Oats is a cover crop — grown to build and protect the soil rather than for a harvest of its own. It's hardy across USDA zones 3 through 10.
Zones
3-10
pH Range
4.5-7.5
Sun
Full Sun
Days to Maturity
60
Score Oats on your exact land.
Zone averages can't see the slope, soil, frost, and sun that decide whether oats actually takes — and those shift from one yard to the next. Enter your address and we'll score oats against your land's real conditions.
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What Oats is
Oats grows as an annual and reaches around three feet at maturity. It blooms yellow in late spring.
How to grow Oats
Oats grows in USDA zones 3 through 10. Oats does best in full sun — at least 6 hours of direct sun a day — and soil from pH 4.5 to 7.5, on well-drained ground. It needs around 1,300 growing degree days to mature and a growing season of at least 110 frost-free days, which is why climate matters as much as soil.
USDA Zones
3-10
USDA PHZM 2023
Soil pH
4.5 - 7.5
USDA PLANTS Database
Sun
Full Sun
plant_species_v5.csv
Drainage
well (dry spells)
plant_species_v5.csv
Frost Tolerance
41°F
plant_species_v5.csv
Days to Maturity
60 days
Oats; cover crop; no strat.
USDA-NRCS
GDD Required
1300+
plant_species_v5.csv
Mature Height
3 ft
plant_species_v5.csv
Frost-Free Days
110+
plant_species_v5.csv
Start the season right
Plant oats in full sun with at least 6 hours of direct sun, once the soil has warmed and frost risk has passed.
Match the soil
Oats prefers pH 4.5 to 7.5 (USDA PLANTS Database). A quick soil test from your local Extension lab tells you whether to add lime or sulfur to land in band.
Water steadily
Keep the root zone evenly moist through establishment. A 2–3 inch mulch layer holds moisture without waterlogging.
Turn it in before it seeds
Cut oats down or turn it into the soil before it sets seed, while the growth is still green — that's when it returns the most to the ground.
Good to know
Good news for pet owners — oats isn't known to be toxic to dogs or cats. (Source: ASPCA.)
Oats isn't classified as a notable pollinator plant in our data — pair it with high-value bloomers nearby to feed bees.
Where Oats thrives
On hardiness alone, oats grows across most of the country — its range (USDA zones 3 through 10) is unusually wide. Zone is only the starting point, though: the soil pH, drainage, and frost dates on your specific land decide how well it actually does.
Zones 3–10·Where Oats growsOpen map →
On USDA hardiness-zone overlap, Oats can grow in these states:
See if Oats will thrive on your land
Zone averages are a start. Your exact soil pH, drainage, sun exposure, and frost dates shape whether oats actually takes — we score it against the real conditions at your address.
Three things about your exact spot that zone averages miss:
We read public map data for this spot — soil, climate, flood, and parcel records. How we handle your address.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I grow Oats in my zone?
Oats grows in USDA hardiness zones 3 through 10 (USDA PHZM 2023). Zone is one factor — soil pH, drainage, and frost dates on your specific parcel also shape whether it takes.
When should you plant Oats?
Most growers plant oats after the last spring frost, once the soil has warmed, leaving enough of the season for its 110-day frost-free need. Your local frost dates set the exact window — a Growable Ground report reads them for your address.
How much sun does Oats need?
Oats needs full sun — a spot that catches at least 6 hours of direct summer sun a day. In more shade it still grows, but usually gives a smaller, later crop. The catch is that a yard rarely gets even light everywhere — a fence, the house, or one tall tree can quietly take those hours. A Growable Ground report reads the real sun-hours across your land, canopy and buildings included, so you can pick the brightest bed before you plant.
What soil does Oats need?
Oats prefers soil pH 4.5 to 7.5, on well-drained ground (USDA PLANTS Database). Your report scores your parcel's actual soil against that using USDA SSURGO data.
Does Oats attract pollinators?
Oats isn't classified as a notable pollinator plant in our data. Pairing it with high-value bloomers nearby keeps bees and butterflies fed.
Is Oats safe for pets?
Oats is not known to be toxic to dogs or cats based on available data (ASPCA). Always supervise pets around new plantings.

