Local planting guide · Midwest
zip 60649
Chicago is in USDA hardiness zone 6b, with average winter lows of -5°F to 0°F. The local growing season runs roughly 04/11 through 10/31 (~201 days). This zip falls within the Midwest growing region.
- USDA zone
- 6b -5°F to 0°F
- Last spring frost
- 04/11
- First fall frost
- 10/31
- Growing season
- 201 days
- Compatible crops
- 87
- Growing region
- Midwest
Right now in Chicago
Week 18 priorities
On the docket: transplant out after last frost · direct sow after last frost. See the full calendar →
Gardening in Chicago
Chicago sits in USDA zone 6b, where winter lows reach -5 to 0°F. The city's 201-day growing season runs from April 11 (average last spring frost) to October 31 (average first fall frost), providing a solid window for temperate fruit production. The climate supports apples, pears, plums, cherries, and persimmons reliably, all the primary stone and pome fruits included in the sample crop list.
The main constraint for Chicago gardeners is not winter cold or season length, but rather the volatile transition seasons. Spring arrives unpredictably: many fruit trees break dormancy and flower by late March or early April, well ahead of the April 11 frost date, making them vulnerable to late cold snaps. Summer brings the warm, humid continental climate typical of the Great Lakes region, creating year-round fungal disease pressure from early June through September.
The combination of late spring frosts hitting blooms and high summer humidity testing disease resistance is what separates successful Chicago orchardists from frustrated ones. Gardeners who select cold-hardy, disease-resistant varieties and plan simple frost protection can maintain productive fruit gardens with reasonable effort.
Regional context · Midwest
What the Midwest brings to Chicago
Continental humid. Cold winters, hot humid summers. Heart of the country's vegetable, sweet corn, and cool-climate fruit production. Michigan and Wisconsin are major fruit states.
Common challenges
Issues that most often defeat home gardeners in zone 6b, drawn from the broader USDA zone profile.
- ▸ Cedar-apple rust
- ▸ Fire blight
- ▸ Stink bugs
What defeats new gardeners in Chicago
Late spring frosts are Chicago's defining challenge. Most fruit trees flower by early April, weeks before the April 11 average last frost date, leaving fragile flower clusters exposed to mid-April cold snaps that can eliminate an entire season's crop in a single night.
The second major pressure is fungal disease driven by summer humidity. From June through September, the warm, damp air creates ideal conditions for fire blight on pears and apples, cedar apple rust across multiple species, and brown rot on stone fruits. All three diseases spread aggressively in humid air and persist in the Chicago growing season.
A third, compounding challenge: Chicago soils are typically heavy clay with poor drainage. Spring moisture lingers, inviting root rot, and the clay structure limits root expansion for trees that prefer lighter loam.
Crops that grow in Chicago
87 crops from our catalog match zone 6b, grouped by type.
Tree fruit
12 crops
zone 6b Apple
Malus domestica
zones 3a–9a
zone 6b Pear
Pyrus communis
zones 4a–8b
zone 6b Peach
Prunus persica
zones 5a–9a
zone 6b European Plum
Prunus domestica
zones 4a–8a
zone 6b Japanese Plum
Prunus salicina
zones 5b–9a
zone 6b Sweet Cherry
Prunus avium
zones 5a–8a
zone 6b Sour Cherry
Prunus cerasus
zones 4a–7b
zone 6b American Persimmon
Diospyros virginiana
zones 4b–9a
Berries
20 crops
zone 6b Highbush Blueberry
Vaccinium corymbosum
zones 4a–7b
zone 6b Lowbush Blueberry
Vaccinium angustifolium
zones 3a–6b
zone 6b Red Raspberry
Rubus idaeus
zones 3b–8a
zone 6b Black Raspberry
Rubus occidentalis
zones 4a–8a
zone 6b Yellow Raspberry
Rubus idaeus
zones 3b–8a
zone 6b Blackberry
Rubus subgenus Rubus
zones 5a–9a
zone 6b June-Bearing Strawberry
Fragaria x ananassa
zones 3a–8b
zone 6b Everbearing Strawberry
Fragaria x ananassa
zones 3b–9a
Nuts
6 cropsVegetables
40 crops
zone 6b Tomato
Solanum lycopersicum
zones 3a–10b
zone 6b Sweet Pepper
Capsicum annuum
zones 4a–10b
zone 6b Hot Pepper
Capsicum species
zones 4a–10b
zone 6b Eggplant
Solanum melongena
zones 5a–10b
zone 6b Potato
Solanum tuberosum
zones 3a–9a
zone 6b Cabbage
Brassica oleracea var. capitata
zones 3a–9b
zone 6b Broccoli
Brassica oleracea var. italica
zones 3a–9a
zone 6b Cauliflower
Brassica oleracea var. botrytis
zones 3b–9a
Herbs
9 crops
zone 6b Basil
Ocimum basilicum
zones 4a–10b
zone 6b Parsley
Petroselinum crispum
zones 3b–9b
zone 6b Cilantro / Coriander
Coriandrum sativum
zones 3b–9b
zone 6b Dill
Anethum graveolens
zones 3b–9a
zone 6b Oregano
Origanum vulgare
zones 4a–9b
zone 6b Thyme
Thymus vulgaris
zones 4a–9a
zone 6b Sage
Salvia officinalis
zones 4a–9a
zone 6b Mint
Mentha species
zones 3b–9b
Plan the year
Planting calendar for Chicago
Year-view of seed starting, transplanting, planting, pruning, fertilizing, harvest, and pest-watch windows tuned to Chicago's local frost dates.
Week ? · loading
This week in Chicago, IL (zone 6b)
Quiet week in Chicago, IL (zone 6b). this week is a good time to step back and plan ahead.
Nothing critical on the calendar this week.
434 bars · 87 crops
Calendar logic combines NOAA frost normals with crop-specific timing data. Local microclimate and weather always overrules the calendar; use this as a starting point.
Top pests for zone 6b
Ranked by how many crops in your zone they affect. Click through for IPM controls and signs to watch for.
Multiple species (Aphididae)
Small soft-bodied sap-sucking insects that reproduce explosively in spring. Excrete honeydew that supports sooty mold and attracts ants. Transmit viral diseases.
Odocoileus species
Whitetail and mule deer browse can devastate orchards and gardens, particularly in winter when food is scarce. Antler rub on young trunks kills saplings outright.
Multiple species
Robins, catbirds, mockingbirds, starlings, cedar waxwings and other songbirds can strip ripening berry and fruit crops in days. Crows and blackbirds also damage fresh sweet corn ears in milk stage. The single biggest yield-loss factor in unprotected home plantings.
Sylvilagus and Lepus species
Cottontails and jackrabbits strip bark from young fruit trees in winter and graze tender garden vegetables year-round, especially seedlings.
Popillia japonica
Defoliating beetle introduced to North America in 1916. Skeletonizes leaves of many fruit trees, berry canes, and pecan.
Multiple species (Chrysomelidae)
Tiny black or bronze jumping beetles that put hundreds of small holes in seedling leaves. Most damaging on direct-seeded brassicas and young eggplant.
Tetranychus urticae
Tiny mite that feeds on leaf undersides, causing stippling and webbing during hot dry weather.
Microtus species
Field voles and meadow voles girdle young fruit-tree trunks under snow cover during winter and chew root crops. The leading cause of mysterious orchard losses.
Top diseases for zone 6b
Ranked by how many crops in your zone they affect. Click through for symptoms, controls, and resistant varieties.
Botrytis cinerea
Ubiquitous fungal disease that causes fruit rot during cool wet weather, often the dominant berry disease in humid regions.
Pseudoperonospora cubensis (cucurbits) and others
Water mold (oomycete, not a true fungus) that thrives in cool damp conditions. Spreads rapidly through cucurbit and brassica plantings on wind-borne spores.
Pythium and Rhizoctonia species
Soil-borne complex of water molds and fungi that kill seedlings before or shortly after emergence. The single most common cause of seed-starting failures.
Cucumber mosaic virus, Tobacco mosaic virus, and others
Family of plant viruses producing mottled yellow-and-green leaf patterns. Vectored primarily by aphids; some are seed-transmitted or spread by handling tools and tobacco products.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens
Soil-borne bacterium that enters plants through wounds and induces tumor-like galls on roots, crown, and lower stems. Galls reduce vigor and shorten plant lifespan; on Rubus the disease is often fatal.
Fusarium oxysporum
Soil-borne fungal disease that plugs vascular tissue and kills affected plants. Persists in soil for many years; impossible to eliminate once established.
Sclerotium rolfsii
Soil-borne fungal disease most damaging in warm humid Southern conditions. White mycelial fans and small mustard-seed-sized sclerotia at the soil line are diagnostic.
Plasmodiophora brassicae
Soil-borne disease causing characteristic distorted club-shaped roots on brassicas. Persists in soil for 10-20 years; the dominant brassica pathogen in acidic poorly-drained soils.
Companion planting suggestions
Beneficial pairings drawn from companion data, filtered to crops that grow in zone 6b.
- Peach + Garlic
Garlic planted around peach trees suppresses peach borer and provides general fungal-pressure reduction.
- European Plum + Garlic
Garlic discourages plum curculio and provides general antifungal benefit beneath stone fruit.
- American Persimmon + Pawpaw
Both natives thrive in similar soils and contribute to a polyculture that supports native pollinators and fauna.
- Jujube + Thyme
Thyme groundcover suits jujube's low-water profile and deters cabbage moth and aphid populations.
- Apricot + Basil
Basil's volatile oils discourage stone-fruit pests and support pollinator visits.
- Highbush Blueberry + Thyme
Creeping thyme thrives in the acidic mulched conditions blueberries require and attracts pollinators during bloom.
Soil types reference
Soil texture and pH decide what grows easily on your specific lot. Find the closest match below for crop recommendations and amendment guidance.
Practical tips for Chicago
First, choose disease-resistant or disease-tolerant varieties explicitly. European plum, hardy cherry, and fire-blight-resistant pears are far more forgiving than tender peach or susceptible pear cultivars, particularly important given the June-to-September humidity window that favors fungal spread.
Second, keep frost cloth or burlap on hand by early April. Monitor the 10-day forecast continuously in early spring, and be ready to drape trees if nighttime temperatures dip toward 28°F in mid-April. The effort takes a few hours and can save an entire season's crop.
Third, improve soil drainage before planting by working compost into the top 12 inches, or by planting in a mounded row 6 inches above surrounding grade. For summer disease management, thin fruit heavily in late June to open the canopy and reduce leaf wetness, which suppresses fungal growth.
Frequently asked questions
- What fruit trees grow best in Chicago?
Cold-hardy apples, pears, European plums, sour cherries, and American persimmons are the most reliable in zone 6b. Sour cherry is especially well-suited: it tolerates the humid summer and the April frost risk better than sweet cherry. Peach is possible but less forgiving of late frosts.
- What's the biggest weather risk in Chicago gardening?
Late spring frosts arriving after bloom in mid-April are the single biggest threat. Fruit trees often flower by early April, weeks ahead of the April 11 average last frost date, leaving developing fruits vulnerable to a killing frost. Frost protection or variety selection for later bloom are essential.
- How do I manage fungal disease in Chicago's humid summers?
Fire blight, cedar apple rust, and brown rot thrive in the warm, damp June-through-September window. Select disease-resistant varieties upfront, thin fruit in late June for air flow, water at the soil base in early morning, and remove infected branches immediately. Overhead irrigation at midday spreads spores and should be avoided.
- Is 201 days enough to ripen late-season fruits?
Yes, for most apples and pears. Very late-ripening apple cultivars may struggle to reach full sugar in cooler years, while early- or mid-season cultivars are safer bets. Stone fruits (cherry, plum) ripen faster and are less constrained by the season length.
- When should I plant in Chicago?
Hardy trees and shrubs can be planted after the soil thaws in early April. Tender perennials and warm-season crops should be planted after April 11, the average last spring frost date. Fall planting from late September through October is equally good and gives roots time to establish before winter dormancy.
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Frost data: NOAA Climate Normals 1991-2020, station USW00014819. Local microclimates can shift these dates by a week or more.
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