Carrot · Sydney, NSW
When to plant carrotin Sydney.
Sydney’s temperate climate gives you a specific window for carrot. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.
The short answer
Plant february-may, august-november in Sydney.
Climate zone: Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (coastal), light frosts inland June-August · Time to harvest: 70-90 days
Planting window
February-May, August-November
Spacing
8 cm apart
25 cm between rows
Sun & water
Full sun to partial shade
Water: Consistent, uneven watering causes forking and cracking
Family of 4
Sow a 1-2m row every 4-6 weeks; a family of 4 needs approximately 3-4 kg per week when in season
Growing carrot in Sydney: the specifics
Sydney sits in a warm-temperate zone with mild winters, hot summers, and year-round growing potential. Frosts are rare in coastal suburbs but can occur inland west of the Blue Mountains. The mild climate means Sydney gardeners can grow almost anything, summers are ideal for tomatoes, capsicum, and cucumbers, while winters deliver excellent brassicas, leafy greens, and root vegetables. For carrot, the productive window in Sydney is february-may, august-november. Within that window, Carrots demand more soil preparation than almost any other vegetable, but in a well-built raised bed, much of this work is already done for you. The key requirements are deep (30cm+), loose, stone-free, well-drained soil with no fresh manure (which causes forking and hairy roots). If your raised bed mix is heavy in compost, add some coarse propagating sand to improve drainage and texture. Carrot seed is tiny and slow to germinate, patience is essential. Sow seed shallowly (5mm deep) in rows or broadcast across a wide band, thinning to 6-8cm spacing once seedlings reach 5cm tall. Keep the surface moist during the 10-20 day germination period, a layer of fine vermiculite or shade cloth draped over the bed helps retain moisture without crusting. Don't let the surface dry out, as carrot seeds will fail to germinate in dry conditions. Choose variety length to match your bed depth. Short-rooted varieties like 'Paris Market' (round) and 'Chantenay Red Cored' suit shallower beds (20-25cm deep); standard varieties like 'Nantes' and 'Melbourne Market' need 25-30cm; long varieties like 'Detroit Dark Red' and 'Yates Top Weight' need 30cm+. Carrots do not transplant, always direct sow. They are slow to establish and can be interplanted with quick-maturing radish, which breaks up the soil as it grows and is harvested before carrots need the space. Succession sow every 4-6 weeks for continuous harvest through autumn, winter, and spring.
Sizing it for your household
Sow a 1-2m row every 4-6 weeks; a family of 4 needs approximately 3-4 kg per week when in season 1-3 roots per plant; expect 2-4 kg per square metre. Plant Planner does this maths automatically once you tell it your household size, it’s the part most planners get wrong because they assume every household is the same.
The 8 cm spacing (with 25 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Sydney can hold 144 carrot plants at maximum density, though in practice you’ll want to mix companions in, so plan for roughly 60-70% of that.
Companion plants for Sydney
Good companions for carrot include Tomato, Leek, Onion, Peas. In Sydney’s temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep carrot away from Dill, Parsnip, they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests.
Sydney-specific tips
- Sydney's wet summers (November-February) bring fungal diseases, ensure beds have excellent drainage and space plants for airflow around tomatoes and zucchini.
- Coastal Sydney rarely frosts, so you can grow silverbeet, kale, and Asian greens year-round without frost protection.
- The summer humidity makes basil bolt quickly, pinch flowers regularly and grow heat-tolerant varieties like Italian Large Leaf.
Common problems
Carrot fly (Psila rosae) is the most serious carrot pest in temperate Australia, the maggots tunnel into roots, causing brown scarring. Plant next to spring onions to confuse the fly, or use fine insect exclusion netting. Nematodes cause knobby, distorted roots, improve soil health with compost and practice crop rotation. Green shoulders occur when carrot tops are exposed to light, mound soil over the top of roots as they develop.
Harvest
Carrots can be left in the ground until needed, which acts as storage. Loosen soil alongside the row with a fork before pulling to avoid snapping tops. Harvest before the ground heats in summer (carrots become woody). Baby carrots can be harvested at 50-60 days for sweeter, more tender eating.
Frequently asked
When should I plant carrot in Sydney?
In Sydney (temperate climate), plant carrot February-May, August-November. Frost risk in Sydney: Frost-free (coastal), light frosts inland June-August.
How many carrot plants does a family of 4 need?
Sow a 1-2m row every 4-6 weeks; a family of 4 needs approximately 3-4 kg per week when in season. Expected yield per plant: 1-3 roots per plant; expect 2-4 kg per square metre. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.
How much space does carrot need in a Sydney raised bed?
Carrot needs 8cm between plants and 25cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.
How long does carrot take to grow in Sydney?
Carrot takes 70-90 days. Germination is 10-20 days. Sydney's temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.
What grows well with carrot?
Good companions in Sydney include Tomato, Leek, Onion, Peas. Avoid planting next to Dill, Parsnip.