What to Plant in May — Zone 10
Tropical and subtropical growing with no real winter. Heat-adapted varieties and timing are key.
Quick Answer
In zone 10 during May, late spring — most warm-season crops can safely go outside and the garden is in full swing. Your key tasks this month: transition to summer garden with tropical crops, grow sweet potatoes, malabar spinach, and yard-long beans, and water deeply and mulch generously.
May Gardening Tasks for Zone 10
May is late spring — most warm-season crops can safely go outside and the garden is in full swing. Zone 10 has a frost-free window from Year-round (rare light frost), which shapes what you can plant and when. Here is your complete task list:
Plant Guides for This Month
These plants are mentioned in your May tasks. Read their full growing guides for detailed planting instructions:
Potato
Digging up homegrown potatoes is like finding buried treasure. These satisfying …
Sweet Potato
Sweet potatoes are tropical vines that produce gorgeous ornamental foliage above…
Spinach
Spinach is a cool-weather superstar packed with iron and vitamins. It grows quic…
Helpful Guides for May
These gardening guides are especially useful this time of year:
- Seed Starting Indoors — essential if you're starting transplants this month
- Companion Planting Guide — plan your layout for maximum yield
- Organic Pest Control — prepare defenses as the season progresses
- Building Better Soil — start any month to improve next season's harvests
- Pest & Disease Library — identify and solve common garden problems organically
- Browse All Plant Guides — detailed growing instructions for every crop
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I plant in May in zone 10?
In zone 10 during May, focus on: Transition to summer garden with tropical crops. Grow sweet potatoes, malabar spinach, and yard-long beans. Water deeply and mulch generously. The frost-free period for zone 10 is Year-round (rare light frost).
Is it too late to plant in May in zone 10?
May is a productive month in zone 10. Tropical and subtropical growing with no real winter. Heat-adapted varieties and timing are key. Check each crop's days to maturity against your remaining frost-free window (Year-round (rare light frost)).
What is USDA zone 10?
USDA Zone 10 has a frost-free growing season from approximately Year-round (rare light frost). Tropical and subtropical growing with no real winter. Heat-adapted varieties and timing are key.