State × crop calendar
Tomatoes planting in New Jersey.
- Primary crop
- Zone 7a
- 190-day season
- Last frost April 20
- Vegetable
- Frost Sensitive
Tomatoes planting in New Jersey is shaped by the state's 7a dominant hardiness zone, last frost date around April 20, and a 190-day growing season. Tomatoes is widely grown in New Jersey — commercially significant or common in home gardens and food plots.
Planting dates on this page are climatological estimates from USDA frost-date norms and zone-typical planting offsets. Verify against Rutgers Cooperative Extension for variety- and county-specific guidance.
Planting calendar — 2026
Frost-anchored windows.
Tomatoes · New Jersey · planting calendar
Planting windows shift earlier in southern parts of the state and later in northern parts. Use last frost date in your specific county as the reference.
Planting windows
Earliest → ideal → latest.
Spring planting
TomatoesEarliest
April 27
Ideal start
May 4
Ideal end
May 25
Latest
June 15
Soil-temp trigger
Transplant after last frost when soil reaches 60°F. Garden centers typically have transplants 1-2 weeks before this window.Harvest window
Typical start
July 3
Typical end
August 12
Harvest timing varies with planting date and seasonal weather — these dates are typical for the ideal planting window.
Growing notes
Tomatoes grows well in New Jersey's typical climate. New Jersey's 190-day growing season and 7a hardiness zone support reliable production with appropriate variety selection.
Tomatoes is widely grown in New Jersey — commercially significant or common in home gardens and food plots.
Agronomy reference
Tomatoes fundamentals.
Soil-temp minimum
60°F
Soil-temp optimum
65–85°F
Days to maturity
60–100
Water (in/wk)
1–2"
Soil pH
6–6.8
Nitrogen demand
high
Days to maturity counted from transplant date, not from seed. Direct seeding is uncommon outside southernmost states.
Common pests to watch
- Tomato hornworm
- Aphids
- Whiteflies
Pest pressure varies by region and year. Confirm current outbreaks with Rutgers Cooperative Extension.
Common diseases
- Early blight
- Late blight
- Septoria leaf spot
Resistance varieties shift each year. Check the current variety trial report for your state.
Variety selection
Tomatoes varieties for New Jersey live with your extension.
Variety selection
Variety performance is micro-regional and changes with each year's trial cycle. We don't republish variety lists — instead, we point directly at the source.
Rutgers Cooperative Extension →Search the extension site for “tomatoes variety trial” or “recommended tomatoes varieties” to find the current report.
Yield varies significantly by variety, soil, fertility, and management. Consult your state extension service for variety performance trials in your region.
Tomatoes timing. Live alerts.
Bield Farm ties weather and soil-temperature stations in your county to crop planting thresholds — get notified the day soil temp clears your target window.
Start free trial →