🚫❄️ Vegetables That Are Not Frost Hardy (UK Guide)

🚫❄️ Introduction: Know What Frost Will Kill

While some vegetables cope well with cold, many cannot tolerate frost at all. Even a light frost can damage leaves, stop growth, or kill plants outright. Understanding which vegetables are not frost hardy helps you avoid wasted time, seed, and effort — especially in the UK’s unpredictable climate.

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This guide explains the vegetables that must be protected from frost, when they’re at risk, and how to grow them successfully despite cold conditions.


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• Frost Protection (Fleece, Cloches, Mini Greenhouses)

Essential for protecting tender crops during cold nights.
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• Seed Trays & Indoor Growing Equipment

Start frost-sensitive vegetables safely indoors.
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• Polytunnels or Greenhouses

Provide consistent warmth and protection for tender crops.
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🌡️ What Does “Not Frost Hardy” Mean?

Non–frost-hardy vegetables:

✔ Are damaged by temperatures below 0°C
✔ Often stop growing below 5°C
✔ May rot or collapse after cold nights
✔ Require warmth to survive and crop

These vegetables should never be exposed to frost.


🍅 Vegetables That Are Not Frost Hardy

These crops must be grown indoors, under cover, or only outdoors after all frost risk has passed.


🍅 Tomatoes

Why frost kills them:

  • Soft tissue collapses when frozen
  • Growth stops in cool weather

Tomatoes should only go outside after the last frost, usually late May in much of the UK.


🌶️ Chillies & Sweet Peppers

Cold sensitivity:

  • Damaged below 5°C
  • Killed by frost

These crops prefer constant warmth and are best grown in greenhouses or indoors.


🍆 Aubergines

Aubergines are extremely cold-sensitive and require long, warm seasons. Even cool nights can cause stress and leaf drop.


🥒 Cucumbers

Why they fail in frost:

  • Tender stems and leaves
  • Cold soil causes root rot

Cucumbers should only be planted out once soil and air temperatures are reliably warm.


🎃 Courgettes, Squash & Pumpkins

Although fast-growing, these plants are very frost tender.

❌ Leaves blacken
❌ Growth stops
❌ Plants collapse

Plant out only after frost risk has fully passed.


🌽 Sweetcorn

Sweetcorn struggles in cold conditions and is easily damaged by frost, especially when young.


🌿 Basil

Basil is one of the most frost-sensitive herbs.

✔ Damaged below 5°C
✔ Killed by frost

Always grow basil indoors or bring it under cover when temperatures drop.


🫘 Beans (Mostly Frost Tender)

✔ French beans
✔ Runner beans
✔ Climbing beans

Bean plants are easily killed by frost and should only be grown outdoors in late spring and summer.


❄️ What Happens If These Vegetables Get Frosted?

❌ Leaves turn black or limp
❌ Growth stops permanently
❌ Fruit production fails
❌ Plants die back completely

Unlike frost-hardy crops, these vegetables do not recover.


🛡️ How to Protect Non–Frost-Hardy Vegetables

✔ Start seeds indoors
✔ Grow under glass or polytunnel
✔ Use fleece on cold nights
✔ Avoid early planting outdoors
✔ Monitor night temperatures

One unexpected frost can undo months of work.


🌍 UK Frost Timing Reality

Southern UK:

  • Last frost: late April–early May

Midlands & Northern England:

  • Last frost: mid–late May

Scotland & exposed areas:

  • Last frost: late May–June

Always prioritise local conditions over calendar dates.


🚫 Common Frost-Related Mistakes

❌ Planting out too early
❌ Trusting daytime temperatures
❌ Ignoring night forecasts
❌ Leaving tender plants uncovered
❌ Assuming mild winters mean no frost

Frost often strikes unexpectedly and overnight.


❓ FAQs

Which vegetables die in frost?

Tomatoes, peppers, chillies, aubergines, cucumbers, courgettes, beans, and basil.

Can I save frost-damaged plants?

Usually no — most tender vegetables do not recover.

Is fleece enough to protect tender vegetables?

For light frost, yes — but not severe or prolonged cold.

Can these vegetables be grown in winter?

Only indoors or in heated greenhouses.

Are non–frost-hardy vegetables worth growing in the UK?

Absolutely — but timing and protection are critical.


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