When to Plant Parsley in Nebraska
More than a garnish. Parsley is a biennial that produces abundantly its first year and is one of the most nutritious herbs.
The Short Answer
Nebraska Frost Dates
Your planting dates depend on which part of Nebraska you're in. Here are the frost date ranges by region:
| Region | Zones | Last Frost (Spring) | First Frost (Fall) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northern/Western Nebraska | 4a, 4b | May 5 - May 20 | Sep 20 - Oct 5 |
| Eastern Nebraska | 5a, 5b | Apr 25 - May 10 | Oct 1 - Oct 15 |
Parsley Planting Schedule for Nebraska
Northern/Western Nebraska (Zones 4a, 4b)
Average last frost: May 5 - May 20 · Average first frost: Sep 20 - Oct 5
Eastern Nebraska (Zones 5a, 5b)
Average last frost: Apr 25 - May 10 · Average first frost: Oct 1 - Oct 15
Growing Parsley in Nebraska
Parsley in Nebraska's Climate
Parsley is one of your most reliable herbs — the biennial handles frost, grows through your moderate summers, and keeps producing from May through November. Start seeds indoors in February (parsley germinates notoriously slowly — 14-28 days). The plant is biennial: lush leaves year one, flowers and seeds year two.
Soil Considerations for Nebraska
Rich prairie soils in east. Sandy soils in Sandhills region. Loess deposits along Missouri River.
Nebraska Climate & Growing Season
Continental climate. Hot summers, cold winters. Adequate growing season in east. Drier in west — irrigation may be needed.
Growing season length varies across Nebraska: Northern/Western Nebraska (4a, 4b) has a last frost around May 5 - May 20, while Eastern Nebraska (5a, 5b) sees frost end around Apr 25 - May 10. This difference matters for parsley — adjust your planting dates to match your specific region.
Growing Tips
Parsley seeds are notoriously slow to germinate — soak overnight before planting. It's a biennial: lush leaves year one, seeds year two.
Companion Planting
Plant parsley alongside these companions for better growth:
The Bottom Line
Last reviewed: March 29, 2026