Can I Grow Broccoli in North Carolina?

USDA Zones 5b-8b · Plant zone range 2-11

Conditional — Some Areas

broccoli (zones 2-11) has limited zone overlap with North Carolina (5b-8b). Only zones 5-8 in the state are suitable.

Zone Comparison

Broccoli Needs

  • USDA Zones: 2-11
  • Soil pH: 5.5 - 8.5
  • Sun: Part Sun
  • Drainage: well (dry spells)
  • Frost-Free Days: 60+

North Carolina Has

  • USDA Zones: 5b-8b
  • Last Frost: Mar 10 - May 5
  • First Frost: Oct 5 - Nov 15
  • Annual Rainfall: 40-60 inches
  • Common Soils: Red clay (Piedmont), Sandy loam (Coastal), Mountain loam

Plant Zone Range (zones 2-11)

2a
11b
3a (Cold)13b (Hot)

Preferred Soil pH

3.5 (Acidic)7.0 (Neutral)9.0 (Alkaline)
Highlighted range: pH 5.58.5

Plant data: USDA PLANTS Database / plant_species_v5.csv. State data: USDA ARS PHZM 2023, NOAA Climate Normals, NRCS SSURGO.

Growing Season Fit

Zone compatibility says you can survive winter here. Whether the growing season is long enough — and warm enough — is a different question.

Frost-free days

Broccoli wants 60+ frost-free days; a typical North Carolina site sees ~220 (NOAA Climate Normals). That leaves comfortable headroom for succession planting.

Growing degree days

Broccoli needs ~1500 GDD (base 50°F) to ripen. The state median runs ~4200 GDD (USDA NRCS county aggregates), so North Carolina's typical season clears that easily.

Climate aggregates derive from USDA NRCS county-level hardiness data + Cornell CALS Extension GDD-by-region tables + MSU Extension chill-hours-by-zone (1991-2020 NOAA Climate Normals baseline).

Soil + Drainage Fit

Broccoli likes near-neutral soil (pH 5.5-8.5). That's the common-ground band across North Carolina's red clay (piedmont) and sandy loam (coastal) — a soil test confirms it for your site. Drainage matters: this plant wants well (dry spells). If your North Carolina site is heavier clay or sits in a low spot, raised beds or amendment with compost solve it.

Plant pH and drainage requirements from USDA PLANTS Database. North Carolina soil profile from USDA NRCS SSURGO. Site-specific verification: a 30-minute soil test from your local Extension lab.

Broccoli in North Carolina — Quick Answer

  • Verdict: Conditional — Some Areas
  • Plant Zones: 2-11 (USDA PLANTS Database)
  • State Zones: 5b-8b (USDA ARS PHZM 2023)
  • Growing Season: Mar 10 - May 5 to Oct 5 - Nov 15 (NOAA Climate Normals)
  • Days to Maturity: 70 days

What Else to Consider

Zone compatibility tells you about winter cold survival — but North Carolina growers also need to think about:

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Red Piedmont clay is hard to work and drains poorly

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Humidity drives significant disease pressure

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Hurricane risk on the coastal plain

Pollinator + Wildlife Value

Broccoli draws pollinators (moderate value, USDA PLANTS Database). Planting it near vegetable beds can lift fruit set on neighboring crops.

North Carolina Cooperative Extension

For North Carolina-specific cultivar recommendations, planting calendars, and pest pressure for broccoli, the canonical source is NC State Extension. Their fact sheets carry the local trial data we can't generalize across 50 states.

Free Report

Check your specific parcel in North Carolina

State-level data is a sketch. Your Growable Ground report scores broccoli against your parcel's exact soil, sun, drainage, and frost data — not zone averages.

Three things about your exact spot that zone averages miss:

Your soil pHYour frost-free daysYour sun & shade

We read public map data for this spot — soil, climate, flood, and parcel records. How we handle your address.

25+ data sources analyzed in seconds

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