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Spring Vegetable Garden for Beginners: What to Plant Right Now
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Spring Vegetable Garden for Beginners: What to Plant Right Now

April and May are the best months to start your first vegetable garden. This complete beginner's guide covers exactly what to plant in spring, when to plant it, and how to set up your first garden bed — no experience needed.

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最后更新: 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

Why Spring Is the Best Time to Start a Vegetable Garden

Spring is the perfect time to start your first vegetable garden — and if you are reading this in April or May, you are right on time. The soil is warming up, days are getting longer, and the most beginner-friendly vegetables are ready to go in the ground.

The good news: you do not need experience, a big yard, or expensive equipment. A 4×4 foot raised bed or a few containers can produce more food than you expect.

This guide covers exactly what to plant right now, how to set up your space, and the 10 easiest spring vegetables for first-time gardeners.

Quick Reference: Spring Planting at a Glance

DetailInfo
Best TimeApril–May (most of North America)
DifficultyBeginner
Space Needed4×4 ft minimum (or 3–5 large containers)
Budget$30–80 for a basic setup
First Harvest25–60 days depending on crop
Key SkillKnowing your last frost date

Step 1: Find Your Last Frost Date

Before you plant anything, you need one piece of information: your last frost date. This is the average date of the last below-freezing night in your area each spring.

Why it matters: Frost kills warm-season crops like tomatoes and peppers. Cold-tolerant crops like lettuce and spinach can go in before your last frost — sometimes 4–6 weeks before.

How to find it: Search "last frost date [your city]" or use the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map.

General spring planting timing:

  • Cold-tolerant crops (lettuce, spinach, peas): Plant 4–6 weeks before last frost
  • Warm-season crops (tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers): Plant after last frost, when nighttime temps stay above 50°F (10°C)

For most of the US, this means:

  • Northern states (Zones 4–5): Last frost around May 1–15. Plant warm-season crops late May.
  • Mid-Atlantic/Midwest (Zones 6–7): Last frost around April 1–15. Plant warm-season crops mid-April.
  • Southern states (Zones 8–9): Last frost February–March. Spring planting starts March–April.

Step 2: Choose Your Garden Location

Vegetables need sunlight above everything else. Before you pick a spot, observe where the sun hits your yard or balcony throughout the day.

Sunlight Requirements

Sun ExposureHours per DayBest Crops
Full sun6–8+ hoursTomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, beans
Partial sun4–6 hoursLettuce, spinach, kale, herbs
ShadeUnder 4 hoursNot ideal for most vegetables

Garden Setup Options

Raised bed (recommended for beginners)

  • Best drainage and soil control
  • Fewer weeds than in-ground beds
  • Warms up faster in spring
  • 4×4 ft or 4×8 ft are most manageable

In-ground bed

  • Lower startup cost
  • Requires amending native soil
  • More weeding

Containers

  • Perfect for balconies and patios
  • 5-gallon pots minimum for tomatoes/peppers
  • 3-gallon pots for herbs and lettuce
  • Needs more frequent watering

Step 3: Prepare Your Soil

Soil is the foundation of your garden. Poor soil = poor harvests. Good soil = abundant harvests with minimal problems.

For raised beds: Fill with a mix of:

  • 60% topsoil or garden soil
  • 30% compost (the most important ingredient)
  • 10% perlite or coarse sand (for drainage)

Pre-made "Mel's Mix" or "raised bed soil" from garden centers also works well.

For in-ground beds:

  1. Remove grass and weeds
  2. Loosen soil 12 inches deep with a fork or tiller
  3. Mix in 3–4 inches of compost
  4. Let rest for a few days before planting

For containers: Use potting mix, not garden soil. Potting mix is lighter and drains better. Add slow-release fertilizer to the mix.

Signs of good soil:

  • Dark brown, not gray or pale
  • Loose and crumbles in your hand
  • Earthy smell (not sour or chemical)
  • Visible earthworms (a great sign!)

Step 4: Pick Your 10 Best Spring Vegetables

These are the easiest, most productive spring vegetables for beginners. They are forgiving, fast-growing, and available at any garden center.

1. Lettuce

Why it's perfect for spring: Grows quickly (30–45 days to harvest), prefers cool weather, and produces for weeks with cut-and-come-again harvesting.

DetailInfo
Direct sow or transplantBoth work
Plant when4–6 weeks before last frost
Spacing6–8 inches apart
HarvestCut outer leaves at 4–6 inches tall
Bonus tipPlant in partial shade to slow bolting

Best beginner varieties: 'Buttercrunch', 'Black Seeded Simpson', 'Little Gem'

2. Radishes

Why they're perfect: Radishes are the fastest vegetable you can grow — some varieties mature in just 22–25 days. They're great for filling gaps between slower crops and keeping impatient beginners motivated.

DetailInfo
Direct sowYes (direct sow only — don't transplant)
Plant whenAs soon as soil is workable (very frost tolerant)
Spacing2–3 inches apart
HarvestWhen root is marble-to-golf-ball sized
Bonus tipHarvest promptly — they turn pithy if left too long

Best beginner varieties: 'Cherry Belle', 'French Breakfast', 'Easter Egg Mix'

3. Spinach

Why it's perfect: Spinach loves cool weather and can even handle light frost. It's one of the most nutrient-dense crops you can grow and yields heavily from a small space.

DetailInfo
Direct sow or transplantDirect sow preferred
Plant when6 weeks before last frost
Spacing3–4 inches apart
HarvestPick outer leaves when 3–4 inches long
Bonus tipBolts (goes to seed) in heat — plant early and enjoy the window

Best beginner varieties: 'Bloomsdale Long Standing', 'Tyee', 'Space'

4. Peas (Sugar Snap or Snow)

Why they're perfect: Peas are cold-tolerant, productive, and delicious straight off the vine. Sugar snap peas are one of the most satisfying first crops — sweet, crunchy, and ready in 60–70 days.

DetailInfo
Direct sowYes
Plant when4–6 weeks before last frost
Support neededYes — provide a trellis or stakes
Spacing2–3 inches apart
HarvestWhen pods are plump and bright green

Best beginner varieties: 'Sugar Snap', 'Oregon Sugar Pod', 'Mammoth Melting Sugar'

5. Kale

Why it's perfect: Kale is nearly indestructible, grows all season, and actually tastes better after a light frost. It's one of the most nutritious crops per square foot.

DetailInfo
Direct sow or transplantBoth work
Plant when4–6 weeks before last frost
Spacing12–18 inches apart
HarvestPick outer leaves, leave inner ones to keep growing
Bonus tipOne or two plants provide a family's worth of greens

Best beginner varieties: 'Lacinato' (Dinosaur), 'Red Russian', 'Winterbor'

6. Tomatoes

Why they're perfect (with caveats): Tomatoes are the #1 garden vegetable in America for good reason — they're productive, versatile, and rewarding. The caveat: they need warm weather and can't go out until after your last frost.

DetailInfo
Direct sow or transplantTransplant strongly recommended
Plant whenAfter last frost, when nighttime temps stay above 50°F
Spacing18–24 inches for determinate; 24–36 for indeterminate
SupportCage, stake, or trellis required
First harvest60–80 days from transplant

Best beginner varieties: 'Celebrity' (disease resistant), 'Better Boy', 'Sun Gold' (cherry — easiest of all)

7. Green Beans (Bush Beans)

Why they're perfect: Bush beans are incredibly productive and low-maintenance. They don't need trellising, fix their own nitrogen in the soil, and produce armloads of beans in just 50–60 days.

DetailInfo
Direct sowYes (don't transplant — they hate root disturbance)
Plant whenAfter last frost, once soil is warm (60°F+)
Spacing3–4 inches apart
HarvestWhen pods are pencil-thin and snap cleanly
Bonus tipSuccession plant every 3 weeks for continuous harvest

Best beginner varieties: 'Blue Lake', 'Provider', 'Contender'

8. Cucumbers

Why they're perfect: Cucumbers grow fast, produce abundantly, and love the warm days of late spring and summer. They're one of the most satisfying crops to grow.

DetailInfo
Direct sow or transplantBoth work
Plant whenAfter last frost, once soil is warm
Spacing12 inches apart (train up a trellis)
HarvestWhen 6–8 inches long — pick often to keep plants producing
Bonus tipVertical growing saves space and improves air circulation

Best beginner varieties: 'Straight Eight', 'Marketmore', 'Spacemaster' (container-friendly)

9. Zucchini

Why they're perfect: One or two zucchini plants will produce more than most families can eat. They grow incredibly fast once established, and you'll harvest within 50–60 days.

DetailInfo
Direct sow or transplantBoth work
Plant whenAfter last frost
Spacing24–36 inches apart (they get big!)
HarvestAt 6–8 inches — don't let them get huge
Caution1–2 plants is usually plenty

Best beginner varieties: 'Black Beauty', 'Patio Star' (compact), 'Golden Egg'

10. Herbs (Basil, Parsley, Chives)

Why they're perfect: Herbs are among the most practical plants you can grow. A small pot of basil, parsley, and chives saves money, adds flavor to every meal, and is nearly impossible to fail with.

HerbWhen to PlantLight NeedsNotes
BasilAfter last frostFull sunPlant near tomatoes
Parsley4 weeks before last frostFull to partialSlow to germinate — be patient
Chives4–6 weeks before last frostFull to partialVery cold-hardy
CilantroBefore last frostPartialBolt-prone in heat
MintAfter last frostPartialKeep in containers — invasive!

Step 5: Plan Your Garden Layout

With a 4×4 foot bed, here's a productive beginner layout (back to front, north to south):

RowPlantsNotes
Back (north)1 Tomato plantTallest — won't shade others
Middle-backBush beans + ZucchiniHalf each
Middle-frontLettuce + SpinachCool crops in partial tomato shade
Front (south)Radishes + HerbsFast-turnover crops near the edge

Planting principles:

  • Tall plants in the north — so they don't shade shorter plants
  • Fast crops near the edges — for easy access at harvest
  • Companion planting — tomatoes love basil nearby; beans fix nitrogen for neighboring plants

Step 6: Water, Feed, and Maintain

Watering

The #1 beginner mistake is inconsistent watering. Vegetables need consistent moisture — not soggy, not bone dry.

General rule: 1 inch of water per week, more in heat How to check: Stick your finger 2 inches into soil. Water if it's dry. Best time to water: Morning — leaves dry before evening, reducing disease

Pro tips:

  • Water at the base of plants, not the leaves
  • Raised beds dry out faster than in-ground — check daily in summer
  • Containers may need watering every day in hot weather
  • Mulch (straw, shredded leaves) dramatically reduces water needs

Fertilizing

If you started with good compost-rich soil, your plants won't need much for the first 4–6 weeks. After that:

  • Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers: Feed every 2 weeks with balanced vegetable fertilizer
  • Leafy greens: Monthly feeding is usually enough
  • Beans: Don't fertilize — they fix their own nitrogen
  • Signs of nutrient deficiency: Pale yellow leaves, stunted growth

Common Problems

ProblemCauseFix
Yellow leavesOverwatering or nitrogen deficiencyCheck drainage; fertilize
Holes in leavesPest damage (caterpillars, beetles)Hand-pick; use row cover
Wilting despite wet soilRoot rot or crown rotImprove drainage; remove affected roots
Leggy seedlingsInsufficient lightMove to brighter spot
No fruit on tomatoes/peppersToo hot or cold at floweringWait — it self-corrects
Lettuce going bitter and tallBolting from heatHarvest quickly; plant in shade

Your First Season: What to Expect

Month 1 (April–May): Cold-tolerant crops go in. Lettuce, spinach, peas, and radishes are growing. Your first radishes are ready.

Month 2 (May–June): After your last frost, warm-season crops go in. Tomato transplants, cucumber seeds, bean seeds. The garden looks full.

Month 3 (June–July): Beans and cucumbers start producing. Zucchini is going wild. Tomatoes are flowering.

Month 4 (July–August): Peak harvest season. Tomatoes ripen. You're eating from the garden every day. Peas and spinach are done (too hot), but everything else is thriving.

Through Fall: Plant a second round of cool-weather crops (lettuce, spinach, kale) in late August for fall harvest.

FAQ

How do I know when to start a spring vegetable garden?

The right time depends on your last frost date. Cool-season crops (lettuce, spinach, peas, radishes, kale) can go in 4–6 weeks before your last frost date — they tolerate light freezes. Warm-season crops (tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, beans, zucchini) should wait until after your last frost, when nighttime temperatures stay above 50°F (10°C). Search "last frost date [your city]" to find yours.

What are the easiest vegetables to grow for beginners in spring?

The easiest spring vegetables for beginners are radishes (harvest in 25 days), lettuce (cut-and-come-again harvests), sugar snap peas, spinach, and kale. These crops are forgiving, grow quickly enough to stay motivating, and tolerate the occasional frost. For warm-season crops, bush beans and zucchini are the most forgiving and productive options.

How much space do I need for a spring vegetable garden?

A 4×4 foot raised bed is the ideal starting size for a beginner — large enough to grow a meaningful variety of vegetables, small enough to manage easily. This space can comfortably grow one tomato plant, a few greens, some radishes, and herbs. If you only have a balcony or patio, 3–5 large containers (5-gallon minimum for tomatoes) can produce just as much food.

How often should I water a vegetable garden in spring?

Most vegetable gardens need about 1 inch of water per week. In cool spring weather, this might mean watering 2–3 times per week. The best test: stick your finger 2 inches into the soil — if it's dry, water. If it's still moist, wait. Container gardens dry out faster than raised beds and may need daily watering in warm weather.

What vegetables can I plant before the last frost?

Cold-tolerant vegetables that can be planted before your last frost include: lettuce, spinach, kale, Swiss chard, peas (sugar snap, snow, and shelling peas), radishes, beets, carrots, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, and most herbs except basil. These crops are either frost-tolerant or actually prefer the cooler temperatures of early spring.

Why is my spring garden not producing?

The most common reasons a spring vegetable garden underproduces are: insufficient sunlight (vegetables need 6+ hours of direct sun), poor soil (not enough compost), inconsistent watering, planting warm-season crops before the soil is warm, or overcrowding plants so they compete for resources. Check these five factors and most problems can be corrected mid-season.

How do I prevent pests in my spring vegetable garden?

The best pest prevention in spring is healthy soil and healthy plants — stressed plants attract pests. Beyond that: use row covers to block insects from young transplants, hand-pick caterpillars and beetles in the morning, plant companion flowers like marigolds to repel aphids, and check the undersides of leaves weekly. Avoid broad-spectrum pesticides, which kill beneficial insects that control pests naturally.

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