Tomato · Hobart, TAS
When to plant tomatoin Hobart.
Hobart’s cool temperate climate gives you a specific window for tomato. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.
The short answer
Plant october-november (after last frost) in Hobart.
Climate zone: Cool Temperate · Frost risk: May-October (frosts possible; hard frosts June-August) · Time to harvest: 60-90 days from transplant
Planting window
October-November (after last frost)
Spacing
60 cm apart
80 cm between rows
Sun & water
Full sun (6+ hours daily)
Water: Regular, deep watering 2-3× per week, avoid wetting foliage
Family of 4
Plant 6-8 plants for a family of 4 (Australians consume approximately 7 kg of tomatoes per person annually, but home gardeners typically preserve surplus as sauce and paste)
Growing tomato in Hobart: the specifics
Hobart has Australia's coolest capital city climate, cold winters with regular frosts, cool summers that rarely exceed 25°C, and a short but highly productive growing season from October to April. The cool climate is a genuine advantage for many crops: brassicas, root vegetables, broad beans, and leafy greens all produce exceptional quality in Hobart's conditions. The challenge is timing, with only 5-6 frost-free months, every week counts and successive planting is essential. For tomato, the productive window in Hobart is october-november (after last frost). Within that window, Tomatoes are warm-season crops that demand at least six hours of direct sun and deep, rich soil. In Australian raised beds, start seeds indoors 6-8 weeks before your last frost date, or buy seedlings from your local nursery in spring. Choose varieties suited to your climate, in subtropical Queensland, heat-tolerant varieties like 'Tommy Toe', 'Yellow Pear', or 'Apollo' perform best; in cooler Victorian gardens, 'Grosse Lisse' and 'Rouge de Marmande' thrive. Prepare your raised bed with plenty of compost, at least one-third compost by volume. Tomatoes are heavy feeders and will exhaust poor soil quickly. Plant seedlings deep, burying the stem up to the lowest leaves; roots will form along the buried stem, creating a stronger, more drought-resilient plant. Install a sturdy stake or tomato cage at planting time to avoid disturbing roots later. Indeterminate (vining) varieties like 'Grosse Lisse' need 1.5-1.8m stakes; determinate bush varieties can be supported with a 90cm stake or cage. Water consistently and deeply, irregular watering causes blossom end rot and fruit cracking. Apply a thick layer of sugar cane mulch to retain moisture and keep soil temperature stable. Feed every two weeks with a balanced liquid fertiliser once flowering begins, then switch to a low-nitrogen, high-potassium fertiliser as fruit sets to encourage ripening rather than leaf growth. Pinch out lateral shoots (suckers) on indeterminate varieties to keep the plant focused on fruit production. In hot Australian summers, provide some afternoon shade with 30% shade cloth if temperatures regularly exceed 38°C, as heat stress can cause flower drop.
Sizing it for your household
Plant 6-8 plants for a family of 4 (Australians consume approximately 7 kg of tomatoes per person annually, but home gardeners typically preserve surplus as sauce and paste) 3-6 kg per plant (indeterminate); 1-3 kg (determinate). 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 Hobart can hold 6 tomato 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 Hobart
Good companions for tomato include Basil, Carrot, Parsley, Marigold. In Hobart’s cool temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep tomato away from Fennel, Brassicas, Corn, they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests.
Hobart-specific tips
- Hobart's short frost-free window means starting tomatoes and capsicum indoors from August is not optional, it's essential to get a productive harvest before April frosts.
- Cold frames and cloches extend Hobart's season dramatically, invest in a simple cold frame to push plantings 4-6 weeks earlier in spring and extend harvests in autumn.
- The cool Tasmanian summer is perfect for premium crops: broccoli, cauliflower, and leafy greens achieve exceptional quality and flavour without bolting.
Common problems
Tomato leaf curl virus (spread by thrips) is a serious problem in subtropical Australia, control thrips with reflective mulch and neem oil sprays. Blossom end rot is caused by calcium deficiency or irregular watering, not a lack of calcium in the soil. Fusarium and verticillium wilt are soilborne diseases, choose resistant varieties (look for F and V on the label). Aphids cluster on new growth; blast off with water or treat with insecticidal soap. Fruit fly (Bactrocera tryoni) in QLD and NSW requires exclusion nets or protein bait traps.
Harvest
Harvest tomatoes when fully coloured and slightly soft to the touch. In very hot weather, pick fruit slightly early and ripen indoors at room temperature, never in the fridge. For Roma and paste tomatoes, wait until the skin just begins to wrinkle slightly for maximum flavour. Regular picking encourages the plant to continue setting new fruit.
Other cool temperate cities
Other fruit vegetable for Hobart
Frequently asked
When should I plant tomato in Hobart?
In Hobart (cool temperate climate), plant tomato October-November (after last frost). Frost risk in Hobart: May-October (frosts possible; hard frosts June-August).
How many tomato plants does a family of 4 need?
Plant 6-8 plants for a family of 4 (Australians consume approximately 7 kg of tomatoes per person annually, but home gardeners typically preserve surplus as sauce and paste). Expected yield per plant: 3-6 kg per plant (indeterminate); 1-3 kg (determinate). Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.
How much space does tomato need in a Hobart raised bed?
Tomato 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 tomato take to grow in Hobart?
Tomato takes 60-90 days from transplant. Germination is 7-14 days. Hobart's cool temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.
What grows well with tomato?
Good companions in Hobart include Basil, Carrot, Parsley, Marigold. Avoid planting next to Fennel, Brassicas, Corn.