When to Plant Broccoli in Massachusetts
A nutrition powerhouse that thrives in cool weather. Harvest the main head, then enjoy weeks of side shoots.
The Short Answer
Massachusetts Frost Dates
Your planting dates depend on which part of Massachusetts you're in. Here are the frost date ranges by region:
| Region | Zones | Last Frost (Spring) | First Frost (Fall) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Western Massachusetts | 5b, 6a | May 1 - May 20 | Sep 20 - Oct 10 |
| Central Massachusetts | 5b, 6a | May 1 - May 15 | Sep 25 - Oct 10 |
| Coastal/Cape | 6b, 7a | Apr 15 - May 1 | Oct 15 - Nov 1 |
Broccoli Planting Schedule for Massachusetts
Western Massachusetts (Zones 5b, 6a)
Average last frost: May 1 - May 20 · Average first frost: Sep 20 - Oct 10
Central Massachusetts (Zones 5b, 6a)
Average last frost: May 1 - May 15 · Average first frost: Sep 25 - Oct 10
Coastal/Cape (Zones 6b, 7a)
Average last frost: Apr 15 - May 1 · Average first frost: Oct 15 - Nov 1
Growing Broccoli in Massachusetts
Broccoli in Massachusetts's Climate
Broccoli grows best in spring and fall in your climate. Fall is the superior season — the gradually cooling temperatures favor tight head formation without the bolting risk of warming spring days. Start fall transplants indoors in late June, set out in late July. After harvesting the main head, leave plants for weeks of side-shoot production.
Soil Considerations for Massachusetts
Rocky, acidic New England soils. Glacial deposits. Raised beds popular. Amend heavily with compost.
Massachusetts Climate & Growing Season
Four seasons. Maritime influence moderates coastal areas. Cold winters. Good growing season with adequate moisture. Broccoli can handle frost well, which is an advantage in Massachusetts's climate. You can push planting dates earlier in spring and extend into fall.
Growing season length varies across Massachusetts: Western Massachusetts (5b, 6a) has a last frost around May 1 - May 20, while Coastal/Cape (6b, 7a) sees frost end around Apr 15 - May 1. This difference matters for broccoli — but broccoli handle frost well, so the timing difference is less critical.
Growing Tips
Harvest main head while buds are tight. Side shoots will continue producing for weeks after the main harvest.
Companion Planting
Plant broccoli alongside these companions for better growth:
Keep broccoli away from:
The Bottom Line
Last reviewed: March 29, 2026