Daytona Beach, FL Frost Dates
Average frost dates, USDA hardiness zone, and growing season length for Daytona Beach, Florida.
Gardening in Daytona Beach
The beach racing heritage masks a surprisingly productive gardening community in the neighborhoods behind the waterfront. Central Florida's growing conditions are excellent.
Zone 9a with Atlantic maritime influence. Your 289-day growing season supports year-round production. Coastal sand transitions to slightly heavier soil inland. Salt spray in oceanfront gardens is a factor.
Daytona's year-round population (as opposed to the tourist pulse) maintains garden traditions that produce food across all seasons.
What This Means for Daytona Beach Gardeners
The average last spring frost in Daytona Beach is around February 15, and the average first fall frost arrives around December 1. That gives you approximately 289 frost-free days to work with.
289 days is a long, productive season that supports two full rounds of warm-season crops plus continuous cool-season production through your mild winter. Most frost-sensitive crops can be transplanted by February 15, giving them months to produce before fall. Your winter garden is the real advantage — growing fresh vegetables in December and January while northern gardeners browse seed catalogs.
These dates are based on NOAA 30-year Climate Normal data for the Daytona Beach area. Your actual frost dates could shift 2-3 weeks in either direction in any given year. Learn more about our data sources.
What to Grow in Daytona Beach
With 289 frost-free days, Daytona Beach can grow nearly anything — including tropical and subtropical plants that most of the country can only dream about. Your prime vegetable season runs from fall through spring; summer is for heat-lovers like okra, sweet potatoes, and peppers. Recommended starting points: cherry tomatoes, jalapeños, okra, sweet potatoes, basil, collard greens, tomatillos, and lemongrass.
See the full Florida planting guide for all 40 plants: Florida Planting Calendar. Or enter your zip code for exact planting dates personalized to Daytona Beach.
More About Zone 9A
Daytona Beach is in USDA Hardiness Zone 9A, which means average annual extreme minimum temperatures between 20°F to 25°F. View the full Zone 9A planting guide.
See the complete planting calendar for Florida: Florida Planting Calendar.
Other Cities in Florida
Frequently Asked Questions
These dates are based on NOAA's 30-year Climate Normal data for the Daytona Beach area. They represent historical averages, not predictions. In any given year, the actual last frost could be 2-3 weeks earlier or later. Microclimates within Daytona Beach (urban heat islands, hilltops, low-lying valleys) can also shift your local frost dates by a week or more.
You can plant cool-season crops (lettuce, kale, broccoli) from December 1 through February 15 — your cool season is your primary vegetable season. Warm-season crops like tomatoes and peppers go out in early spring. Tropical plants grow year-round. Enter your zip code for exact dates for every plant.