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Planting Calendar · Zone 6B

When to plant tomatillo in zone 6b

In USDA zone 6b, start tomatillo seeds indoors around Mar 9, transplant outdoors May 4, and harvest from Jul 18.

Brad FerradaWritten by Brad Ferrada, who built Garzed · planting data from university extensions
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Showing USDA Zone 6B
Growing SeasonZone 6b
Last frost ~Apr 20First frost ~Oct 15Today
Start indoorsTransplant / sowHarvestFrost risk
FEBMARAPRMAYJUNJULAUGSEP
Start indoors Mar 9 · Transplant May 4 · First harvest Jul 18 · Wrap by Sep 12
Last spring frostApr 20
Start seeds indoorsMar 9
Transplant outMay 4
First harvestJul 18
Last harvestSep 12
First fall frostOct 15

Why these dates work in zone 6b

Zone 6b's last spring frost averages Apr 20 and first fall frost Oct 15 — about 178 frost-free days. Tomatillo is frost-sensitive, so the 2w after frost timing builds in a safety margin against a late cold snap — setting plants out too early risks losing them to frost. Starting seeds indoors 6 weeks ahead gives strong transplants ready the moment the soil warms.

Common questions

How long does tomatillo take to grow in zone 6b?

Tomatillo matures in about 75–100 days from transplanting. In zone 6b that means setting plants out around May 4 and first picking around Jul 18.

Will tomatillo survive frost in zone 6b?

No — tomatillo is frost-sensitive. In zone 6b, wait until after the last frost (around Apr 20) to plant, and harvest before the first fall frost (around Oct 15).

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