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Planting Calendar · Zone 6A

When to plant brussels sprouts in zone 6a

In USDA zone 6a, start brussels sprouts seeds indoors around Mar 19, transplant outdoors Apr 9, and harvest from Jul 8.

Brad FerradaWritten by Brad Ferrada, who built Garzed · planting data from university extensions
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Showing USDA Zone 6A
Growing SeasonZone 6a
Last frost ~Apr 30First frost ~Oct 10Today
Start indoorsTransplant / sowHarvestFrost risk
MARAPRMAYJUNJULAUG
Start indoors Mar 19 · Transplant Apr 9 · First harvest Jul 8 · Wrap by Aug 19
Last spring frostApr 30
Start seeds indoorsMar 19
Transplant outApr 9
First harvestJul 8
Last harvestAug 19
Fall succession sowJun 27
First fall frostOct 10

Why these dates work in zone 6a

Zone 6a's last spring frost averages Apr 30 and first fall frost Oct 10 — about 163 frost-free days. Brussels Sprouts tolerates light frost, so you can set plants out ahead of the last-frost date and keep harvesting into the cooler fall. Starting seeds indoors 6 weeks ahead gives strong transplants ready the moment the soil warms. There's also room for a fall succession sowing around Jun 27 for a second harvest before frost.

Common questions

How long does brussels sprouts take to grow in zone 6a?

Brussels Sprouts matures in about 90–110 days from transplanting. In zone 6a that means setting plants out around Apr 9 and first picking around Jul 8.

Will brussels sprouts survive frost in zone 6a?

Yes — brussels sprouts tolerates light frost. In zone 6a you can set plants out a little before the last frost (around Apr 30) and keep harvesting past the first fall frost (around Oct 10).

Can I plant a second crop of brussels sprouts in zone 6a?

Yes — in zone 6a there's time for a fall sowing around Jun 27 for a second harvest before frost.

For soil, spacing, pests and companion planting, see the full brussels sprouts growing guide →