Vegetables8 min read

Growing Tomatoes in Florida

Tomatoes are the most popular vegetable in American gardens — and one of the trickiest to grow in Florida. The key is understanding that Florida tomatoes are a cool-season crop, not a summer crop.

Timing Is Everything

In Florida, tomatoes are planted in fall (August–September for transplants) for a winter harvest, and again in late winter (January–February) for a spring harvest. Summer is too hot — tomatoes stop setting fruit above 95°F and are devastated by fungal diseases in the humidity. If you try to grow tomatoes in June, you'll lose them.

The Everglades Tomato Difference

The Everglades tomato (Solanum pimpinellifolium) is a wild species native to Florida and the Caribbean. Unlike standard tomatoes, it's genuinely heat-tolerant and can produce through Florida summers. The fruits are small — about the size of a large blueberry — but intensely flavorful. It's the one tomato we grow year-round. If you want a tomato that actually thrives in Florida heat, start here.

Soil and Fertilizing

Tomatoes are heavy feeders. In Florida's sandy soil, nutrients leach out quickly. Amend your bed with compost before planting and side-dress with a balanced fertilizer every 3–4 weeks. Calcium deficiency (blossom end rot) is common in Florida — add crushed eggshells or gypite to your soil before planting.

Disease Management

Florida's humidity makes fungal diseases — early blight, late blight, and Septoria leaf spot — almost inevitable. Choose disease-resistant varieties when possible. Water at the base of plants, never overhead. Remove affected leaves promptly. A weekly spray of diluted neem oil can help prevent fungal issues before they start.

Key takeaways

  • Plant tomatoes in fall (Aug–Sep) and late winter (Jan–Feb) — not summer
  • Everglades tomatoes are the exception — they tolerate Florida heat year-round
  • Amend sandy soil with compost and add calcium to prevent blossom end rot
  • Water at the base and use neem oil to manage fungal diseases