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Zucchini · Sydney, NSW

When to plant zucchiniin Sydney.

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

The short answer

Plant september-january in Sydney.

Climate zone: Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (coastal), light frosts inland June-August · Time to harvest: 50-65 days

Planting window

September-January

Spacing

60 cm apart

90 cm between rows

Sun & water

Full sun (6+ hours daily)

Water: Regular and deep, 2-3× per week; avoid wetting leaves

Family of 4

1-2 plants is usually more than enough for a family of 4, zucchini are famously productive

Growing zucchini 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 zucchini, the productive window in Sydney is september-january. Within that window, Zucchini is a warm-season cucurbit that needs full sun, rich soil, and consistent moisture to perform at its best. Start seeds indoors in biodegradable pots 3-4 weeks before the last frost date, or direct sow once soil has warmed to 18°C. Zucchini seedlings grow quickly and transplant easily if roots aren't disturbed, use peat or coir pots to avoid transplant shock. In raised beds, plant one zucchini per square metre minimum, these are large, spreading plants. If space is tight, choose compact bush varieties like 'Black Beauty' or 'Lebanese White', or train a standard variety vertically on a strong trellis (this requires daily tying but saves considerable ground space). Prepare a generous planting hole enriched with compost, aged manure, and a handful of complete fertiliser. Zucchini are voracious feeders, liquid feed every two weeks with a balanced fertiliser during active growth, then increase potassium as fruit sets. Pollination is essential and sometimes problematic in raised beds. Zucchini produce separate male and female flowers (females have a tiny fruit at the base). If bees are scarce or you're growing under cover, hand-pollinate by transferring pollen from a male flower to a female flower with a small paintbrush or by removing a male flower and brushing it directly onto the female. Poor pollination results in fruit that yellows and drops at 3-5cm. Powdery mildew is almost inevitable by late summer, choose mildew-resistant varieties and remove heavily infected leaves promptly.

Sizing it for your household

1-2 plants is usually more than enough for a family of 4, zucchini are famously productive 20-30 fruits per plant over the 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 90 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Sydney can hold 5 zucchini 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 zucchini include Beans, Corn, Nasturtium, Marigold. In Sydney’s temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep zucchini away from Potato, Fennel, 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

Powdery mildew is the most common problem, a white powdery coating on leaves. Choose resistant varieties, ensure good airflow, and spray with a dilute bicarbonate of soda solution (1 tsp/L). Squash vine borer is a serious pest in some regions, the larvae tunnel into stems at soil level, causing sudden wilt. Look for entry holes with sawdust-like frass and remove larvae with a thin wire. Fruit fly is problematic in QLD and NSW, use protein bait traps or exclusion bags on developing fruit.

Harvest

Harvest zucchini when 15-20cm long for the best flavour and texture. Check plants daily in peak summer, they can grow from picking size to overripe marrow in 48 hours in hot weather. Use scissors rather than pulling to avoid damaging the plant. Flowers are edible and delicious stuffed and baked or added to fritters.

Frequently asked

When should I plant zucchini in Sydney?

In Sydney (temperate climate), plant zucchini September-January. Frost risk in Sydney: Frost-free (coastal), light frosts inland June-August.

How many zucchini plants does a family of 4 need?

1-2 plants is usually more than enough for a family of 4, zucchini are famously productive. Expected yield per plant: 20-30 fruits per plant over the season. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.

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

Zucchini needs 60cm between plants and 90cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.

How long does zucchini take to grow in Sydney?

Zucchini takes 50-65 days. Germination is 5-10 days. Sydney's temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.

What grows well with zucchini?

Good companions in Sydney include Beans, Corn, Nasturtium, Marigold. Avoid planting next to Potato, Fennel.