🧅📦 Sowing Onion Seeds for Long-Term Storage (UK Guide)
🌱 Introduction: Storage Starts at Sowing Time
If you want onions that store for months without sprouting or rotting, success is decided right at the seed stage. Long-term storage onions need a long, steady growing season, strong early growth, and zero stress. When grown correctly, onions from seed outperform sets for keeping quality.
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This guide explains how to sow onion seeds specifically for long-term storage, what to prioritise, and which mistakes shorten shelf life.
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🧭 The Golden Rules for Storage Onions
To store well, onions must:
- Grow slowly and steadily
- Never be checked by cold, drought, or crowding
- Finish the season fully mature
- Be cured properly (after harvest)
Most storage failures start months before harvest.
📅 When to Sow Onion Seeds for Storage (UK)
✅ Best sowing window
- Late January to mid-February → ideal
- Early March → acceptable, slightly reduced storage life
Later sowing shortens the growing season and usually produces smaller bulbs that don’t store as long.
👉 Storage onions need maximum leaf growth early to build large, dense bulbs later.
🌡️ Temperature & Light (Critical Early On)
Germination
- 15–20°C
- 7–14 days
After germination (very important)
- 10–15°C
- Bright light (windowsill or grow lights)
Warm, low-light conditions produce soft growth and shorten storage life later.
🌱 Best Compost for Storage-Quality Onions
At sowing:
- Fine seed compost only
- Low nutrients encourage strong root systems
Why this matters:
- Early leafy growth from rich compost leads to soft bulbs
- Soft bulbs don’t store well
Switch to general compost only after seedlings are established.
🌱 How to Sow Onion Seeds for Long-Term Storage
1️⃣ Sow Thinly
- 1–2 cm spacing
- Overcrowding early permanently reduces bulb density
2️⃣ Sow Shallow
- 5–10 mm deep
- Seeds should be just covered, never buried
3️⃣ Water Carefully
- Compost damp, not wet
- Avoid cold, soggy conditions
4️⃣ Grow Cool & Bright
- Light beats heat
- Slow, compact growth = better storage later
✂️ Trimming Seedlings (Improves Storage Quality)
When seedlings reach 12–15 cm:
- Trim to 8–10 cm
- Repeat if needed
Trimming:
- Thickens stems
- Improves bulb structure
- Reduces stress
This directly improves keeping quality.
🌱 Thinning & Potting On (Important for Density)
Storage onions must grow without competition.
Indoors:
- Thin to 1–2 cm spacing
- Pot on if crowded
Outdoors:
- 10–15 cm between plants
- 25–30 cm between rows
Crowded onions grow soft and hollow—bad for storage.
🌤️ Hardening Off (Avoid Growth Checks)
Harden off slowly over 7–10 days.
- Avoid frost
- Avoid strong wind early
Cold shock at this stage increases bolting risk, which ruins storage onions.
🌱 Planting Out for Storage Crops
Plant out when:
- Seedlings are pencil-thick
- Soil is workable and warming
- Usually March–April
Avoid planting into cold, wet soil—it causes stress that shortens storage life.
🌾 Feeding & Watering for Storage Onions
Early growth
- Minimal feeding
- Encourage steady leaf growth
Bulb formation
- Keep soil evenly moist
- Avoid drought stress
Late season (very important)
- Stop feeding
- Reduce watering
- Allow bulbs to firm up naturally
Excess nitrogen late on = poor storage.
🚫 Common Mistakes That Ruin Storage Life
- Sowing too late
- Overcrowding
- Overfeeding nitrogen
- Harvesting too early
- Not curing properly
- Storing bulbs that were stressed
You can’t “fix” storage problems after harvest—they’re built into the bulb.
🧠 Key Takeaway
Onions grown for long-term storage must be sown early, grown steadily, spaced generously, and never stressed. Onion seeds are the best choice for storage crops because they give a longer season and denser bulbs than sets.
Get the first 8 weeks right, and you’ll enjoy firm, dry onions that store for months with minimal losses.