When to plant tomatoes: including tips on how and where to plant them

Find out when to plant tomatoes, and growing tips to get a delicious and bountiful homegrown crop

when to plant tomatoes: tomatoes growing in pots
(Image credit: Getty)

You need to know when to plant tomatoes to guarantee that bumper crop that feeds the family all summer. Fresh and delicious homegrown tomatoes beat the socks off supermarket ones when it comes to taste. The flavour of freshly picked tomatoes grown in full sun is a joy to behold, and there are countless types for you to grow – from small and sweet cherry varieties, to large beefsteak tomatoes, perfect for salads or nestled in burgers. 

So, when should you plant tomatoes and how do you achieve the best crop? 

Now is the time you should be sowing seeds, so read on to find out when and how to grow tomatoes, or find more gardening and planting advice in our garden ideas section. 

When to sow tomato seeds

It's easy to grow your own from seed, and tomatoes can be sown from late February to mid-March if you are growing them in a greenhouse. Find more advice on greenhouse growing here - or from late March to early April if you are going to be growing them outside.

Here is how to sow tomato seeds:

  • Sow indoors in small, 7.5cm pots of moist compost
  • Place in a propagator or cover pots with clingfilm and keep on a warm windowsill
  • Keep the seedlings at a temperature of about 18°C
  • Remove the cling film or pots from the propagator when the seeds have germinated - started to grow
  • Transfer the seedlings to 9cm pots filled with multi-purpose compost when two leaves have formed
  • Support stems of cordon tomatoes by tying them to a pea stick with soft string
  • Continue to pot on as they grow
  • Keep the compost damp

tomatoes growing in a garden

Cordon tomatoes will need to be staked to support them as they grow

(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)

If you don't want to grow tomatoes from seed – or don't have the space for it - you can buy young plants, which are available from garden centres in spring and can be ordered from online garden centres, too.  

These young plants will still need to be protected from frost and hardened off before planting out (see below). 

Types of tomatoes

There are two main growing types of tomatoes:

Bush types (determinate) are bushy, don't require staking and are usually planted in pots or hanging baskets with their stems trailing around the edge. 

Cordon types (indeterminate) grow tall and need to be supported by a cane or stake.

For the beginner, bush tomatoes are probably the easiest to grow as they don't need to be staked, and you won't need to pinch out side shoots to keep the plant fruiting on a single stem (see below).

When to plant out tomatoes

Tomatoes are warm weather plants so will not grow in temperature below 10°C (50°F). Planting tomato plants when the night time temperature is at 10°C will give them enough time to mature a bit before fruiting.

Move them outside after the last frosts in May. 

Before planting them out, first harden off the tomato plants. To do so, stand them in a sheltered spot outdoors during the day , for a few hours to begin with, and gradually increase the time until after a couple of weeks you can leave them out all night.  

When planting tomatoes outside:

  • Choose a sunny, sheltered spot
  • Either plant 2 or 3 plants in a growing bag, or;
  • Plant tomato plants in the ground where you have added lots of well-rotted manure, spaced 45–60cm apart

Tomatoes picked from a garden crop

The taste of tomatoes freshly picked from the vegetable garden is incomparable

(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)

How to care for tomato plants

Cordon tomatoes

Stake the plants to support them by tying to a bamboo cane with garden twine.

Tall-growing cordon tomatoes will need to be 'pinched out' – the side shoots removed regularly when they are about 2.5cm long, so that they grow on a single stem. 

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When the first tiny fruits begin to appear, strip away the leaves underneath to allow light and air to reach them better.

When there are four clusters of flowers (or seven clusters if you are growing the tomatoes in the greenhouse) pinch out the plant’s growing tip of the main stem.

Bush tomatoes

Bush tomatoes do not need to be staked. If the fruits are hidden under the leaves, thin out the foliage a little to let the sun through to ripen them. Support heavy clusters of flowers to stop the stems from snapping.

In the case of all tomatoes, once flowers appear, feed your plants weekly with liquid tomato food, and keep the tomatoes well watered, as irregular watering can cause the fruit to split.

How to pinch out tomatoes

Pinching out tomatoes will give you healthy growth and a better crop, rather than rangy, unproductive plants. To pinch out tomatoes, simply snap off the side shoots (also called 'laterals'); these are the shoots that grow between the leaf and the main stem. Ensure you're not snapping off a shoot with flower buds on them as these will become fruits. Any shoots that are much thicker than 5mm are safer cut off – snapping them off won't happen cleanly and you may damage the stalk.

When to harvest tomatoes

For the best flavour, leave tomatoes on the plants so they can ripen naturally. 

Towards the end of the season, prune off the older leaves to let in more light. If the weather turns cold, pick the clusters to ripen indoors.

Tomatoes are best eaten straight away and don’t freeze well. Store for up to a week at room temperature – not in the fridge. 

How can I stop blight reoccurring in tomatoes?

Horticulturalist and garden expert Matt James explains, 'Tomato blight is most common in warm, wet weather. Outdoor tomatoes are much more susceptible to infection, with greenhouse crops less so. Symptoms include a watery rot on the leaves, which quickly collapse, brown lesions on the stems and patchy brown fruit.'

tomatoes on the vine with blight

Prevention is the key. Water only at the base of the plant — water left on the leaves encourages the disease. Open up your greenhouse vents on hot days and never grow potatoes and tomatoes together, as blight affects them both. Bordeaux mixture is a useful fungicide for preventative treatment, but is not suitable for organic gardeners.

Tomato varieties such as ‘Fantasio F1’, ‘Legend’, ‘Ferline’ and ‘Losetto’ offer some resistance to blight — try these instead.

Rachel joined the Period Living team six years ago after freelancing on a range of titles covering everything from homes and gardens, history and arts to wildlife. As the magazines Content Editor, she still gets to enjoy all of these things handily packaged together (one way or another) in the pages of Period Living. She loves her Victorian home, but is wrestling with making its cracks, quirks and draughty bits work for a family home.

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