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Silverbeet · Sydney, NSW

When to plant silverbeetin Sydney.

Sydney’s temperate climate gives you a specific window for silverbeet. 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: 50-70 days to first harvest; ongoing

Planting window

Year-round

Spacing

30 cm apart

40 cm between rows

Sun & water

Full sun to partial shade

Water: Moderate, tolerates brief drought but produces best with consistent moisture

Family of 4

6-8 plants provides regular harvests for a family of 4 year-round

Growing silverbeet 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 silverbeet, the productive window in Sydney is year-round. Within that window, Silverbeet is one of the most forgiving and productive crops in the Australian raised bed garden. Unlike spinach, it tolerates heat and continues producing through summer; unlike lettuce, it doesn't bolt at the first sign of warmth. This makes it a genuinely year-round crop in most Australian climates. Sow seed 2cm deep in rows 40cm apart, thinning to 25-30cm spacing when seedlings are 10cm tall. Like beetroot, silverbeet seed clusters contain multiple seeds, expect 3-4 seedlings per position and thin to the strongest one. Use thinnings as baby greens in salads. Silverbeet tolerates poorer soil than most vegetables but performs best in compost-enriched raised beds. Apply a balanced fertiliser at planting and top-dress with compost or liquid fertiliser every 4-6 weeks through the growing season. The most important management technique is the harvesting method, always remove outer leaves from the base of the plant, cutting cleanly at the stem base. Never strip the plant entirely. The growing centre continuously produces new leaves. Managed this way, a single planting can last 12-18 months. Choose varieties for interest and productivity: 'Fordhook Giant' is the standard green variety with white stems; 'Rainbow Chard' ('Five Colour Silverbeet') produces red, yellow, orange, pink, and white-stemmed plants that are as ornamental as they are edible; 'Red Chard' (Ruby Chard) has brilliant scarlet stems and is highly productive.

Sizing it for your household

6-8 plants provides regular harvests for a family of 4 year-round Ongoing, a single plant produces 1-2 kg over its productive life. 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 30 cm spacing (with 40 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Sydney can hold 24 silverbeet 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 silverbeet include Tomato, Onion, Carrot, Beans. In Sydney’s temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep silverbeet away from Corn, 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

Leaf miners create pale winding tunnels within leaves, minor damage can be removed by cutting out affected sections. Caterpillars occasionally feed on leaves; handpick or treat with Bt. Downy mildew appears in humid conditions as pale patches on upper leaf surfaces with grey-purple fuzz beneath, improve airflow and avoid overhead watering. Powdery mildew is occasional; treat with bicarbonate spray.

Harvest

Harvest outer leaves when 25-35cm long, cutting cleanly at the stem base. Young inner leaves are more tender for salads; larger outer leaves are better cooked. Remove old, yellowing outer leaves even if not consuming them, this keeps the plant productive and reduces disease. Silverbeet wilts after harvest; refrigerate immediately in a sealed bag.

Frequently asked

When should I plant silverbeet in Sydney?

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

How many silverbeet plants does a family of 4 need?

6-8 plants provides regular harvests for a family of 4 year-round. Expected yield per plant: Ongoing, a single plant produces 1-2 kg over its productive life. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.

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

Silverbeet needs 30cm between plants and 40cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.

How long does silverbeet take to grow in Sydney?

Silverbeet takes 50-70 days to first harvest; ongoing. Germination is 7-14 days. Sydney's temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.

What grows well with silverbeet?

Good companions in Sydney include Tomato, Onion, Carrot, Beans. Avoid planting next to Corn.