Can I Grow Peony in Indiana?

USDA Zones 5b-6b · Plant zone range Data pending

Conditional — Some Areas

Zone data for peony is not yet available. Growing may be possible depending on your specific location.

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Your yard isn't the whole zone.

Indiana spans zones 5b-6b, but your yard has its own microclimate — slope, trees, and low spots shift frost and sun across a single parcel. Enter your address and we'll score peony against your land's actual soil, sun, and frost.

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Zone Comparison

Peony Needs

  • USDA Zones: Data pending
  • Sun: Part Sun
  • Frost-Free Days: 0+

Indiana Has

  • USDA Zones: 5b-6b
  • Last Frost: Apr 10 - May 10
  • First Frost: Oct 1 - Oct 25
  • Annual Rainfall: 36-46 inches
  • Common Soils: Silt loam, Clay loam, Glacial till

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

When to Plant Peony in Indiana

The frost window

Across Indiana, the last spring frost clears between Apr 10 and May 10, and the first fall frost lands between Oct 1 and Oct 25 (NOAA Climate Normals 1991-2020). Counting from the latest last frost to the earliest first frost, that's a 144-day window you can count on — up to 198 days on a mild site in a kind year.

Frost window: NOAA Climate Normals 1991-2020. Plant timing fields: USDA PLANTS Database. Your site's own frost dates can run earlier or later than the state range — a parcel report pins them down.

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

Peony wants 0+ frost-free days; a typical Indiana site sees ~190 (NOAA Climate Normals). That leaves comfortable headroom for succession planting.

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).

Peony in Indiana — Quick Answer

  • Verdict: Conditional — Some Areas
  • Plant Zones: Data pending (USDA PLANTS Database)
  • State Zones: 5b-6b (USDA ARS PHZM 2023)
  • Growing Season: Apr 10 - May 10 to Oct 1 - Oct 25 (NOAA Climate Normals)

What Else to Consider

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

Heavy clay soils limit drainage in many areas

Mounded rows and compost open clay up — and where water still stands, a raised bed ends the argument.

Late spring frosts through early May

Hold tender transplants until your local last-frost normal clears — hardy greens will happily take the early slot.

Hot humid summers promote blight and mildew

Mulch to stop soil splash, water at the base, and rotate crop families — the blight playbook your extension teaches.

Pollinator + Wildlife Value

Peony draws pollinators (moderate value, USDA PLANTS Database). Planting it near vegetable beds can lift fruit set on neighboring crops. Deer pressure is meaningful across much of Indiana; peony is listed as deer-resistant (USDA PLANTS Database), which makes it a safer pick for unfenced sites. Our deer & wildlife guide carries the full deer-resistant list and how to protect the rest.

Indiana Cooperative Extension

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

Common Questions About Growing Peony in Indiana

When can I plant Peony in Indiana?

Indiana's last spring frost clears between Apr 10 and May 10, and the first fall frost lands between Oct 1 and Oct 25 (NOAA Climate Normals 1991-2020). Time outdoor planting to after the last-frost date for your specific site, and count back from those dates for transplant scheduling.

What hardiness zone is Peony grown in across Indiana?

Indiana spans USDA hardiness zones 5b-6b (USDA ARS PHZM 2023). Peony carries a range of zones Data pending, so the overlap zones are where outdoor growing is most reliable.

How many frost-free days does a typical Indiana site have?

A typical Indiana site sees ~190 frost-free days per year (derived from NOAA Climate Normals 1991-2020). Peony needs 0+ frost-free days, so check whether your local microclimate runs above or below the state average before settling on a planting date.

Will Peony actually grow on my specific land in Indiana?

State-level zone + climate data is a sketch. A Growable Ground parcel report scores peony against your address's exact soil pH, drainage, sun, and frost-date data drawn from USDA SSURGO, NOAA, and PRISM — not state averages.

Free Report

Check your specific parcel in Indiana

State-level data is a sketch. Your Growable Ground report scores peony 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.

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