What to Plant in September in Pennsylvania

September is arguably the most productive month in the Pennsylvania garden. Summer crops are reaching peak harvest, fall crops planted in July and August are sizing up, and three major tasks all open simultaneously: lawn overseeding, garlic bed preparation, and one last round of cool-season direct sowing before the frost window closes.

Most gardeners are in wind-down mode by September. The gardeners who know better are just getting started on a second season that runs straight through November.

πŸ“… PA Garden Calendar β€” Where September Falls

JanIndoor prep
FebSeed start
MarIndoor start
AprCool crops
MayWarm crops
JunGrow + sow
JulFall starts
AugFall transplant
Sepβ–Ά Now
OctGarlic
NovCleanup
DecRest

Indoor Starting
Spring Planting
Active Growing
Harvest / Fall Prep
Fall Planting
Dormant / Prep

πŸ‚ September Quick Reference β€” Pennsylvania

First Frost Window
Zone 5a: late Sept–early Oct Β· Zone 6a: mid-Oct Β· Zone 7a: mid-to-late Nov

Direct Sow Now
Spinach, lettuce, radishes, arugula, kale (all zones early Sept); peas (6b–7a only, Sept 1–10)

Transplant Out
Fall broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage started in July β€” early September, especially northern zones

#1 Lawn Task
Overseed now. Sept 1–20 is the prime lawn seeding window across PA

Garlic Prep
Seed garlic arriving; prepare bed with compost; plant mid-October to November

Harvesting
Tomatoes, peppers, winter squash, potatoes, late beans β€” September is peak harvest month

September in Pennsylvania: Two Seasons at Once

September occupies a unique position in the PA garden calendar. For the first two weeks you’re still in full summer-harvest mode β€” tomatoes, peppers, and winter squash need constant attention. At the same time, the fall planting window has opened, and missing it means no cool-season vegetables in October and November.

Zone Average First Frost Days Left from Sept 1 September Status
7a (Philadelphia area) November 17 ~77 days Full planting window open all month
6b (Reading, York, Lancaster) October 19–22 ~48–51 days Early September is last chance for most crops
6a (Pittsburgh, Harrisburg) October 10–28 ~39–57 days Focus on quick-maturing cool crops and frost-tolerant varieties
5b (Scranton, Erie) October 4–14 ~33–43 days Radishes and spinach only; brassica transplants if started in July
5a (Pocono/Mountain areas) September 28 – October 1 ~27–30 days Frost could arrive late September β€” radishes and cold frames

What to Direct Sow in September

September opens the best cool-season sowing window of the fall. Soil is still warm (above 50Β°F), which accelerates germination β€” and the cooling air temperatures are exactly what lettuce, spinach, and arugula need to stay tender and productive rather than bolting.

Spinach

Spinach is the most cold-hardy leafy green in the PA fall garden. It germinates in soil as cool as 40Β°F, grows slowly through October frosts, and can overwinter under a cold frame or low tunnel to provide very early spring harvest in March or April. Sow in early September for fall harvest, or mid-September for overwintering.

Sow seeds Β½ inch deep, 2 inches apart in rows. Thin to 4–6 inches. According to University of Maryland Extension, spinach planted in September and protected with a row cover or cold frame can survive Pennsylvania winters and resume growth in early spring β€” one of the most productive low-effort strategies in fall gardening.

Lettuce

Lettuce matures in 45–65 days and tolerates light frost. Sow in early September for harvest in mid-to-late October in zones 6a–7a. Northern zones (5a–5b) should sow by September 5–10 and cover with row cover once temperatures drop consistently below 35Β°F. Leaf lettuce varieties β€” Black Seeded Simpson, Red Sails, Oak Leaf β€” are faster and more forgiving than head types.

Direct sow β…› inch deep. Cut-and-come-again harvesting works well for fall plantings where you want as many leaves as possible before frost ends production.

Arugula and Mustard Greens

Arugula is the fastest fall green β€” baby leaves in 21–30 days, full harvest in 40 days. It handles light frost easily and actually improves in flavor when temperatures drop below 50Β°F. The peppery bite that some find harsh in summer becomes pleasantly spicy in fall. Sow through the end of September in all PA zones; zone 7a can sow into October.

Mustard greens (30–40 days) are similarly cold-tolerant and produce a high volume of nutritious leaves per square foot. Both crops are excellent for raised beds or containers where you want a quick fall return from recently cleared summer beds.

Radishes

Radishes mature in just 25–30 days, making them the most flexible crop in September. Sow through mid-September in zones 5a–5b, and through late September in zones 6a–7a. Successive sowings every two weeks produce a continuous radish harvest well into October. Don’t overlook daikon radishes (50–60 days) for zones 6a–7a β€” a late-September daikon sowing produces a November harvest and the roots act as natural tillage in compacted soil.

πŸ“…

Free PA Planting Calendar

Zone-specific Β· 4 pages Β· Instant download

Get the exact dates for your Pennsylvania zone β€” when to start seeds indoors, direct sow, transplant, and harvest. Built around your local frost window, not a generic national average.

  • Wall chart with all key dates
  • Seed-start schedule (50+ crops)
  • First & last frost reference
  • Soil temp cheat sheet

Kale and Chard

Kale planted in September delivers the best-tasting kale of the year. Frost sweetens kale dramatically β€” cold temperatures convert stored starches to sugars, transforming a sometimes-bitter leaf into something genuinely sweet and tender. Lacinato (dinosaur kale) and Red Russian kale are the most cold-hardy; standard curly kale is also fine. Kale planted now will produce through November and can survive mild Pennsylvania winters with minimal protection.

Peas β€” Zones 6b–7a Only

A fall pea planting is ambitious but rewarding in the right zones. Bush sugar snap peas (60 days) planted by September 5–10 in zone 7a will produce in early November. Zone 6b can attempt it with the first week of September only. Inoculate seeds with rhizobium bacteria and choose the fastest-maturing variety available β€” Oregon Sugar Pod II (60 days) is a reliable choice for tight fall windows.

Transplant Fall Brassicas Outdoors

If you started broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, or Brussels sprouts indoors in July, early September is transplant time. These seedlings have been growing for 5–7 weeks and should have 4–5 true leaves. Don’t wait β€” every week of delay means a week less growing time before hard frost.

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Transplanting window by zone. Northern PA (Zone 5a–5b): transplant by September 5–10 at the latest. Central and Western PA (6a): September 1–15. Eastern PA (6b–7a): September 1–20. Later transplants may not reach full maturity before hard frost, though partial heads still provide harvest and flavor improves with light frost exposure.

Harden off seedlings that have been indoors by setting them outside in a shaded, sheltered spot for 3–5 days before full-sun transplanting. Brassicas are prone to transplant shock when moved directly from indoor conditions to full outdoor exposure. Water well at transplant and again 2 days later. Space broccoli and cauliflower 18 inches apart, cabbage 12–18 inches depending on head size.

Floating row cover over newly transplanted fall brassicas serves two purposes: it adds frost protection AND excludes cabbage white butterflies, which are still active in September and will lay eggs on unprotected plants.

Get Ready for Garlic Planting

Garlic gets planted in Pennsylvania between mid-October and early November, but September is when you confirm your seed garlic has arrived and prepare the bed. Hardneck varieties β€” Music, German Extra Hardy, Chesnok Red, Georgian Crystal β€” are the right choice for PA winters. Softneck types are bred for milder climates and often winter-kill or produce poorly in zones 5–6.

The Penn State Extension garlic guide recommends amending beds with compost and ensuring good drainage before planting β€” garlic rots in waterlogged soil. Use September to work 2–3 inches of compost into your planned garlic bed so it integrates before planting season. This is also the time to test soil pH and add lime if needed; garlic prefers 6.0–7.0.

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Separate cloves just before planting, not now. Keep seed garlic heads intact through September. Breaking bulbs into cloves too early causes them to dry out. Separate cloves the day of or the day before planting in mid-October. Select only the largest, firmest cloves for planting β€” they produce the largest bulbs.

Peak Harvest Month: What to Pick in September

While fall planting is underway, September is simultaneously the biggest harvest month of the year for many PA crops.

Tomatoes and Peppers: Final Push

As night temperatures drop into the 50s, tomato and pepper fruit set slows and eventually stops. The plants are putting all remaining energy into ripening fruit already on the vine. Remove any blossoms that open after September 1 in zones 5a–6a β€” they won’t have time to produce ripe fruit before frost. This redirects plant energy to ripening existing fruit faster.

When frost is forecast: pick all tomatoes showing any color (even a hint of orange) and ripen indoors on the counter β€” not in the refrigerator. Cold temperatures destroy tomato flavor compounds. A slightly underripe tomato ripened on a kitchen counter at 65–70Β°F tastes far better than a refrigerated one.

Winter Squash, Pumpkins, and Potatoes

Winter squash (butternut, acorn, delicata, Hubbard) is ready when the rind resists a fingernail scratch and the stem has dried and corked over. Cure in a warm, ventilated spot (75–85Β°F) for 10–14 days after harvest to harden the skin and convert starches to sugars before long-term storage. Cured winter squash stores for months.

Potatoes should be harvested by mid-to-late September at the latest in most PA zones. Once tops die back, potatoes can be attacked by soil-borne diseases if left in the ground too long. Cure potatoes at 50–60Β°F with high humidity for 1–2 weeks before storing in a cool (40Β°F), dark location. Research from UMass Extension shows that proper curing heals skin cuts and dramatically extends storage life through winter.

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September Lawn: The Prime Seeding Window

September 1–20 is the best time to seed a lawn in Pennsylvania β€” by a wide margin. Soil is warm from summer (perfect for germination), air temperatures are cooling (reduces stress on new seedlings), and fall rains are typically more reliable than spring. This is also the window when weed pressure drops sharply as crabgrass and other summer annuals begin to die off.

Overseeding vs. Full Renovation

If your lawn has thin spots but reasonable turf density, overseed: mow short (2–2.5 inches), dethatch if thatch exceeds Β½ inch, core aerate, then apply seed at 3–4 lbs per 1,000 sq ft. If more than 50% of the lawn area is bare or weedy, consider full renovation: kill existing vegetation, loosen the surface, grade, then seed at 5–7 lbs per 1,000 sq ft.

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Use starter fertilizer, not regular fertilizer. New grass seedlings have shallow roots and can’t access nutrients efficiently from standard fertilizers. Use a starter formula (lower nitrogen, higher phosphorus β€” ratios like 12-24-8) applied at seeding. Water lightly 2–3 times daily until germination. Once seedlings are 2 inches tall, transition to once-daily deep watering.

Pennsylvania’s best lawn grasses for overseeding: tall fescue (best all-around β€” deep roots, good drought tolerance, disease resistant), Kentucky bluegrass (beautiful but needs supplemental irrigation), and perennial ryegrass (fast germination, excellent for mixing with bluegrass or fescue). A tall fescue/Kentucky bluegrass mix is the standard recommendation for PA lawns.

The Lawn Seeding Deadline

New grass seedlings need a minimum of 6 weeks of growth before the first killing frost to develop enough root mass to survive winter. That puts the absolute latest seeding date around October 1–5 for zone 5a, October 10–15 for zone 6a, and October 20 for zone 7a. Earlier is better β€” September 1–15 is ideal in all PA zones.

September Garden Maintenance

Clean Up Diseased Material Now

As summer crops start to decline, remove diseased foliage aggressively. Late blight on tomatoes, powdery mildew on squash, and fungal issues on other plants get worse in September’s cooler, damper conditions. Don’t compost diseased material β€” bag and discard it. Clearing plant debris in fall dramatically reduces fungal disease spore loads that overwinter in the soil for next year.

Soil Amendment and Cover Crops

As summer beds clear out, September is an excellent time to apply compost and plant a cover crop. Winter rye, crimson clover, and hairy vetch all establish well when seeded in September. These crops protect bare soil from compaction and erosion, fix nitrogen (legumes), add organic matter when turned in spring, and suppress early weed germination.

Winter rye (not ryegrass) is the most cold-hardy option and the easiest to establish β€” broadcast seed at 2–3 lbs per 1,000 sq ft over a cleared bed, rake lightly, and water. It establishes in 7–10 days, grows actively until hard frost, resumes in March, and is ready to till under 3–4 weeks before spring planting.

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Extend the season with row cover. A single layer of floating row cover (1.5 oz weight) adds 4–6Β°F of frost protection β€” often enough to extend harvest 3–4 extra weeks in zones 5–6. Drape directly over plants or use wire hoops. Remove on warm days over 75Β°F to prevent heat buildup, or use lightweight spunbonded fabric that breathes freely.

September Planting Calendar at a Glance

My region:



PA Region Direct Sow Transplant Out Harvest Priority Lawn
Northern PA (Erie/Poconos, Zone 5a–5b) Spinach and radishes by Sept 5–10 only; arugula first week; cover crops after clearing Fall brassicas immediately (Sept 1–5); delay risks frost before maturity Winter squash, potatoes β€” harvest before late Sept frost Overseed Sept 1–10; absolute deadline Sept 15
Western PA (Pittsburgh, Zone 6a) Spinach, lettuce, arugula, radishes through mid-Sept; kale all month Fall brassica transplants Sept 1–15 Winter squash, potatoes, late beans; tomatoes through frost Overseed Sept 1–20; deadline Oct 1
Central PA (State College, Zone 5b–6a) Spinach, lettuce, arugula, radishes through Sept 10–15; kale all month Fall brassica transplants Sept 1–10 (5b) or Sept 1–15 (6a) Winter squash, potatoes, late beans; tomatoes through frost Overseed Sept 1–15; deadline Oct 1
Eastern PA (Philadelphia, Zone 7a) Full range all month: spinach, lettuce, arugula, kale, radishes, mustard greens, peas (through Sept 10) Fall brassica transplants through Sept 20; Brussels sprouts through Sept 15 Tomatoes and peppers through October; squash and potatoes by late Oct Overseed Sept 1–20; deadline Oct 15

Season planning: Check our month-by-month Pennsylvania planting guide to keep your garden producing all year. Browse all Pennsylvania vegetable guides.

Frequently Asked Questions About Planting in September in Pennsylvania

1. What vegetables can I still plant in September in Pennsylvania?

Spinach, lettuce, arugula, kale, mustard greens, and radishes are all excellent September plantings in PA. In warmer zones (6b–7a), you can also sow peas in early September. If you started broccoli, cauliflower, or cabbage indoors in July, September is when those transplants go outside. The key is to act in the first half of September β€” the planting window closes quickly, especially in northern and mountain zones.

2. Can I still plant garlic in September in Pennsylvania?

Not yet β€” garlic should be planted in mid-October through early November in Pennsylvania, after the soil has cooled below 50Β°F. September is when you should have your seed garlic on hand and your bed prepared: work in compost, test pH, and ensure good drainage so the bed is ready when October arrives. If you ordered seed garlic and it hasn’t arrived yet, contact your supplier β€” good hardneck varieties sell out quickly.

3. When should I overseed my lawn in Pennsylvania?

The ideal window is September 1–20, with September 1–15 being optimal across most of PA. Soil is warm enough for fast germination, air temperatures are dropping to reduce stress on seedlings, and fall rains are more reliable. New grass needs 6 weeks before killing frost to establish adequately β€” seeding in October is late and risky, especially in zones 5–6.

4. What should I do with my tomato plants in September?

Keep watering consistently, remove new blossoms in zones 5–6 (they won’t produce ripe fruit before frost), and watch the forecast. Pick any tomato with a hint of color when frost threatens β€” they’ll ripen well on the kitchen counter. Do not store in the refrigerator. Cold destroys tomato flavor compounds. Most tomatoes showing any orange color will ripen fully at room temperature within a week.

5. How do I protect fall crops from early frost?

Floating row cover (1.5 oz weight) is the most practical tool β€” it adds 4–6Β°F of frost protection and can extend the harvest season by 3–4 weeks. Drape directly over crops or suspend on wire hoops. For individual plants, gallon jugs filled with water act as heat reservoirs overnight. Cold frames (low boxes with a clear lid) extend the season into December for spinach and kale in most PA zones.

6. When should I harvest winter squash in Pennsylvania?

Harvest winter squash when the skin resists a fingernail scratch, the stem has dried and turned corky, and the blossom end feels firm. For most varieties this is late September through October. After harvesting, cure at 75–85Β°F for 10–14 days before storing β€” curing hardens the skin, heals any surface cuts, and dramatically improves flavor and storage life. Properly cured squash stored in a cool, dry location keeps for several months.

Continue Reading: PA Seasonal Planting Guides