Texas is a gardener's paradox. The long, punishing summers that settle over the Hill Country and Gulf Coast can fry cool-season crops by May, yet the mild winters across most of the state (USDA zones 8aβ9a) mean something is almost always in season. The key to a productive Texas vegetable garden is timing around the heat rather than fighting it: most gardeners run two main plantings β a spring crop that races to harvest before the worst JulyβAugust heat, and a fall crop that takes off as temperatures ease in September.
Heat tolerance is the single most important trait when choosing what to grow. Crops that shrug off 95 Β°F-plus days carry the summer, while cool-season favorites belong in the fall and winter garden. The crops below are the most dependable performers for Texas conditions, ordered roughly by how well they handle the state's defining challenge.
At a glance
| Crop | Type | Days to harvest | Sun | Heat | Frost | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomato | Warm | 60β80 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Okra | Warm | 50β65 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Pepper | Warm | 60β90 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Sweet potato | Warm | 90β120 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Eggplant | Warm | 65β85 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Cucumber | Warm | 50β70 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Zucchini | Warm | 45β60 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Green bean | Warm | 50β65 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Sweet corn | Warm | 60β100 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Kale | Cool | 50β65 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Lettuce | Cool | 30β60 days | Part | β | β | Easy |
Why each one works
Tomato
Warm-season 60β80 daysTomatoes are Texas's most popular crop, but they need a head start: set transplants out in early-to-mid spring so fruit sets before nights climb above ~75 Β°F and pollination stalls. Heat-tolerant varieties bred for the South β Celebrity, Phoenix, Solar Fire β are the safe bet, and a second crop planted in late June for fall often outperforms spring.
Full tomato growing guide βOkra
Warm-season 50β65 daysIf one vegetable was made for Texas, it's okra. It thrives in the worst summer heat, tolerates drought once established, and produces from early summer until frost. Pick the pods every day or two to keep them tender.
Full okra growing guide βPepper
Warm-season 60β90 daysPeppers love Texas heat and keep producing through summer once established. Bell peppers can drop blossoms in extreme heat, so many Texas growers lean on heat-proof chiles β jalapeΓ±o, serrano, poblano β for a more dependable harvest.
Full pepper growing guide βSweet potato
Warm-season 90β120 daysSweet potatoes turn the long, hot summer into an asset, needing 90β120 frost-free days of warmth to size up. Plant slips after the soil warms and harvest before the first fall frost β they're one of the most carefree crops in the state.
Full sweet potato growing guide βEggplant
Warm-season 65β85 daysEggplant rivals okra for heat tolerance and produces all summer. It starts slower than peppers but becomes extremely productive once real heat arrives, making it a Texas summer staple.
Full eggplant growing guide βCucumber
Warm-season 50β70 daysCucumbers grow fast in the warmth but resent the peak of summer, so plant them in spring for an early harvest and again in late summer for fall. Keep them consistently watered to avoid bitter, misshapen fruit.
Full cucumber growing guide βZucchini
Warm-season 45β60 daysSummer squash is one of the quickest returns in the Texas garden β seed to harvest in under two months. Stay ahead of squash bugs and vine borers, which are relentless across the South.
Full zucchini growing guide βGreen bean
Warm-season 50β65 daysBush beans are an easy spring and fall crop, maturing in about two months. They struggle to set pods in extreme summer heat, so time them for the milder shoulder seasons rather than mid-July.
Full green bean growing guide βSweet corn
Warm-season 60β100 daysSweet corn does well statewide with room and water. Plant it in blocks rather than single rows for good pollination, and get it in early to stay ahead of both the heat and corn earworms.
Full sweet corn growing guide βKale
Cool-season 50β65 daysKale leads the Texas cool-season garden: plant in fall for harvests right through the mild winter, when summer heat is no longer a threat. It's far more heat-forgiving than other brassicas.
Full kale growing guide βLettuce
Cool-season 30β60 daysLettuce belongs in the fall, winter, and very early spring garden β it bolts and turns bitter the moment Texas heat arrives. Successive sowings from September onward keep salads coming through the cool months.
Full lettuce growing guide βFrequently asked questions
When should I plant vegetables in Texas?
Most of Texas gardens in two seasons. Plant warm-season crops in spring after the last frost (roughly February in the south to April in the Panhandle) for an early-summer harvest, then plant a second warm-season crop in mid-to-late summer for fall. Cool-season crops go in from September through winter.
What vegetables grow best in Texas summer heat?
The most heat-proof choices are okra, southern peas, sweet potatoes, eggplant, peppers (especially chiles), and melons. Tomatoes need to be planted early so they set fruit before peak heat, and many cool-season crops simply pause until fall.
Can you grow vegetables year-round in Texas?
In most of the state, yes. The mild winters let you grow cool-season crops like kale, lettuce, carrots, and broccoli through fall and winter, while warm-season crops fill spring and summer. Only the coldest northern areas see a true winter gap.
What's the hardest part of gardening in Texas?
Managing the summer heat and the pests that come with it. Timing plantings so crops mature before or after the worst heat β and choosing heat-tolerant varieties β matters more than almost anything else.