Eggplant · Brisbane, QLD
When to plant eggplantin Brisbane.
Brisbane’s subtropical climate gives you a specific window for eggplant. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.
The short answer
Plant august-november in Brisbane.
Climate zone: Subtropical · Frost risk: Frost-free · Time to harvest: 65-90 days from transplant
Planting window
August-November
Spacing
60 cm apart
75 cm between rows
Sun & water
Full sun (6+ hours daily)
Water: Regular, consistent deep watering; sensitive to drought
Family of 4
2-4 plants is sufficient for a family of 4 for regular use; eggplants freeze well for extended use
Growing eggplant in Brisbane: the specifics
Brisbane enjoys a subtropical climate with warm, humid summers and mild, dry winters, giving home gardeners an almost year-round growing season. The main challenge is the hot, wet summer (November-March) when fungal diseases, pest pressure, and extreme heat test even experienced gardeners. Brisbane's real gardening gold is the dry winter months from May to September, when tomatoes, capsicum, broccoli, leafy greens, and beans all thrive in the cooler conditions. For eggplant, the productive window in Brisbane is august-november. Within that window, Eggplant is the most heat-demanding of the Solanaceae crops, it requires consistently warm temperatures and a long growing season. In Melbourne and Canberra, the season is short and marginal; in Brisbane, Sydney, and Perth it thrives for most of the year. In Darwin and tropical Queensland, it can be grown almost year-round. Start seeds 8-10 weeks before the last frost (in cooler climates) or 8 weeks before planting time. Sow at 6-8mm depth in warm propagating mix at 24-30°C, a heating mat is beneficial. Seedlings grow slowly and should be well established before transplanting. Transplant into the raised bed when nighttime temperatures are reliably above 15°C and daytime temperatures above 22°C. Plant deeply, staking immediately, eggplants become top-heavy with fruit and will blow over or snap without support. Eggplants are heavy feeders. Incorporate generous compost and complete fertiliser into the planting hole. Feed fortnightly with a balanced liquid fertiliser during vegetative growth, switching to a potassium-rich fertiliser once flowering begins. Mulch heavily to retain soil moisture and warmth. Variety choice matters greatly in Australia: 'Black Beauty' is the classic large purple variety; 'Lebanese Eggplant' is smaller, mild-flavoured, and very productive; 'Thai Eggplant' produces small round fruit and is particularly heat-tolerant; 'Ping Tung Long' from Taiwan is excellent for subtropical gardens.
Sizing it for your household
2-4 plants is sufficient for a family of 4 for regular use; eggplants freeze well for extended use 8-15 fruit per plant per season. 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 60 cm spacing (with 75 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Brisbane can hold 6 eggplant 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 Brisbane
Good companions for eggplant include Basil, Marigold, Thyme, Tarragon. In Brisbane’s subtropical climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep eggplant away from Fennel, Corn, they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests.
Brisbane-specific tips
- Brisbane's subtropical summers are tough on cool-season crops, don't fight the season. Focus July-September on your best planting window for tomatoes and capsicum.
- Fungal diseases like powdery mildew and early blight thrive in Brisbane's humid summers, choose disease-resistant tomato varieties and avoid overhead watering.
- Sweet potato is a Brisbane superstar, plant slips in October and harvest 4-5 months later. It handles the summer heat better than almost any other crop.
Common problems
Spider mites are the most common pest in hot, dry conditions, maintain soil moisture and spray with miticide if needed. Aphids cluster on new shoots; treat with insecticidal soap. 28-spotted ladybird (Epilachna vigintioctopunctata) is a serious leaf pest in subtropical Australia, hand-pick adults and remove egg clusters from leaf undersides. Fruit fly is problematic in QLD and NSW, use protein bait traps. Verticillium wilt causes sudden plant collapse; remove affected plants and rotate crops.
Harvest
Harvest eggplant when the skin is glossy and the fruit feels firm, typically at 15-20cm for large varieties. Press the skin with your finger; if it springs back slowly, the fruit is ready. If it springs back immediately, it is underripe. If it doesn't spring back, it is overripe and may be bitter. Use a sharp knife or secateurs, leaving a short stem attached.
Other fruit vegetable for Brisbane
Frequently asked
When should I plant eggplant in Brisbane?
In Brisbane (subtropical climate), plant eggplant August-November. Frost risk in Brisbane: Frost-free.
How many eggplant plants does a family of 4 need?
2-4 plants is sufficient for a family of 4 for regular use; eggplants freeze well for extended use. Expected yield per plant: 8-15 fruit per plant per season. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.
How much space does eggplant need in a Brisbane raised bed?
Eggplant needs 60cm between plants and 75cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.
How long does eggplant take to grow in Brisbane?
Eggplant takes 65-90 days from transplant. Germination is 10-21 days. Brisbane's subtropical climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.
What grows well with eggplant?
Good companions in Brisbane include Basil, Marigold, Thyme, Tarragon. Avoid planting next to Fennel, Corn.