When to plant eggplant in Charleston

Eggplant is frost-tender, so every date keys off Charleston's last spring frost of Apr 16.
Step 1 · Sow
Start seeds indoors
Mar 9 – Mar 30
Before your last frost, on a warm windowsill or heat mat.
Step 2 · Plant
Transplant outdoors
May 21 – Jun 11
Once frost risk has passed and nights stay mild.
Step 3 · Harvest
Harvest window
Jul 30 – Aug 14
Picking runs until conditions turn against the crop.
Window
Days to maturity
70 – 85 d
Charleston's 186-day season leaves this much room.
Eggplant on Charleston's growing year
Frost-bounded season with crops mapped onto the 12-month axis.
Frost risk Growing Harvest
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
DEC
APR 16
OCT 21

Common questions

When will eggplant be ready to harvest in Charleston?

Expect to harvest from around late July (Jul 30–Aug 14) in Charleston, based on its local frost dates. Confidence 79%.

When should I start eggplant seeds indoors in Charleston?

Start seeds indoors around early March (Mar 9–Mar 30) in Charleston, based on its local frost dates. Confidence 84%.

When can I transplant eggplant outdoors in Charleston?

Transplant outdoors around late May (May 21–Jun 11) in Charleston, based on its local frost dates. Confidence 85%.

How long is the growing season in Charleston?

Charleston has roughly 186 frost-free days, which is enough time to grow eggplant to maturity outdoors.

The rule of thumb

Sow eggplant 6–8 weeks before your last spring frost; plant out 2–3 weeks after it. Every date on this page is derived from that rule and Charleston's frost dates.

Confidence 88/100 · Curated · based on NOAA GHCN-Daily 1991–2020 normal · frost dates are probabilities, not guarantees.