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Growing guide Β· South Carolina

Best Vegetables to Grow in South Carolina

South Carolina's long, hot summers are tailor-made for tomatoes, peppers, okra, and sweet potatoes β€” warm-season crops that thrive where northern gardens struggle. Start transplants early to beat the brutal midsummer heat, then plant a second round in late summer for a productive fall harvest.

Warm climateUSDA zone 814 crops

South Carolina's climate sits in a sweet spot for warm-season vegetables: USDA zone 8 means frost is rare after mid-March and doesn't return until November, giving gardeners a long growing window. The real challenge isn't cold β€” it's the intense heat and humidity that arrives by July and can shut down fruit set on tomatoes and peppers. Successful SC gardeners work around this by timing two distinct plantings rather than one long season.

Spring planting starts transplants indoors in late January or February, moving them outside after the last frost (roughly mid-March in the Piedmont, earlier on the coast). The goal is to get fruiting crops like tomatoes and cucumbers harvested before daytime temperatures consistently exceed 95Β°F. Fall planting, seeded or transplanted in late July through August, catches the second cool-down and often produces the most reliable yields with less pest pressure.

Heat-lovers like okra, sweet potatoes, eggplant, and Southern field crops genuinely prefer SC summers and need no coddling. For everything else, variety selection matters enormously β€” choose heat-tolerant or short-season varieties bred for the Southeast, and mulch heavily to keep soil temperatures and moisture consistent through the long summer stretch.

At a glance

CropTypeDays to harvestSunHeatFrostLevel
Tomato Warm 60–80 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Pepper Warm 60–90 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Cucumber Warm 50–70 days Full βœ“ β€” Easy
Zucchini Warm 45–60 days Full βœ“ β€” Easy
Eggplant Warm 65–85 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Okra Warm 50–65 days Full βœ“ β€” Easy
Green bean Warm 50–65 days Full βœ“ β€” Easy
Sweet potato Warm 90–120 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Sweet corn Warm 60–100 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Pumpkin Warm 90–120 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Winter squash Warm 80–110 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Watermelon Warm 70–100 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Cantaloupe Warm 70–90 days Full βœ“ β€” Moderate
Basil Warm 50–70 days Full βœ“ β€” Easy

Why each one works

01

Tomato

Warm-season 60–80 days

Tomatoes are South Carolina's signature garden crop, but success hinges on timing. Set out transplants by mid-March so plants establish and fruit before July heat causes blossom drop above 95Β°F. Choose heat-set varieties like 'Solar Fire,' 'Heatmaster,' or 'Arkansas Traveler' β€” these are bred specifically to hold fruit set in high temperatures common across SC's Midlands and Lowcountry.

Full tomato growing guide β†’
02

Pepper

Warm-season 60–90 days

Peppers handle SC heat better than tomatoes and actually fruit more reliably through July and August when heat-stressed tomatoes stall. Both sweet bells and hot varieties like jalapeΓ±o and cayenne thrive; hot peppers in particular seem to intensify in flavor under the summer sun. Plant transplants at the same time as tomatoes and expect a second flush of production once September cools things down.

Full pepper growing guide β†’
03

Cucumber

Warm-season 50–70 days

Cucumbers are one of SC's fastest warm-season crops, capable of going from transplant to harvest in 50–55 days β€” a critical advantage for slipping a full crop in before peak summer. Plant a spring crop in early April and a fall crop from seed in late July; the fall planting often outyields spring by avoiding the worst cucumber beetle pressure. 'Marketmore 76' and 'Straight Eight' perform reliably, but 'Spacemaster' suits smaller plots.

Full cucumber growing guide β†’
04

Zucchini

Warm-season 45–60 days

Zucchini produces so prolifically in SC that a plant set out in mid-March can be overwhelming by May. The short 45–55 day window to harvest means you can squeeze in both a spring and a fall planting, and the fall crop often escapes the squash vine borer damage that plagues spring plants. Keep fruit harvested at 6–8 inches β€” zucchini left on the vine suppresses new production fast in the heat.

Full zucchini growing guide β†’
05

Eggplant

Warm-season 65–85 days

Eggplant is arguably South Carolina's most effortless summer crop β€” it genuinely thrives in temperatures that shut everything else down, and the long SC season lets it produce from June through October with minimal fuss. 'Black Beauty' and 'Ichiban' (a Japanese type) both perform well; 'Ichiban' tolerates high humidity and resists foliar disease better than large-fruited Italian types. Set transplants out in late March for the longest possible harvest window.

Full eggplant growing guide β†’
06

Okra

Warm-season 50–65 days

Okra was practically bred for South Carolina β€” a heat-demanding, drought-tolerant crop that needs little intervention once established and produces prolifically through the hottest months when most other crops quit. Direct sow after soil reaches 65Β°F (late April in most of SC) and harvest pods every 2–3 days when they're under 4 inches; pods that get away become tough and fibrous fast. 'Clemson Spineless' remains the workhorse variety, though 'Jambalaya' is more compact for smaller spaces.

Full okra growing guide β†’
07

Green bean

Warm-season 50–65 days

Green beans fit neatly into both SC planting windows: a spring crop sown in late March and a fall crop in mid-August each yield in 50–60 days before or after peak summer heat. Bush types are easier to manage and mature more uniformly for a clean harvest; 'Provider' is especially reliable because it germinates in cool, wet spring soil better than most varieties. Avoid planting through July β€” extreme heat causes poor pod set and accelerates fiber development.

Full green bean growing guide β†’
08

Sweet potato

Warm-season 90–120 days

Sweet potatoes are native to the Southeast and South Carolina is one of the nation's top production states for good reason β€” the long, hot growing season of 100+ frost-free days is exactly what slips planted in mid-May need to build large roots by October. Plant slips (rooted cuttings) rather than seeds, and let the vines run without cutting them back; the sprawling foliage actually shades soil and conserves moisture. 'Beauregard' is the commercial standard and performs dependably for home gardeners too.

Full sweet potato growing guide β†’
09

Sweet corn

Warm-season 60–100 days

Sweet corn needs space and a full 60–100 days of heat, both of which SC provides in abundance. Plant in blocks of at least four rows rather than single rows to ensure good wind pollination, and time planting so silks emerge before the worst July heat to prevent poor kernel set. 'Silver Queen' is an SC classic with excellent flavor, while 'Kandy Korn' and 'How Sweet It Is' offer supersweet types that hold their sugar longer after harvest.

Full sweet corn growing guide β†’
10

Pumpkin

Warm-season 90–120 days

Pumpkins for fall harvest need to be planted in late June to early July in SC β€” count back 90–120 days from your target October harvest and sow directly in the garden after soil is thoroughly warm. The summer heat drives rapid vine growth; mulch heavily and water deeply but infrequently to discourage powdery mildew. 'Howden' and 'Connecticut Field' are reliable standards; 'Seminole' is a heat-tolerant heirloom developed in the Southeast that resists vine borers better than most.

Full pumpkin growing guide β†’
11

Winter squash

Warm-season 80–110 days

Winter squash follows the same July planting window as pumpkins, maturing into fall after the heat breaks. Butternut types are especially well suited to SC because they show better resistance to squash vine borer than acorn or hubbard types β€” their tough, dense stems are harder for larvae to penetrate. 'Waltham Butternut' planted in early July reliably produces mature, cured fruit by October; cure at 80–85Β°F for two weeks to harden the skin for long storage.

Full winter squash growing guide β†’
12

Watermelon

Warm-season 70–100 days

South Carolina's combination of hot days, warm nights, and sandy Coastal Plain soils produces exceptional watermelons β€” the state has a long commercial tradition with the crop for exactly these reasons. Plant transplants or direct-sow after mid-April once soil hits 70Β°F, and give vines room to sprawl (8–10 feet per plant). 'Crimson Sweet' and 'Charleston Gray' (a variety developed in SC) are proven performers; 'Sugar Baby' suits smaller gardens with its more compact growth and 75-day maturity.

Full watermelon growing guide β†’
13

Cantaloupe

Warm-season 70–90 days

Cantaloupe thrives in SC's heat and, like watermelon, benefits from the state's sandy soils that warm quickly and drain well. Set transplants out in late April or direct-sow in early May; the 70–90 day season fits cleanly into the spring window before July's worst heat. 'Athena' is the most reliable modern variety for the Southeast β€” it has excellent disease resistance and handles humidity better than older types. A cantaloupe is ripe when the stem slips off with light pressure and the blossom end gives slightly.

Full cantaloupe growing guide β†’
14

Basil

Warm-season 50–70 days

Basil loves everything South Carolina summers deliver β€” heat, sun, and humidity β€” and grows luxuriantly from late April through September with minimal effort. Start seeds indoors in March or direct-sow after last frost; in SC's climate plants can reach 2–3 feet and need regular pinching to delay bolting. 'Genovese' is the culinary standard, but 'Nufar' offers Fusarium wilt resistance that matters in SC's warm, moist soil conditions where that pathogen is common.

Full basil growing guide β†’

Frequently asked questions

When should I start tomato and pepper seeds indoors in South Carolina?

Start tomato and pepper seeds indoors 8–10 weeks before your last frost date, which falls around March 15 in the Piedmont and late February along the coast. That puts seed starting in late January for most of the state. Transplant outdoors once nighttime temperatures stay consistently above 50Β°F and all frost risk has passed.

Why do my tomatoes drop blossoms in midsummer?

Blossom drop happens when daytime temperatures exceed 95Β°F or nighttime temperatures stay above 75Β°F β€” both common in SC from late June through August. The solution is timing: get fruit set in May and June before the heat peaks, then let the plant rest and resume production in September when temperatures moderate. Choosing heat-set varieties like 'Heatmaster' or 'Solar Fire' also significantly reduces drop.

What is a fall vegetable garden in South Carolina, and when do I start it?

A fall garden is a second planting timed so crops mature after summer heat breaks but before first frost in November. Start transplants for tomatoes and peppers in late June indoors and move them out in late July; direct-sow cucumbers, green beans, and summer squash in late July through mid-August. The fall season often has better pest pressure, lower disease incidence, and more reliable harvests than spring for many crops.

How do I deal with squash vine borers in South Carolina?

Squash vine borers are a serious summer pest in SC β€” the moth lays eggs at the base of squash and pumpkin stems in June and July, and larvae bore into vines and kill plants rapidly. The most effective strategy is timing: plant zucchini early (March) so it finishes producing before peak egg-laying in late June, then replant in August after the moth's season ends. Row cover over young plants until flowering also prevents egg-laying, though it must be removed for pollination.