What Can I Still Plant in Zone 8?

A live countdown to Zone 8's average first frost (~Dec 1) — and the last safe day to plant each of the 31 crops we track here, sorted by urgency.

Quick answer

Zone 8's average first frost lands around ~Dec 1 (Mid November – mid December). A crop can still go in if its days to maturity — plus a 14-day fall factor — fit before that date. The countdown below runs that math against today's date for 31 vegetables, herbs, and flowers.

Zone 8 planting countdown

Checking today's date against your zone's planting deadlines…

How we calculate this: last safe planting date = average first frost − (days to maturity + 14-day fall factor). Seed-packet maturities assume spring's lengthening days; late in the season, shorter days slow growth, so every crop gets a two-week buffer. Deadlines always count back from the next upcomingfirst frost — once this year's date passes, the countdown rolls over to next season. “Fast variety” deadlines use the quick end of each crop's maturity range. Same formula as our fall planting calendar.

Keep planning your Zone 8 garden

Deadlines for other zones

Zone 8 planting deadlines: common questions

When is the average first frost in Zone 8?

On average, Zone 8's first fall frost arrives in the window Mid November – mid December. This page counts back from the midpoint (~Dec 1) — the same anchor as our fall planting calendar. Watch your local forecast as the date nears; a single early cold night can beat the average.

How do I know if there's still time to plant something in Zone 8?

Take the crop's days to maturity from the seed packet, add a 14-day fall factor (growth slows as days shorten), and count back from ~Dec 1. If today is on or before the resulting date, there's still time. The tool above runs that math for every crop we track, live against today's date.

What are the latest crops I can plant in Zone 8?

Fast, frost-tolerant growers win the late game: radishes need only about 6 weeks before first frost, spinach and lettuce 8–9 weeks, turnips about 10. Garlic is the special case — plant it right around ~Dec 1 for harvest next summer.

A crop's deadline just passed — is it really too late?

Not always. A quick-maturing variety can shave 10–20 days off the packet's range — that's what the “fast varieties only” group above checks. Starting from transplants instead of seed buys back another 3–6 weeks, and a row cover adds a few degrees of frost protection at the finish line. Past that, plan the crop for the next window instead.

How exact are these planting deadlines?

They're built on long-term frost averages, so treat them as a strong guide, not a guarantee — your microclimate can shift the real date a week either way. Cold-hardy crops like kale, spinach, and carrots forgive a late sowing far better than tender crops like beans and squash.