When to Plant Sweet Potatoes in Vermont
Not related to regular potatoes at all. Sweet potatoes need heat and a long growing season but reward with incredible harvests.
The Short Answer
Vermont Frost Dates
Your planting dates depend on which part of Vermont you're in. Here are the frost date ranges by region:
| Region | Zones | Last Frost (Spring) | First Frost (Fall) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Vermont | 3b, 4a | May 20 - Jun 5 | Sep 5 - Sep 20 |
| Central Vermont | 4a, 4b, 5a | May 10 - May 25 | Sep 15 - Oct 1 |
| Southern Vermont | 4b, 5a, 5b | May 5 - May 20 | Sep 20 - Oct 5 |
Sweet Potatoes Planting Schedule for Vermont
Northern Vermont (Zones 3b, 4a)
Average last frost: May 20 - Jun 5 · Average first frost: Sep 5 - Sep 20
Central Vermont (Zones 4a, 4b, 5a)
Average last frost: May 10 - May 25 · Average first frost: Sep 15 - Oct 1
Southern Vermont (Zones 4b, 5a, 5b)
Average last frost: May 5 - May 20 · Average first frost: Sep 20 - Oct 5
Growing Sweet Potatoes in Vermont
Sweet Potatoes in Vermont's Climate
Sweet potatoes are a stretch in cold climates — the crop needs 90+ days of warm soil and air. Southern zones 5b-5a gardeners can succeed with Beauregard (90 days), black plastic mulch, and raised beds. Northern zone 3-4 gardeners should skip sweet potatoes — the season simply isn't long enough. Container growing on a sun-baked patio sometimes works where in-ground doesn't.
Soil Considerations for Vermont
Rocky, acidic soils typical of New England. Glacial deposits. Thin mountain soils. Raised beds very popular. Loose, well-drained soil is especially important for sweet potatoes since the edible portion grows underground. If your soil is heavy clay, consider raised beds.
Vermont Climate & Growing Season
Short growing season. Cold winters. Cool summers. Long summer days help compensate. Season extension techniques valuable. Sweet Potatoes 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 Vermont: Northern Vermont (3b, 4a) has a last frost around May 20 - Jun 5, while Southern Vermont (4b, 5a, 5b) sees frost end around May 5 - May 20. This difference matters for sweet potatoes — transplant timing shifts by several weeks across the state.
Growing Tips
Grow from slips, not seeds. Start slips from a sweet potato in water 8 weeks before transplanting. Cure harvested tubers in warmth for 10 days.
Companion Planting
Plant sweet potatoes alongside these companions for better growth:
Keep sweet potatoes away from:
The Bottom Line
Last reviewed: March 29, 2026