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When to plant edamame in New York

New York spans USDA zones 4b–7b, so the right time to plant edamame shifts by weeks across the state. The window to sow seed directly outdoors runs from about April 8 in New York to May 24 in Oneonta below are local dates for 201 cities, each computed from its own frost dates.

In New Yorkthe edamame direct sow window (April 8April 29) has passed for this year.
CityZoneLast frostFirst frostDirect sow
New York7bApril 1November 19April 8 – April 29
Buffalo6bApril 24October 26May 1 – May 22
Yonkers7bApril 20October 26April 27 – May 18
Rochester6bApril 24October 25May 1 – May 22
Syracuse6aApril 29October 19May 6 – May 27
Albany6aApril 27October 15May 4 – May 25
New Rochelle7bApril 20October 26April 27 – May 18
Cheektowaga6bApril 24October 26May 1 – May 22

Edamame in New York: FAQ

When can I plant edamame in New York?

Across New York, the time to direct-sow edamame spans roughly April 8 in New York to May 24 in Oneonta, each following that city's local frost dates.

Does the edamame planting date vary across New York?

Yes. New York publishes 201 cities with their own frost dates, so the right edamame planting window shifts by weeks between the warmest and coldest parts of the state — use your city's page for the exact dates.

How long does edamame take to grow in New York?

Edamame takes about 75–95 days to reach harvest once planted — check that this fits inside your city's frost-free season on its place page.

Planting reminders

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Edamame planting guide →All New York cities →New York planting calendar →
When to Plant Edamame in New York — Frost-Based Dates by City — BlissGarden