
  2. Your County Extension Office: Localized data + advice
  3. Old Farmer's Almanac: Enter ZIP code for personalized dates
  4. Neighboring Gardeners: Ask locals with multi-year experience

First Frost Dates (Fall Planting)

Don't forget the flip side! For fall planting, you need your first frost date:

USDA Zone Average First Fall Frost
Zone 3September 1-15
Zone 4September 15-30
Zone 5October 1-15
Zone 6October 15-30
Zone 7October 30 - November 15
Zone 8November 15 - December 1
Zone 9December 1-15 (or later)
Zone 10+Rare/None (frost-free)

Quick Reference: Frost Date Cheat Sheet

🌡️ Temperature Terminology

  • Light frost (32-29°F): Tender plants damaged, hardy plants fine
  • Moderate frost (29-25°F): Most plants damaged, only very hardy survive
  • Hard/killing frost (25°F or below): Kills all but the hardiest plants
  • Frost-free date: 90% probability last frost has occurred

🎯 Bottom Line

Know your zone → Find your last frost date → Count backwards for seed starting → Plant accordingly

When in doubt, add 1-2 weeks to be safe. A late planting beats a dead plant any day!

🌱 Spring Planting Season is Here!

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