Lawn by Season

When to Plant Pumpkins in Savannah, GA

Published: April 24, 2026

Zone 9aWarm climateLast frost: January 30 · First frost: December 15
Pumpkins ready to plant in Savannah, GA

Pumpkin Planting Dates for Savannah, GA

Start seeds indoorsJanuary 9–16
Last frost (average)January 30
Transplant outdoorsFebruary 6–16
Direct sow outdoorsFebruary 6–16
Minimum soil temperature60°F
Expect first harvestApril 22 – May 17
First fall frost (average)December 15

Count back 75–100 days from desired harvest date. For Halloween harvest, plant late June to mid-July. Plant 1–2 weeks after last frost.

Best Pumpkin Varieties for Savannah, GA

Consult a Savannah-area nursery or your state extension office for pumpkin varieties proven in Zone 9a.

Growing Pumpkins in Savannah

Savannah sits in Zone 9a, with an average last frost of January 30 and first fall frost around December 15 — giving a 319-day frost-free growing season. Warm-season crops like pumpkin need soil at 60°F or above before transplanting; Savannah's frost calendar puts that window clearly in the late-spring to early-fall range.

Savannah's warm climate creates a two-season opportunity for pumpkin: a spring crop planted February 6–16 and a fall crop planted around July. Peak summer heat (often 95°F+) can shut down flower set in July and August, so the fall crop started in midsummer avoids the worst of that heat and typically produces cleaner fruit.

Savannah's sandy soils drain fast — Savannah gardeners should water pumpkin more frequently (every 2 to 3 days during peak summer) and add generous compost to improve moisture retention. Raised beds with amended soil perform significantly better than in-ground planting in sandy conditions. Target 2 inches of total water per week, split across several irrigation sessions rather than one deep soaking.

Pumpkin Calendar for Savannah

MonthTask
JanuaryStart seeds indoors under grow lights
FebruaryTransplant outdoors into warm soil
AprilExpect first harvest window to open
DecemberFirst fall frost — harvest remaining, end of outdoor season

Pumpkin Tips for Savannah Gardeners

  • For Halloween pumpkins, count back 75–100 days from October 31 — plant between late June and mid-July in most climates.
  • Plant on hills or mounds to warm soil and improve drainage; two plants per hill is plenty.
  • In Savannah, plant fall crops in July for October–November harvests — these often out-yield spring plantings because cooler fall nights improve fruit set.

Common Pumpkin Pests in Savannah

  • Squash Vine Borerpeaks June–August in Zone 9a (active March–October); sudden wilting with frass at stem base; inject Bt into the stem or use row covers through flowering.
  • Squash Bugpeaks June–August in Zone 9a (active March–October); gray-brown shield bugs that suck plant sap; handpick and destroy egg clusters on leaf undersides.
  • Cucumber Beetlepeaks June–August in Zone 9a (active March–October); yellow and black striped beetles that spread bacterial wilt; trap with yellow sticky traps.

Check plants every 2–3 days during peak season — early intervention prevents most infestations from becoming serious.

What to Plant with Pumpkins in Savannah

In Savannah's warm climate, Corn and Bush Bean are the most beneficial plants to grow alongside pumpkin. Corn provides vertical support for climbing companions in the Three Sisters planting. Keep pumpkin away from Potato — it competes for nutrients and shares blight diseases. Warm-climate gardeners especially benefit from dense, layered companion plantings that shade soil and reduce water loss.

See the full pumpkin companion planting guide

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I plant pumpkin in Savannah, GA?

In Savannah (Zone 9a), start pumpkin seeds indoors around January 9–16 and transplant outdoors around February 6–16. The city's average last frost of January 30 is the anchor date — count 3 weeks back for seed starting and 1 weeks forward for transplanting.

What zone is Savannah, GA for pumpkin growing?

Savannah is USDA Zone 9a. For pumpkin, this means a frost-free growing season of roughly 46 weeks running from January 30 to December 15. This is a comfortable window for warm-season crops like pumpkin — standard varieties work well.

When is pumpkin harvest season in Savannah?

Expect the first pumpkin harvest in Savannah around April 22, with harvest continuing through May 17. This is based on 75–100 days from transplant or direct sow.

How long does it take to grow pumpkin in Savannah, GA?

From transplant or direct sow to first harvest, pumpkin takes 75–100 days in Savannah's climate. Based on a typical planting date of February 6–16, expect your first harvest around April 22. Savannah's warm Zone 9a climate tends toward the faster end of this range — warmer soil and longer days accelerate maturity.

What soil does pumpkin need in Savannah?

Savannah's sandy soils drain fast and lose nutrients quickly — a challenge for pumpkin which prefers steady moisture. Add 4–6 inches of compost annually to improve moisture retention. Water more frequently but with less volume per session, and mulch heavily to reduce evaporation.

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