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When to plant tomato in New Mexico

New Mexico spans USDA zones 6a–8b, so the right time to plant tomato shifts by weeks across the state. The window to transplant seedlings outdoors runs from about March 7 in Chaparral to May 31 in Las Vegas below are local dates for 23 cities, each computed from its own frost dates.

In Albuquerquethe tomato transplant out window (April 30May 7) has passed for this year.
CityZoneLast frostFirst frostTransplant out
Albuquerque7bApril 23October 20April 30 – May 7
Las Cruces8bMarch 12November 13March 19 – March 26
Rio Rancho7bApril 8November 1April 15 – April 22
Santa Fe6bMay 14October 6May 21 – May 28
Roswell7bApril 13October 30April 20 – April 27
Farmington7aMay 2October 13May 9 – May 16
Hobbs8aMarch 28November 10April 4 – April 11
Clovis7aApril 14October 29April 21 – April 28

Tomato in New Mexico: FAQ

When can I plant tomato in New Mexico?

Across New Mexico, the time to transplant tomato spans roughly March 7 in Chaparral to May 31 in Las Vegas, each following that city's local frost dates.

Does the tomato planting date vary across New Mexico?

Yes. New Mexico publishes 23 cities with their own frost dates, so the right tomato 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 tomato take to grow in New Mexico?

Tomato takes about 60–85 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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An email when it’s time to start seeds, transplant, and sow — timed to your frost dates. Double opt-in, one-click unsubscribe, no spam.

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