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Rosemary · Sydney, NSW

When to plant rosemaryin Sydney.

Sydney’s temperate climate gives you a specific window for rosemary. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.

The short answer

Plant year-round in Sydney.

Climate zone: Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (coastal), light frosts inland June-August · Time to harvest: Ongoing from establishment; cuttings produce harvestable growth in 60-90 days

Planting window

Year-round

Spacing

60 cm apart

80 cm between rows

Sun & water

Full sun (6+ hours daily), essential for aromatic intensity

Water: Low once established, drought-tolerant; water weekly in establishment phase

Family of 4

1 plant is more than sufficient for a family of 4; rosemary is rarely needed in large quantities

Growing rosemary 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 rosemary, the productive window in Sydney is year-round. Within that window, Rosemary is best established from semi-hardwood cuttings rather than seed, cuttings root easily and produce a plant true to variety, whereas seed-grown rosemary is variable. Take 10-15cm cuttings from new growth in autumn or spring, strip the lower leaves, and insert into a free-draining propagating mix. Roots develop within 4-8 weeks. In raised beds, rosemary is best positioned as a permanent resident at one end of a long bed, its woody shrub habit and perennial nature means it will be there for years, and planning around it from the start avoids disruption. Rosemary demands free-draining soil above all else, it will rot in heavy, wet, or poorly drained conditions. The free-draining nature of raised beds makes them ideal for rosemary, especially in high-rainfall areas. Never overwater rosemary or allow it to sit in water. Once established, rosemary requires almost no care, a hard prune after flowering in spring to maintain shape and encourage fresh growth is the primary management task. Do not feed heavily; rich soil produces lush but less aromatic growth. Choose varieties for purpose: 'Prostrate Rosemary' is low-growing and cascades beautifully over bed edges; 'Tuscan Blue' and 'Miss Jessop's Upright' are tall and upright with excellent flavour; 'Blue Lagoon' is compact and suited to smaller beds.

Sizing it for your household

1 plant is more than sufficient for a family of 4; rosemary is rarely needed in large quantities Ongoing; an established rosemary bush can produce kilograms of fresh herb per year. 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 80 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Sydney can hold 6 rosemary 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 rosemary include Broccoli, Cabbage, Kale, Beans. In Sydney’s temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep rosemary away from Cucumber, Pumpkin, 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

Phytophthora root rot is the most serious problem, caused by waterlogged soil. Ensure excellent drainage, especially in clay-based gardens. Rosemary beetle is a minor pest that can defoliate plants, handpick adults and larvae. Powdery mildew occasionally affects plants in humid, shaded positions, increase sun exposure and improve airflow. Spittlebug (froghoppers) creates frothy masses on stems; wash off with water.

Harvest

Harvest rosemary by snipping green stem tips 10-15cm long. The woody stems below do not regrow well when cut, always harvest green, current-season growth. Rosemary can be harvested year-round in most Australian climates. For large harvests, prune up to one-third of the plant after flowering in spring.

Frequently asked

When should I plant rosemary in Sydney?

In Sydney (temperate climate), plant rosemary Year-round. Frost risk in Sydney: Frost-free (coastal), light frosts inland June-August.

How many rosemary plants does a family of 4 need?

1 plant is more than sufficient for a family of 4; rosemary is rarely needed in large quantities. Expected yield per plant: Ongoing; an established rosemary bush can produce kilograms of fresh herb per year. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.

How much space does rosemary need in a Sydney raised bed?

Rosemary needs 60cm between plants and 80cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.

How long does rosemary take to grow in Sydney?

Rosemary takes Ongoing from establishment; cuttings produce harvestable growth in 60-90 days. Germination is 14-21 days (seed); immediate (cutting). Sydney's temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.

What grows well with rosemary?

Good companions in Sydney include Broccoli, Cabbage, Kale, Beans. Avoid planting next to Cucumber, Pumpkin.