Atlanta GA Frost Dates — When to Plant & Protect Your Garden
Atlanta’s frost dates define your growing window in USDA Zone 8a (dataset_id: usda_phzm_2023). The data shows your typical frost-free period runs 246 days (dataset_id: noaa_frost_dates), from mid-March through late November. Here’s what the climate record reveals about timing your garden.
Your Last Spring Frost
Based on NOAA station USW00013874 covering Atlanta, here are your spring frost probabilities (dataset_id: noaa_frost_dates):
| Confidence Level | Last Frost Date | Use This For |
|---|---|---|
| 90% chance frost has ended | March 20 | Heat-loving crops (tomatoes, peppers, okra) |
| 80% chance frost has ended | March 6 | Cold-tolerant transplants |
| 70% chance frost has ended | March 11 | Cool-season direct seeding |
| 50% chance frost has ended | March 20 | Planning benchmark |
| 30% chance frost has ended | March 29 | Conservative planting |
| 10% chance frost has ended | April 8 | Latest possible frost |
The 50% confidence date (March 20) represents your average last spring frost. One year in ten, frost persists until April 8.
Your First Fall Frost
Your fall frost probabilities (dataset_id: noaa_frost_dates):
| Confidence Level | First Frost Date | Growing Days Left |
|---|---|---|
| 10% chance frost arrives | November 4 | Start harvest prep |
| 30% chance frost arrives | November 13 | Cover tender plants |
| 50% chance frost arrives | November 21 | Average first frost |
| 70% chance frost arrives | December 1 | Extended season likely |
| 90% chance frost arrives | December 10 | Latest typical frost |
Your average first fall frost occurs November 21. In mild years, frost may not arrive until December 10.
Your Growing Season
Your frost-free period spans 246 days on average (dataset_id: noaa_frost_dates) — from March 20 to November 21. This represents the core window between your 50% confidence spring and fall frost dates.
Temperature patterns support multiple growing seasons:
- Winter hardy crops: Can grow through your Zone 8a minimum temperatures of 10-15°F (dataset_id: usda_phzm_2023)
- Cool-season crops: March-May and September-December windows
- Heat-loving crops: Late March through early November
Growing degree days (base 50°F) accumulate across the year (dataset_id: noaa_cdo_historical):
- Peak accumulation: July (936 GDD) and August (911 GDD)
- Strong spring growth: May (623 GDD) and June (819 GDD)
- Extended fall season: September (705 GDD) and October (418 GDD)
What This Means for Your Garden
For spring planting: Your 80% confidence last frost (March 6) allows early cool-season planting. Wait until your 90% confidence date (March 20) for tender transplants.
For fall planning: Count back from November 21 (your average first frost) when timing late-season plantings. Your extended growing degree accumulation through October (418 GDD) supports fall harvests.
Zone 8a advantages: Your minimum winter temperatures of 10-15°F (dataset_id: usda_phzm_2023) support overwintering of many perennials and allow for year-round gardening with appropriate crop selection.
This Week in Atlanta
Current conditions (dataset_id: open_meteo_forecast, recorded 2026-04-02 15:00):
- Temperature: 80.4°F
- Soil temperature (6-inch depth): 77.1°F
- Humidity: 45%
7-day forecast:
- April 2: High 81°F, Low 60°F — No frost risk
- April 3: High 79°F, Low 61°F — No frost risk
- April 4: High 76°F, Low 62°F — 53% chance rain
- April 5: High 70°F, Low 58°F — 66% chance rain
- April 6: High 67°F, Low 52°F — No frost risk
- April 7: High 68°F, Low 54°F — Clear conditions
- April 8: High 61°F, Low 44°F — Watch for late cool snap
April 8 brings your lowest forecast low (44°F) — well above frost threshold but worth monitoring if you have newly planted tender crops.
Your Growing Season: How’s It Going?
Current month (April) patterns (dataset_id: noaa_cdo_historical):
- Normal April temperature: 62.0°F average (72.5°F high, 51.5°F low)
- Expected growing degree days: 369 GDD (base 50°F)
- Typical precipitation: 3.36 inches
Your soil temperature of 77.1°F indicates excellent conditions for warm-season planting — well above the 60°F threshold most heat-loving crops prefer.
About This Data
Frost date calculations come from NOAA Climate Normals 1991-2020 (dataset_id: noaa_frost_dates) recorded at station USW00013874. This represents 30 years of temperature records specific to the Atlanta area.
Zone classification uses the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map 2023 (dataset_id: usda_phzm_2023), which places Atlanta in Zone 8a with minimum winter temperatures of 10-15°F.
Current weather and forecasts pull from Open-Meteo (dataset_id: open_meteo_forecast) for coordinates 33.749°N, -84.388°W, representing central Atlanta.
Growing degree day data comes from NOAA Climate Data Online (dataset_id: noaa_cdo_historical), providing monthly normals for agricultural planning.
Geographic coverage includes ZIP codes 30301-30308 in Fulton County, Georgia (dataset_id: hud_zip_crosswalk), serving Atlanta’s 1,061,944 residents (dataset_id: census_acs_5yr).
All frost probabilities represent historical climate patterns. Individual years vary significantly from these averages.
Frost Date Planner Calculator
Interactive planting date calculator coming soon. Will use pre-computed frost probability data to recommend optimal planting windows for your specific crops.
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