Learn how to grow beautiful pomegranate trees at home. These ancient fruits with jewel-like seeds are surprisingly easy to grow and offer stunning ornamental value along with delicious, antioxidant-rich fruit.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
Introduction to Growing Pomegranates
Pomegranates (Punica granatum) are among the most ancient and revered fruits in human history, cultivated for over 5,000 years since their domestication in ancient Persia. Today, these stunning plants offer home gardeners dual value: gorgeous orange-red flowers that brighten the landscape and uniquely delicious fruit filled with ruby-like, antioxidant-packed seeds called arils.
Native to the Iranian Plateau, pomegranates have spread across the globe, thriving in Mediterranean climates and anywhere summers are hot and dry. While commercial production centers in California, India, and Iran, home gardeners in USDA zones 7-10 can successfully grow these rewarding plants.
Whether you want fresh fruit, ornamental beauty, or both, pomegranates deliver with relatively low maintenance once established.
Why Grow Pomegranates?
Growing your own pomegranates offers many benefits:
- Dual purpose: Beautiful flowers AND delicious fruit
- Antioxidant powerhouse: More antioxidants than red wine or green tea
- Drought tolerant: Perfect for water-wise gardens
- Long-lived: Trees can produce for 200+ years
- Low maintenance: Once established, relatively trouble-free
- Versatile form: Grow as tree, shrub, hedge, or container plant
Understanding Pomegranate Basics
Plant Structure and Growth
| Characteristic | Details |
|---|---|
| Type | Deciduous shrub/small tree |
| Height | 12-20 feet (can be kept smaller) |
| Spread | 12-15 feet |
| Growth rate | Moderate (12-24 inches/year) |
| Lifespan | 100-200+ years |
Self-Fertility
Great news for small-space gardeners:
| Characteristic | Details |
|---|---|
| Self-fertile | Yes—most varieties |
| Cross-pollination | Increases fruit set |
| Pollinators | Attracts bees and hummingbirds |
Tip: While one plant can produce fruit, planting two different varieties often increases yields.
Popular Varieties for Beginners
For Fruit Production
| Variety | Hardiness | Flavor | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wonderful | Zone 8-10 | Sweet-tart | #1 commercial; deep red |
| Angel Red | Zone 7-10 | Sweet | Soft seeds; less splitting |
| Parfianka | Zone 7-10 | Rich, complex | Exceptional flavor |
| Eversweet | Zone 7-10 | Very sweet | Virtually seedless sensation |
Cold-Hardy Varieties (Zone 6-7)
| Variety | Hardiness | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Salavatski (Russian) | Zone 6, 0°F | Large fruit; very productive |
| Russian 26 | Zone 6b, 3°F | Heat and cold tolerant |
| Kazake | Zone 7, 0°F | Reliable; good flavor |
Ornamental/Dwarf Varieties
| Variety | Size | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Nana | 2-4 feet | Perfect for containers |
| State Fair | 5-6 feet | Good fruit; compact |
What You'll Need
Essential Supplies
- Pomegranate plant (bare root or container)
- Sunny location (6+ hours direct sun)
- Well-draining soil
- Mulch (2-4 inches)
- Support stake (optional, for tree form)
Optional but Helpful
- Soil pH test kit
- Compost
- Balanced fertilizer
- Pruning shears
- Bird netting (for harvest)
Step-by-Step Growing Guide
Step 1: Choose the Right Location
| Factor | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Sunlight | Full sun (6+ hours); more = sweeter fruit |
| Soil | Well-draining; tolerates poor soils |
| pH | 5.5-7.2 |
| Protection | South-facing wall in cold zones |
| Space | 12-15 feet for standard; less for dwarf |
Location tips:
- Hot, dry summers produce the sweetest fruit
- Avoid frost pockets
- Reflected heat from walls is beneficial
- Good air circulation prevents disease
Step 2: Prepare and Plant
Best planting time: Early spring (after frost) or fall
Planting steps:
- Dig hole 2× wider than root ball
- Add compost if soil is poor
- Position at same depth as in container
- Backfill with native soil (no amendments in hole)
- Water deeply
- Apply 3-4 inches mulch (keep away from trunk)
Spacing:
- Standard trees: 12-15 feet apart
- Hedges: 6-8 feet apart
- Containers: One plant per large container
Step 3: Watering
| Stage | Water Needs |
|---|---|
| First year | Regular; 1-2 inches weekly |
| Established | Deep watering every 7-10 days |
| Fruiting | Consistent during fruit development |
| Pre-harvest | Reduce slightly (prevents splitting) |
Important: Pomegranates are drought-tolerant once established, but irregular watering during fruit development causes fruit to split.
Step 4: Fertilizing
| Timing | Fertilizer | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Early spring | Balanced (10-10-10) | 1/2 cup per year of tree age |
| Summer | Light nitrogen | Optional if growth is slow |
| Fall | None | Let plant harden off |
Tips:
- Don't over-fertilize (promotes leaves, not fruit)
- Mature trees may need little fertilizer
- Compost provides gentle nutrients
Step 5: Basic Pruning
When to prune: Late winter (February-March)
Goals:
- Maintain desired form (tree or shrub)
- Remove suckers (shoots from base)
- Keep center open for air circulation
- Remove dead, crossing, or weak branches
Pruning approach by form:
| Form | Description | Trunks |
|---|---|---|
| Multi-trunk shrub | Natural form; best for cold areas | 4-6 trunks |
| Single-trunk tree | More formal; freeze-free areas only | 1 trunk |
Important: Pomegranates fruit on second-year wood. Don't prune too heavily or you'll remove fruiting wood!
Step 6: Pollination and Flowering
| Characteristic | Details |
|---|---|
| Bloom time | Late spring to early summer |
| Flower color | Brilliant orange-red (most varieties) |
| Duration | Blooms over several weeks |
| Fruit development | 5-7 months after bloom |
Flower types:
- Vase-shaped flowers → develop into fruit
- Bell-shaped flowers → decorative only (drop off)
Harvesting Pomegranates
When to Harvest
| Indicator | Ready | Not Ready |
|---|---|---|
| Skin color | Deep red (variety specific) | Green or pale |
| Shape | Flattened sides, angular | Round |
| Skin | Slightly rough, leathery | Smooth, shiny |
| Sound | Metallic "ping" when tapped | Dull sound |
| Timing | September-November (Northern Hemisphere) | — |
How to Harvest
- Don't wait for fruit to fall (they split on ground)
- Cut stem with pruners (don't pull)
- Leave short stem attached
- Handle carefully (arils bruise easily)
- Harvest before heavy rain (prevents splitting)
Storage
| Method | Duration |
|---|---|
| Counter | 1-2 weeks |
| Refrigerator | 2-3 months (whole fruit) |
| Arils (refrigerated) | 5-7 days |
| Arils (frozen) | Up to 1 year |
Common Problems and Solutions
Growing Issues
| Problem | Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| No fruit | Too young; over-fertilized | Patience (3+ years); reduce N |
| Fruit splitting | Irregular watering | Consistent moisture; reduce before harvest |
| Few flowers | Too much shade; excess N | More sun; reduce fertilizer |
| Poor fruit flavor | Not enough heat/sun | Maximize sun exposure |
Pest Issues
| Pest | Signs | Control |
|---|---|---|
| Pomegranate butterfly | Larvae in fruit | Bag fruit; remove affected |
| Aphids | Curled leaves | Strong water spray; neem |
| Whiteflies | Sticky leaves; flying insects | Yellow traps; insecticidal soap |
| Squirrels/birds | Missing fruit | Netting at ripening |
Disease Issues
| Disease | Signs | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Heart rot | Internal decay (hidden) | Harvest promptly; good hygiene |
| Gray mold (Botrytis) | Fuzzy gray on flowers/fruit | Air circulation; avoid overhead water |
| Leaf spot | Brown spots on leaves | Fungicide if severe |
Quick Reference Table
| Factor | Requirement |
|---|---|
| USDA Zones | 7-10 (some varieties zone 6) |
| Chill hours | 100-400 |
| Sun | Full sun (6+ hours) |
| Soil pH | 5.5-7.2 |
| Water | Moderate; drought tolerant when established |
| Spacing | 12-15 feet (standard) |
| Time to fruit | 2-3 years |
| Harvest | September-November |
| Storage | 2-3 months refrigerated |
Conclusion
Pomegranates reward gardeners with stunning beauty and delicious, healthful fruit. Choose a variety suited to your climate—cold-hardy Russian types for zones 6-7, or classics like 'Wonderful' for warmer areas.
The keys to success are full sun, well-draining soil, consistent watering during fruit development, and patience through the first few years. Once established, pomegranates are remarkably low-maintenance and long-lived, potentially producing fruit for generations.
Ready to learn more? Check out our Intermediate Guide for variety deep-dives, training systems, and maximizing fruit quality.
यह गाइड शेयर करें
संबंधित गाइड
इन संबंधित गाइड के साथ सीखना जारी रखें
How to Grow Guava: Complete Planting & Harvest Guide
Learn how to grow guava with this complete planting and harvest guide. This tropical fruit tree is surprisingly cold-hardy, produces fragrant fruit in just 2-4 years, and grows well in containers. This guide covers varieties including cold-hardy types for Zone 8, growing from seed vs cuttings, pruning, container growing, and solutions to common problems.
How to Grow Papaya: Complete Planting & Harvest Guide
Learn how to grow papaya with this complete guide. This fast-growing tropical fruit tree produces sweet, melon-like fruits in just 6-12 months from seed. This guide covers starting from seed, the male vs female plant mystery, container growing for cold climates, pollination, harvesting, and solutions to common problems.
How to Grow Olive Trees: Complete Guide from Planting to Harvest
Learn how to grow olive trees at home — in the ground or in containers. This complete guide covers the best self-fertile varieties, chill hour requirements, container growing for cold climates, pruning for fruit production, and how to cure your own homegrown olives.
How to Grow Banana Plants: Complete Guide for Any Climate
Learn how to grow banana plants at home — indoors or out. This complete guide covers cold-hardy varieties for northern gardens, container growing, the dwarf Cavendish trick, pup propagation, and how to actually get bananas to fruit in non-tropical climates.