🌱📦 When to Order Seeds Based on Planting Times (UK Guide)

🌱 Introduction: Why Ordering Seeds at the Right Time Matters

Ordering seeds too late can mean sold-out varieties, rushed decisions, or missed planting windows. Ordering too early without a plan can lead to wasted money and forgotten packets.

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The key is to order seeds based on when you’ll plant them, not when seed catalogues arrive.

This guide explains when to order seeds based on planting times, so you have the right seeds before you need them — but not years in advance.

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🧭 The Golden Rule: Order Before the Earliest Sowing Date

You should always have seeds in hand at least 4–8 weeks before their earliest sowing time.

This allows for:

  • Seed shortages or postal delays
  • Changes to weather or plans
  • Time to start seeds under cover if needed

Never plan to order seeds at planting time.


📅 Seed Ordering Timeline by Planting Season (UK)

🌱 Late Winter–Early Spring Planting

(Sowing: January–March)
Order seeds: October–December

Crops include:

  • Onions (from seed)
  • Leeks
  • Early salads
  • Hardy brassicas
  • Broad beans

Why early ordering matters:

  • These seeds are among the first to sell out
  • You may want multiple sowings or backup varieties

🌿 Main Spring Planting

(Sowing: March–April)
Order seeds: December–January

Crops include:

  • Carrots
  • Beetroot
  • Lettuce
  • Peas
  • Spinach

This is the core seed-ordering window for most UK gardeners.


☀️ Tender & Summer Crops

(Sowing: April–May)
Order seeds: January–February

Crops include:

  • Tomatoes
  • Courgettes
  • Beans
  • Sweetcorn
  • Cucumbers

Why this timing works:

  • You’ll have seeds ready for indoor sowing
  • You can replace failures without reordering

🍂 Late Summer & Autumn Crops

(Sowing: July–August)
Order seeds: May–June

Crops include:

  • Spinach
  • Pak choi
  • Rocket
  • Autumn salads
  • Turnips

These are often forgotten, so ordering early prevents gaps later.


❄️ Overwintering Crops

(Sowing: September–November)
Order seeds: July–August

Crops include:

  • Overwintering onions
  • Broad beans (autumn sowing)
  • Winter salads

Many gardeners miss this window because they didn’t plan far enough ahead.


🚨 Seeds You Should Always Order Early

These frequently sell out first:

  • Tomatoes
  • Chillies
  • Popular carrot and lettuce varieties
  • F1 hybrids
  • Organic seed ranges

Order these at least one season ahead.


🔁 How Many Times Per Year Should You Order Seeds?

Ideal approach: 2–3 orders per year

1️⃣ Main order (Dec–Jan)
– Covers most spring and summer crops

2️⃣ Top-up order (May–June)
– Covers late sowings and replacements

3️⃣ (Optional) Autumn order (July–Aug)
– For overwintering crops

This avoids overbuying and keeps seed fresh.


📦 How Ordering Timing Improves Planting Success

Ordering based on planting time allows you to:

  • Start seeds on time, not late
  • Replace failures immediately
  • Avoid impulse buying
  • Stick to your planting plan

Prepared gardeners plant calmly — rushed gardeners plant poorly.


🚫 Common Seed Ordering Mistakes

  • Ordering everything in spring
  • Forgetting late-season crops
  • Buying seeds without a planting plan
  • Relying on “last chance” availability
  • Not ordering backups for key crops

Seed availability controls planting success more than most people realise.


🧠 Key Takeaway

The best time to order seeds is well before the earliest sowing date, not when planting begins. In the UK, most gardeners should place their main seed order between December and January, with smaller top-ups later in the year.

If you plan planting times first and order seeds accordingly, you’ll never miss a sowing window — and you’ll garden with far less stress.


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