Garlic · Perth, WA
When to plant garlicin Perth.
Perth’s mediterranean/temperate climate gives you a specific window for garlic. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.
The short answer
Plant march-june in Perth.
Climate zone: Mediterranean/Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (coastal), rare light frosts in hills July-August · Time to harvest: 180-210 days (6-7 months)
Planting window
March-June
Spacing
15 cm apart
25 cm between rows
Sun & water
Full sun (6+ hours daily)
Water: Moderate, reduce watering as bulbs mature; stop watering 2 weeks before harvest
Family of 4
Plant 50-100 cloves (4-8 bulbs' worth) for a family of 4; allows generous use plus some to save for next season's planting
Growing garlic in Perth: the specifics
Perth has a classic Mediterranean climate, hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters, giving it a completely different growing rhythm to the east coast. The long, dry summer (November-April) demands water-wise gardening and heat-hardy varieties, while the cooler months from May to October are Perth's prime growing season. Perth's warm winters mean brassicas, leafy greens, and tomatoes can all produce through the cooler months without frost damage. For garlic, the productive window in Perth is march-june. Within that window, Garlic is one of the most rewarding and surprisingly easy crops for Australian raised bed gardeners. It requires a period of cold to vernalise and trigger bulb formation, this is why it must be planted in autumn and winter in most Australian climates. Tropical climates cannot grow garlic successfully without using hardneck varieties that require less cold. Plant garlic from cloves, not seed. Purchase certified disease-free seed garlic from a garden centre or nursery, do not plant supermarket garlic, which is often treated to prevent sprouting and may carry disease. Break bulbs into individual cloves just before planting. Plant cloves pointed end up, 5-8cm deep, in well-prepared, free-draining raised bed soil enriched with compost. Space cloves 15cm apart in rows 25cm apart. A topdressing of compost after planting and a layer of straw mulch helps retain moisture and suppress weeds through winter. Garlic requires minimal care over its 6-7 month growing period. Water regularly in dry periods through winter and spring, reducing as summer approaches and the foliage begins to yellow. Stop watering entirely 2-3 weeks before planned harvest. Softneck garlic varieties ('California White', 'Italian Late') are the most widely grown in Australia and store for 6-12 months. Hardneck varieties ('German Red', 'Music', 'Russian Red') produce larger cloves with more complex flavour but shorter storage life (3-6 months). Choose varieties from Australian garlic suppliers for best results in local conditions. Scapes (the curling flower stalks of hardneck varieties) should be cut off when they form a complete curl, this directs energy back to bulb development. Scapes are delicious and can be used like spring onion.
Sizing it for your household
Plant 50-100 cloves (4-8 bulbs' worth) for a family of 4; allows generous use plus some to save for next season's planting 1 bulb per clove planted (10-12 cloves per bulb at harvest). 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 15 cm spacing (with 25 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Perth can hold 76 garlic 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 Perth
Good companions for garlic include Tomato, Pepper, Carrot, Lettuce. In Perth’s mediterranean/temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep garlic away from Beans, Peas, Parsley, they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests.
Perth-specific tips
- Perth's dry summers require drip irrigation or soaker hoses rather than overhead watering, conserve water and reduce fungal disease risk simultaneously.
- Unlike east coast cities, Perth's best tomato planting window is actually August-October for a summer harvest, with a second planting possible in late February.
- Perth's Mediterranean summers are too hot and dry for most leafy greens, focus on heat-tolerant herbs (rosemary, thyme, oregano) and water-efficient crops like sweet potato in summer.
Common problems
Rust (Puccinia allii) causes orange-yellow pustules on leaves and is the most common garlic problem in Australia, it rarely prevents harvest but reduces vigour. Improve airflow by spacing adequately. Basal plate rot (Fusarium culmorum) causes rotting at the base of bulbs, especially in wet, warm conditions, use free-draining raised bed mix and practice crop rotation. White rot (Sclerotium cepivorum) is a serious soilborne disease; do not grow alliums in affected beds for 15+ years.
Harvest
Harvest garlic when approximately half the leaves have died back (typically October-December in most Australian climates). Dig carefully with a fork, lifting the whole bulb. Do not pull by the stem. Cure harvested garlic by hanging in bunches or spreading on racks in a warm, airy, shaded location for 2-4 weeks. Well-cured garlic stores at room temperature for 6-12 months.
Other mediterranean/temperate cities
Other allium for Perth
Frequently asked
When should I plant garlic in Perth?
In Perth (mediterranean/temperate climate), plant garlic March-June. Frost risk in Perth: Frost-free (coastal), rare light frosts in hills July-August.
How many garlic plants does a family of 4 need?
Plant 50-100 cloves (4-8 bulbs' worth) for a family of 4; allows generous use plus some to save for next season's planting. Expected yield per plant: 1 bulb per clove planted (10-12 cloves per bulb at harvest). Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.
How much space does garlic need in a Perth raised bed?
Garlic needs 15cm 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 garlic take to grow in Perth?
Garlic takes 180-210 days (6-7 months). Germination is 10-20 days. Perth's mediterranean/temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.
What grows well with garlic?
Good companions in Perth include Tomato, Pepper, Carrot, Lettuce. Avoid planting next to Beans, Peas, Parsley.