When to Plant Okra in Mississippi
A Southern garden staple that thrives in blazing heat. Beautiful flowers are a bonus.
The Short Answer
Mississippi Frost Dates
Your planting dates depend on which part of Mississippi you're in. Here are the frost date ranges by region:
| Region | Zones | Last Frost (Spring) | First Frost (Fall) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Mississippi | 7b, 8a | Mar 15 - Apr 1 | Nov 1 - Nov 15 |
| Central Mississippi | 8a, 8b | Mar 1 - Mar 15 | Nov 10 - Nov 25 |
| Southern Mississippi | 8b, 9a | Feb 15 - Mar 5 | Nov 15 - Dec 5 |
Okra Planting Schedule for Mississippi
Northern Mississippi (Zones 7b, 8a)
Average last frost: Mar 15 - Apr 1 · Average first frost: Nov 1 - Nov 15
Central Mississippi (Zones 8a, 8b)
Average last frost: Mar 1 - Mar 15 · Average first frost: Nov 10 - Nov 25
Southern Mississippi (Zones 8b, 9a)
Average last frost: Feb 15 - Mar 5 · Average first frost: Nov 15 - Dec 5
Growing Okra in Mississippi
Okra in Mississippi's Climate
Okra thrives in your warm climate — it's one of the few crops that actually improves as summer heat intensifies. The crop produces from May through October, keeping the garden productive when other vegetables struggle. Deeply embedded in Southern cooking traditions — fried okra, gumbo, pickled okra.
Soil Considerations for Mississippi
Rich delta soils in west. Heavy clay in many areas. Sandy in pine belt. Acidic throughout. Make sure soil has warmed to at least 65°F before planting okra outside.
Mississippi Climate & Growing Season
Long growing season. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters. Two-season gardening possible. Okra cannot tolerate any frost, so wait until all frost danger has passed before transplanting outside. Watch local forecasts carefully in spring.
Growing season length varies across Mississippi: Northern Mississippi (7b, 8a) has a last frost around Mar 15 - Apr 1, while Southern Mississippi (8b, 9a) sees frost end around Feb 15 - Mar 5. This difference matters for okra — transplant timing shifts by several weeks across the state.
Growing Tips
Soak seeds overnight before planting to speed germination. Harvest pods at 3-4 inches — they get tough quickly.
Companion Planting
Plant okra alongside these companions for better growth:
The Bottom Line
Last reviewed: March 29, 2026