Frost Date Countdown
Enter your local frost dates and see at a glance how many days you have until it's safe to plant โ or time to protect your garden.
๐ How it works & FAQFrost dates are averages and vary by year and microclimate โ treat this as a planning estimate, not a guarantee.
Know exactly when it's safe to plant
Every garden lives inside two invisible fences: the last hard frost of spring and the first frost of fall. The stretch between them is your frost-free growing season โ the window when tender plants like tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and basil can go outside without being killed overnight. This Frost Date Countdown turns those two dates into a plain, running count of days so you always know where you stand.
Where to find your frost dates
Frost dates are local. A gardener a few miles up a hill can see frost two weeks later than a neighbor in a sheltered valley. Look up your area's average last spring frost and first fall frost from a regional extension office, an almanac, or a frost-date lookup for your ZIP or postal code. Those averages are usually given as a 50% probability date, meaning frost is equally likely before or after — so cautious gardeners wait a week or two past the spring date before setting out their most delicate seedlings.
How to use it
- Enter your last spring frost date for your location.
- Enter your first fall frost date.
- Read the live countdown cards โ days to each frost and total frost-free days.
- Check the message for a quick safe-to-plant or take-cover verdict.
Everything updates instantly and runs entirely in your browser — nothing is uploaded. These figures are planning estimates, not professional agronomic advice.
FAQ
- What counts as a frost date?
- It's the date when temperatures are expected to dip to freezing (32°F / 0°C). The spring date is the last expected frost; the fall date is the first.
- Why wait past the last spring frost?
- Average dates are 50/50 odds, so frost can still arrive later. Waiting one to two weeks — or until the soil warms — protects heat-loving crops.
- Are these dates guaranteed?
- No. Frost dates are long-term averages and shift with weather, elevation and microclimate. Treat the countdown as a planning estimate, not a promise.
- Is my data private?
- Yes. The dates you enter never leave your device — all math happens locally in your browser.