Skip to content
Part of Vegetables course
View Course
Growing Potatoes: A Complete Beginner's Guide
VegetablesBeginner

Growing Potatoes: A Complete Beginner's Guide

Learn how to grow delicious potatoes in your garden. This beginner-friendly guide covers seed potato selection, planting, hilling, and harvesting this versatile staple crop.

12 min read
35 gardeners found this helpful
Last updated: May 6, 2026
SG

Sarah Green

Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.

My Garden Journal

Growing Potatoes: A Complete Beginner's Guide

Potatoes (Solanum tuberosum) are one of the most rewarding vegetables to grow in your garden. Native to the Andes Mountains, these versatile tubers have become a global food staple. Homegrown potatoes offer superior flavor and variety compared to store-bought options.

Why Grow Potatoes?

Potatoes offer many rewards:

  • Variety: Hundreds of types beyond supermarket options
  • Flavor: Freshly dug potatoes taste noticeably better
  • Storage: Properly cured, they store for months
  • Value: High yield from small planting
  • Fun: Digging potatoes is like a treasure hunt!

Understanding Potatoes

How Potatoes Grow

Potatoes grow differently than most vegetables:

  • Planted from seed potatoes (tuber pieces), not seeds
  • Sprouts emerge and grow into leafy plants
  • Underground stems (stolons) produce new tubers
  • Tubers develop and enlarge over the growing season
  • Plants die back when tubers are mature

Growth Types

Understanding potato types helps with planning:

Determinate (Early Varieties):

  • Produce tubers at one level
  • Ready in 70-90 days
  • Don't benefit much from hilling
  • Smaller plants, lower total yield

Indeterminate (Late Varieties):

  • Produce tubers at multiple levels
  • Ready in 90-120+ days
  • Benefit significantly from hilling
  • Larger plants, higher total yield

Climate Needs

Potatoes prefer cool weather:

  • Optimal Temperature: 60-70°F (16-21°C)
  • Soil Temperature for Planting: 45-55°F (7-13°C)
  • Frost Sensitivity: Foliage killed by frost, tubers protected
  • Heat Tolerance: Growth slows above 80°F (27°C)

Getting Started

Choosing Seed Potatoes

What are Seed Potatoes? Seed potatoes are tubers grown specifically for planting. They're certified disease-free, unlike grocery store potatoes (which may carry diseases and are often treated to prevent sprouting).

Selecting Good Seed:

  • Choose certified disease-free seed
  • Look for firm tubers with visible "eyes"
  • Avoid soft, shriveled, or moldy tubers
  • Select golf ball to egg-sized pieces
TypeVarietiesBest Uses
RussetRusset Burbank, KennebecBaking, frying
YellowYukon Gold, German ButterballAll-purpose, mashing
RedRed Pontiac, Red NorlandRoasting, salads
FingerlingRussian Banana, French FingerlingRoasting, salads
WhiteKennebec, SuperiorAll-purpose

Soil Preparation

Potatoes need loose, well-drained soil:

  1. Choose a sunny location (6+ hours)
  2. Test and adjust soil pH (5.8-6.5 ideal)
  3. Add 2-4 inches of compost
  4. Remove rocks and debris
  5. Loosen soil to 12 inches deep

Planting Potatoes

Preparing Seed Potatoes

Cutting Seed Potatoes:

  1. Large tubers can be cut into pieces
  2. Each piece needs 2-3 eyes
  3. Pieces should be golf ball size minimum
  4. Let cut pieces cure 2-3 days before planting

Chitting (Pre-Sprouting): Optional technique to get a head start:

  1. Place seed potatoes in single layer
  2. Position eyes facing up
  3. Keep in cool (60-70°F), light location
  4. Wait 2-4 weeks until sprouts are 1/2-1 inch
  5. Plant with sprouts facing up

When to Plant

Timing depends on your climate:

  • Spring: 2-4 weeks before last frost
  • Soil Temperature: At least 45°F (7°C)
  • Early Varieties: Plant earlier
  • Late Varieties: Can plant later

How to Plant

  1. Dig trenches 4-6 inches deep
  2. Space trenches 30-36 inches apart
  3. Place seed pieces 12-15 inches apart
  4. Position eyes/sprouts facing up
  5. Cover with 3-4 inches of soil
  6. Water gently

Hilling Potatoes

Why Hill?

Hilling (mounding soil around stems) is essential:

  • Prevents Greening: Exposed tubers turn green and toxic
  • Increases Yield: More stem = more tubers (especially indeterminate)
  • Controls Weeds: Smothers weed seedlings
  • Improves Drainage: Raises tuber zone
  • Protects from Frost: Insulates against cold

When to Hill

Hill at these key times:

  1. First Hilling: When plants are 6-8 inches tall
  2. Second Hilling: 2-3 weeks later
  3. Continue: Until plants flower
  4. Stop: Once flowering begins

How to Hill

  1. Pull soil from between rows
  2. Mound around stem base
  3. Cover lower third of plant
  4. Leave top leaves exposed
  5. Create 4-6 inch mounds

Care Requirements

Watering

Consistent moisture is important:

  • Provide 1-2 inches per week
  • Water deeply to encourage deep roots
  • Most critical during tuber formation
  • Reduce watering as plants die back
  • Avoid waterlogged conditions

Fertilizing

Potatoes are moderate feeders:

At Planting:

  • Work compost into soil
  • Add balanced fertilizer

During Growth:

  • Side-dress after first hilling
  • Avoid excess nitrogen (causes lots of foliage, few tubers)
  • Stop fertilizing after flowering

Pest and Disease Management

Common Pests:

PestSignsControl
Colorado Potato BeetleStriped beetles, orange larvaeHand-pick, neem oil
AphidsClusters on leavesStrong water spray
WirewormsHoles in tubersCrop rotation

Common Diseases:

DiseaseSignsPrevention
Late BlightBrown spots, rapid deathFungicides, resistant varieties
Early BlightTarget-like spotsGood air circulation
ScabRough patches on skinLow pH soil

Harvesting Potatoes

When to Harvest

Timing depends on your goals:

New Potatoes (Early Harvest):

  • 2-3 weeks after flowering
  • Small, thin-skinned
  • Don't store well
  • Sweetest flavor

Storage Potatoes (Full Harvest):

  • After foliage dies back
  • Wait 2 weeks after vines die
  • Skins should be set (don't rub off)
  • Best for long-term storage

How to Harvest

  1. Cut back dying vines (optional)
  2. Wait for dry weather
  3. Use a garden fork, not a shovel
  4. Start 12-18 inches from plant center
  5. Lift carefully to avoid damage
  6. Brush off soil (don't wash)

Curing and Storage

Curing:

  • Place in dark, cool (45-60°F) location
  • Maintain humidity (85-90%)
  • Cure for 1-2 weeks
  • Allows skins to toughen, wounds to heal

Storage:

  • Temperature: 38-45°F (3-7°C)
  • Humidity: 90-95%
  • Darkness: Essential (prevents greening)
  • Duration: 4-6 months possible

Common Problems

Green Potatoes

Green skin indicates solanine (toxic):

  • Caused by light exposure
  • Cut away green portions before eating
  • Prevention: Proper hilling and storage

Small Tubers

Several causes:

  • Harvested too early
  • Hot weather during tuber formation
  • Water stress
  • Too much nitrogen

Hollow Heart

Empty cavity inside tuber:

  • Caused by rapid growth
  • Often follows drought then rain
  • Maintain consistent moisture

Tips for Success

  1. Use Certified Seed: Prevents disease introduction
  2. Don't Skip Hilling: Critical for yield and safety
  3. Water Consistently: Most important during flowering
  4. Rotate Crops: Don't plant where nightshades grew for 3+ years
  5. Harvest Carefully: Damaged tubers don't store well

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I plant grocery store potatoes? It's not recommended. They may carry diseases and are often treated to prevent sprouting.

Why did my potatoes produce flowers but no tubers? Unusual—usually caused by extreme heat or disease. Flowers don't need to form for tubers.

How do I know when new potatoes are ready? Gently dig near a plant about 2 weeks after flowering. If tubers are golf ball size, they're ready.

Growing potatoes is one of gardening's great pleasures. From planting to the excitement of digging up your harvest, potatoes reward gardeners with delicious, versatile results that store well into winter.

Share This Guide

Related Guides

Continue learning with these related guides

Also in Vegetables