Blog

When to Plant Garlic in USDA Zone 5a

Zone 5a Zone 5a April

Zone 5a gardeners: here's your April plan

A quick April briefing for Zone 5a gardeners — what's urgent, what's next, and what can wait.

Avg. last frost May 1
Avg. first frost October 9
Send me my free Zone 5a Planting Guide →
Garlic

Garlic is a pungent allium planted in fall and harvested the following summer. Hardneck varieties produce edible flower stalks (scapes) and are more cold-hardy.

In Zone 5a, the average last spring frost is around April 25 and the first fall frost is around October 8, giving you a growing season of approximately 166 days.

Share this guide:
Facebook X
Zone 5a Moderate season
166 days
Last Spring Frost April 25
166 growing days
First Fall Frost October 8

Garlic Planting Timeline — Zone 5a

Where Is USDA Zone 5a?

The map below highlights the states that contain Zone 5a. Click any state to see the Garlic planting schedule for that location.

Prints a clean, ink-friendly version without maps or navigation.

Garlic Planting Calendar — Zone 5a

Activity When Date Range
Fall Sowing August 27 Aug 27 – Sep 10

Plant 1" deep · 6" apart · Rows 12" apart

Month-by-Month Timeline

MonthActivities
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August Fall Sowing
September Fall Sowing
October
November
December

Free Zone 5a Planting Calendar PDF

Know exactly when to plant every crop in your zone. Get a printable month-by-month calendar customized for Zone 5a with start dates, transplant windows, and harvest times.

Instant PDF download. No spam, unsubscribe any time.

Share this guide:
Facebook X

Growing Conditions

Sun

Full Sun (6-8+ hours)

💧 Water

0.5"/week · Moderate — regular watering

Days to Maturity

90–240 days

Soil pH

6 – 7.5

Zone Temperature Range

°F to °F average annual minimum

Growing Season

166 days (Zone average)

Planting Specifications

Planting Depth1 inches
Plant Spacing6 inches apart
Row Spacing12 inches between rows

Growing Tips for Garlic in Zone

Zone has a short growing season (~166 days). Start Garlic indoors early and use season-extension techniques like row covers and cold frames.

Plant individual cloves pointed end up in fall, 6 weeks before ground freezes. Mulch heavily with straw. Harvest when lower leaves begin to brown but 5-6 green leaves remain.

Companion Planting

Good Companions

Avoid Planting Near

  • Peas
  • Green Beans
  • Asparagus
Best Seller
The Gardener's Encyclopedia to Companion Planting

The Gardener's Encyclopedia to Companion Planting

$27 $293 value

The pairings that make vegetables, herbs, and flowers grow better — and the ones that quietly wreck a bed.

  • Proven pairings for 200+ vegetables, herbs, flowers, and fruits
  • Full seed-starting + planting schedule with timing and spacing
  • Bonus: square-foot gardening guide + printable seasonal planners
See what's inside →

Saving Garlic Seeds

Recommended for Your Garden

🌱
Seed Starting Trays $8-20

Start seeds indoors with reusable cell trays and humidity domes.

🧪
Soil Test Kit $12-25

Test your soil pH, nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium levels before planting.

🏷️
Garden Plant Markers $6-12

Keep your garden organized with durable, weather-resistant plant labels.

Related Plants

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I plant Garlic in Zone 5a?

In Zone 5a, plan your Garlic planting around the average last frost date of April 25.

Can Garlic grow in Zone 5a?

Yes, Garlic can grow well in Zone 5a, hardy in USDA zones 3a through 9b. Zone 5a has a growing season of approximately 166 days, which is sufficient for Garlic (90-240 days to maturity).

What is the last frost date for Zone 5a?

The average last spring frost in Zone 5a is around April 25, and the first fall frost is around October 8. This gives a growing season of approximately 166 days. These are 50% probability dates — actual frost dates vary year to year.

What should I plant next to Garlic?

Good companion plants for Garlic include Tomatoes, Peppers, Lettuce, Carrots. These companions can help with pest control, pollination, and nutrient sharing.

🌱

Your Free Printable Garden Planner

A 24-page printable planner tailored to your zone. Planting dates, monthly task lists, harvest log, seed inventory, and succession charts — everything you need to plan a full season.

Instant PDF download. No spam, unsubscribe any time.

Data sources: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023), NOAA 30-Year Climate Normals, University Cooperative Extension planting guides. Planting dates are estimates based on average frost dates — local conditions may vary. Last updated: April 2026.

Sources & credits

Every number on this page traces back to a primary horticulture or government data source. Click through to verify.