Planting, Growing & Harvesting Potatoes (2024)

Potatoes are easy to grow at home. Imagine being able to harvest "new" potatoes in the spring and early summer to eat with homegrown green beans!

Mature potatoes can be stored so that you and your family can enjoy them for many months. Even if you don't plant to fill your hall closet with potatoes, it's still fun to grow a few plants, if only to experience the novelty of digging up your dinner.

Here's how to grow potatoes.

Where to Buy Potatoes for Home Growing

It is essential to start with certified disease-free seed potatoes. These are available at home improvement, farm, and garden centers, and can also be ordered online. It's not usually a good idea to plant potatoes from the grocery store, as they've usually been treated so that they won't sprout on the shelves (and you want them to sprout).

When to Plant Potatoes

Potatoes grow best during cooler weather. Plant potatoes 2-4 weeks before the last frost in the spring, when the soil temperature is at least 40 degrees F. In warm climates, potatoes are planted from January to March and harvested between March and June. In cooler areas, potato-planting time is usually between April and June, with harvest between July and September. Consult your local cooperative extension agency to learn the best planting time for your area.

Where to Plant Potatoes

Plant potatoes where they will receive full sun, and choose and well-drained, acidic soil. Avoid planting in the same spot in which peppers, eggplants, or tomatoes were grown in the previous season, as potatoes are particularly susceptible to diseases carried by those plants.

Plant Potatoes from Seed Pieces

Potatoes need fertile, well-drained soil. Prepare in-ground garden soil by mixing 3 inches of Miracle-Gro® All Purpose Garden Soil into the top 6 to 8 inches of native soil. This will help protect from overwatering and underwatering, and give potatoes a head start on nutrition. If you plan to grow your potatoes in raised beds, fill them with Miracle-Gro® Raised Bed Soil, which is 100 percent organic and provides the right foundation for growing plants in this way. For container growing, get great results by filling pots with Miracle-Gro® Potting Mix.

Potatoes grow best in acidic soils with a pH of 4.8 to 5.5. Test soil with a soil kit and adjust the pH if necessary. (The local extension agency can tell you how).

How to Plant Potatoes

Cut seed potatoes into 1- to 2-inch squares with two to three eyes (bud sprouts) per piece, then allow them to dry for a couple of days before planting. Plant seed potatoes 12 to 18 inches apart and four inches deep. The eyes should be facing up and the cut side facing down. If planting in-ground, space rows 24 to 36 inches apart to leave room for hilling (see below) and walking between the plants.

How to Water Potatoes

Potatoes need consistent moisture, though you never want the soil to be soggy. Water plants once or twice per week, providing one to two inches of water in total. The most critical period for watering is when plants are in bloom. Be sure to water around the base of the plants, not on the leaves.

How to Hill Potatoes

Hilling potatoes keeps sunlight from reaching developing tubers and turning them green. (Green parts of potatoes contain a natural toxin called solanine and should not be eaten.) Hill potatoes by piling additional soil or potting mix halfway up around the stems when plants are about 6-8 inches tall. Continue to hill every three weeks or so, until the plants start to bloom.

How to Feed Potatoes

Begin feeding with a month after planting to give plants the nutrients they need to grow strong and produce lots of potatoes for you to harvest. Make sure to follow all label directions.

How to Troubleshoot when Growing Potatoes

Potatoes are susceptible to a variety of pests and diseases. Use floating row covers to protect plants from flea beetles and Colorado potato beetles early in the season, then remove covers just before plants start to bloom. Fungal and bacterial problems are best prevented by giving the plants good care: avoid watering the leaves, provide good airflow, and ensure that the pH level of the soil isn't too high.

How to Harvest and Store Potatoes

Harvest "new" (immature) potatoes for eating after the plant begins flowering. Gently scratch some soil under the plants aside and feel around for a few small tubers and pull them out, then replace the soil so the plants will keep growing. For full-sized potatoes, wait until after the tops of the plants have died. Carefully dig up the entire plant using a garden fork, doing your best not to bruise or pierce the potatoes. Bring them inside and keep them in a dark, cool, humid spot (such as an unfinished basem*nt or garage) for two weeks to "cure" so the skins will thicken and dry for storing. Store in a covered, ventilated box or bin.

How to Grow Potatoes: Recap

  • Start with certified disease-free seed potatoes.
  • Plant in full sun in acidic, well-drained soil. Use Miracle-Gro® All Purpose Garden Soil for in-ground gardens, Miracle-Gro® Raised Bed Soil in raised beds, or Miracle-Gro® Potting Mix in containers.
  • Water thoroughly.
  • Hill potato plants as they grow.
  • Feed with beginning a month after planting.
  • Use row covers and good cultural practices to help prevent pest and disease problems.
  • Harvest potatoes when growth dies back and store in a cool, humid place.

Ready to start growing potatoes? Click on any of the product links above for more information, to purchase the product online, or to find a retailer near you.

Planting, Growing & Harvesting Potatoes (2024)

FAQs

How long between planting and harvesting potatoes? ›

Early-season potato varieties are planted first in spring and are ready to harvest in 60-80 days. Mid-season varieties mature in 80-100 days. Late-season potato varieties are ready to harvest in 100-130 days.

What is the easiest way to grow and harvest potatoes? ›

Easiest Harvest: Grow Bags

Put a few inches of a soil-compost mixture in the bottom of a bag, then plant three or four seed potato pieces and cover with 3 inches of soil. Continue adding soil as the plants grow until the bag is full. To harvest, turn the bag on its side and dump out the contents.

Should I water potatoes every day? ›

I don't advise watering every day either, since potatoes could rot if they're sitting in wet soil. If you have very sandy soil or your area is going through an extremely hot or dry period, you can water a couple times a week if you find the soil is drying out quickly.

Do you water potatoes right after planting? ›

Maintain even moisture, especially from the time after the flowers bloom. Potatoes need 1 to 2 inches of water a week. Too much water right after planting and not enough as the potatoes begin to form can cause them to become misshapen. Stop watering when the foliage begins to turn yellow and die off.

How often should you water potatoes? ›

How much water do potatoes need and when? Potatoes need different amounts of water at different times in order to produce to the best of their ability. Generally, potatoes need between 1-2 inches of water per week; this could be provided by rain events or you to make up the difference.

When to stop watering potatoes? ›

Stop watering potatoes once the stems start to turn yellow and die back, which is typically at the end of summer if you planted them in the spring.

What month do you plant potatoes? ›

The best planting time is February. But I think of potatoes as having two seasons here — one is August into early September for a late fall or early winter harvest, and the other is February for a late spring harvest.

How many potatoes do you get from one potato plant? ›

How Many Potatoes Form Per Plant? You can expect at least five to six new potatoes for each potato you plant. If only every plant multiplied this way! There's something so magical about pulling up a potato plant and seeing so many new potatoes attached to the small one you planted months ago.

What makes potatoes grow big? ›

If you want to grow big potatoes, you absolutely have got to give them the room they need to get big. This means planting your seed potatoes 12″-14″ inches apart. No exceptions. This is why bags, towers, and the like often fail or only produce either small numbers of potatoes or just small potatoes in general.

What fertilizer do potatoes need? ›

Ammonium polyphosphate (10-34-0) is the most commonly used liquid P fertilizer and is suitable for banded application in potatoes. A variety of related liquid products are available and suitable, although they have lower P contents. Orthophosphate P, as found in MAP and DAP, is the form of P taken up by plants.

How deep do you plant potatoes? ›

Option 1: Planting potatoes 4 to 5 inches deep

This is the standard technique used when planting seed potatoes with the tubers usually planted in a trench. I use a garden hoe to dig a 4 to 5 inch deep trench and place a seed potato every 10 to 12 inches. Space rows 18 to 24 inches apart.

What happens if you plant a whole potato in the ground? ›

If larger potatoes are planted whole they will produce larger plants and should be given a little extra room, 12-16 inches. A spacing of 36 inches between rows in adequate but if you have the extra space, further spacing will make hilling easier.

What's the secret to growing potatoes? ›

Potatoes like slightly acidic soil (5.8-6.5 pH). Add fertilizer or composted manure for best results. If you want to make the task of weeding easier (and you have the space), plant your potatoes at least two feet apart so that you can weed around them easily.

What happens if you don't hill potatoes? ›

Completely unhilled potatoes will still form some tubers, though the harvest may not be as impressive as those that have been through the hilling process. Dig after the stems have died back as you would hilled potatoes.

What to put on potatoes before planting? ›

To further protect your seed potatoes, you can dust them with powdered sulfur right after cutting them and before planting them. Place the potatoes in a bag, add the sulfur and shake. Then lay the pieces out and let them dry for three to four days.

How long after potatoes flower are they ready? ›

Mature potatoes should be harvested about two weeks after the flowers and vines begin to yellow and die. Potatoes can handle a light frost, but make sure to dig them all up before the first heavy frost.

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