When to Plant Daffodils in New Mexico
Deer-proof, squirrel-proof, and virtually indestructible. Daffodils naturalize and multiply, coming back bigger each year.
The Short Answer
New Mexico Frost Dates
Your planting dates depend on which part of New Mexico you're in. Here are the frost date ranges by region:
| Region | Zones | Last Frost (Spring) | First Frost (Fall) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northern New Mexico | 4a, 4b, 5a, 5b | May 5 - May 25 | Sep 15 - Oct 5 |
| Central New Mexico (Albuquerque) | 7a, 7b | Apr 1 - Apr 20 | Oct 15 - Nov 5 |
| Southern New Mexico | 7b, 8a, 8b | Mar 15 - Apr 5 | Oct 25 - Nov 15 |
Daffodils Planting Schedule for New Mexico
Northern New Mexico (Zones 4a, 4b, 5a, 5b)
Average last frost: May 5 - May 25 · Average first frost: Sep 15 - Oct 5
Central New Mexico (Albuquerque) (Zones 7a, 7b)
Average last frost: Apr 1 - Apr 20 · Average first frost: Oct 15 - Nov 5
Southern New Mexico (Zones 7b, 8a, 8b)
Average last frost: Mar 15 - Apr 5 · Average first frost: Oct 25 - Nov 15
Growing Daffodils in New Mexico
Daffodils in New Mexico's Climate
Most daffodils need more winter chill than subtropical zones provide. Paperwhite narcissus (a Tazetta type) requires zero chilling and can be forced indoors in pebbles and water. North Florida can grow some daffodil types outdoors; south Florida should force Paperwhites instead.
Soil Considerations for New Mexico
Alkaline desert soils. Low organic matter. Caliche layers common. Heavy amendment with compost essential.
New Mexico Climate & Growing Season
High desert climate. Intense sun. Low humidity. Wide temperature swings day to night. Irrigation essential. Daffodils can handle frost well, which is an advantage in New Mexico's climate. You can push planting dates earlier in spring and extend into fall.
Growing season length varies across New Mexico: Northern New Mexico (4a, 4b, 5a, 5b) has a last frost around May 5 - May 25, while Southern New Mexico (7b, 8a, 8b) sees frost end around Mar 15 - Apr 5. This difference matters for daffodils — adjust your planting dates to match your specific region.
Growing Tips
Let foliage die back naturally after blooming — it feeds next year's flowers. Plant at 3x the bulb's height deep.
Companion Planting
Plant daffodils alongside these companions for better growth:
The Bottom Line
Last reviewed: March 29, 2026