A winter greenhouse in USDA Zones 5-7 can keep producing leafy greens, root vegetables, alliums, brassicas, and herbs that tolerate air temperatures down to 28°F and soil temperatures down to 32°F without supplemental heat.
Most gardeners shutter their greenhouse in November, but the right crops keep it running through January and February. The trick is matching the plant to the environment: an unheated structure with short days and cold soil. Below are the specific varieties that thrive there, the planting schedule that works, and the winter maintenance habits that prevent rot, mold, and failure.
Which Crops Survive an Unheated Winter Greenhouse?
Five crop categories reliably produce through winter in Zones 5-7: leafy greens, root vegetables, alliums, brassicas, and several hardy herbs. Each tolerates temperatures that would kill a tomato or pepper plant outright.
Leafy Greens
Kale, spinach, Swiss chard, arugula, collards, and mustard greens all handle air temperatures down to 28°F. They need a full-sun spot (six-plus hours daily) and soil pH between 6.0 and 7.0. Water them about once a week in winter — far less than summer’s schedule — because the plants are barely growing and soggy soil invites rot.
Root Vegetables
Carrots, beets, radishes, turnips, parsnips, and rutabagas are natural winter survivors. They need full sun and the same soil pH range. One critical timing rule: don’t plant carrots or beets in the fall in short-day regions like Zone 6b — the low light prevents them from forming a proper root. Instead, plant them in late winter for a harvest two months ahead of your outdoor garden.
Alliums
Garlic, onions, leeks, and scallions sail through winter cold. They’re full-sun crops with the same 6.0–7.0 pH preference. Leeks are especially forgiving; they stand up to repeated frosts and keep growing slowly whenever the greenhouse warms above freezing.
Brassicas
Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cabbage, kohlrabi, cauliflower, and Asian greens all work. Cold weather actually sweetens them — the plants convert starches to sugars as a natural antifreeze. Head-forming types like cabbage and broccoli develop better when grown for late-winter harvest than for fall harvest.
Herbs
Parsley, cilantro, dill, chives, rosemary, thyme, and oregano tolerate winter conditions in an unheated greenhouse. Rosemary is a tender perennial in Zone 6b and might not survive in every microclimate, so test it in your setup. Parsley is more dependable and keeps producing leaves all winter if you pick them one at a time instead of chopping the whole plant.
What’s the Right Planting Schedule for a Winter Greenhouse?
The ideal planting window runs from mid-summer to mid-autumn. The crop must reach maturity before day length drops below 10 hours. Count backward from your first frost date using the days-to-maturity number on the seed packet: a 58-day crop goes in the ground roughly 58 days before frost. For spinach, start transplants with successive sowings so you have young plants ready to move into the greenhouse as space opens up.
Table: Best Winter Greenhouse Crops at a Glance
| Crop Category | Examples | Temp Tolerance | Winter Hacks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leafy Greens | Kale, spinach, chard, arugula, collards, mustard | Air 28°F / Soil 32°F | Remove leaves one at a time; never harvest frozen greens |
| Root Vegetables | Carrots, beets, radishes, turnips, parsnips, rutabagas | Air 28°F / Soil 32°F | Plant late winter in short-day zones; mulch deeply with straw |
| Alliums | Garlic, onions, leeks, scallions | Air 28°F / Soil 32°F | Leeks are the most cold-tolerant; garlic barely notices winter |
| Brassicas | Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cabbage, kohlrabi, cauliflower | Air 28°F / Soil 32°F | Cold sweetens them; head-forming types prefer late-winter timing |
| Herbs | Parsley, cilantro, dill, chives, rosemary, thyme, oregano | Air 28°F / Soil 32°F | Rosemary is borderline in Zone 6b; parsley is the most reliable |
| Winter Lettuce | Endive, radicchio | Air 28°F / Soil 32°F | Standard lettuce freezes easily; stick with the rugged varieties |
| Asian Greens | Tatsoi, mizuna, pac choi | Air 28°F / Soil 32°F | Fast-growing; succession-plant from late summer through early fall |
Winter Greenhouse Maintenance That Makes or Breaks the Harvest
Keeping an unheated greenhouse productive takes different habits than summer growing. The big shift is water: cut back to once or twice a week in fall, then water only occasionally on warm sunny winter days. The plant’s vascular system runs slow, and wet soil plus cold temperatures equals root rot. If you’re building a new winter greenhouse from scratch, our tested DIY greenhouse designs show insulated setups that hold heat better through January nights.
Vent the greenhouse on mild days — even 40°F is warm enough to open a vent for an hour. This cuts condensation, which is the main cause of fungal diseases in winter. Insulate the walls with bubble wrap attached to the plastic sheeting. A 55-gallon water barrel painted black and placed inside acts as thermal mass, absorbing heat during the day and releasing it at night.
Use frost blankets or low-tunnel hoops over individual crops for extra protection. Perennial herbs like rosemary may still fail in Zone 6b winters — if you lose one, treat it as a test that tells you to switch to a hardier variety next year.
Table: Watering and Temperature Ranges for Winter Greenhouse Crops
| Factor | Target Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Air temperature | 50–65°F ideal; lowest 28°F | Crops listed tolerate the bottom end; warmer speeds growth |
| Soil temperature | 45–75°F ideal; lowest 32°F | Cold soil slows everything; thermal mass and insulation help keep it stable |
| Watering frequency | 1 inch per week; infrequent in winter | One deep watering every 7-10 days on a sunny day; skip if soil is moist |
| Fertilizing | Slow-release kelp or fish emulsion | Add during occasional winter watering; plants still need some nutrition |
| Condensation control | Vent on mild days | Prevents fungal diseases; even a 15-minute vent window helps |
Five Common Mistakes That Wreck a Winter Greenhouse Harvest
An unheated greenhouse is forgiving, but these errors are the ones that cause the most losses.
Planting root crops in fall in short-day regions. Carrots and beets need long daylight to form roots. In Zone 6b and similar zones, planting them in late winter gives you a harvest two months early instead of a tray of leafy tops with nothing underground.
Harvesting frozen greens. Picking kale or spinach when the leaves are frozen damages the plant’s cells and often kills it. Wait until the leaves thaw naturally — usually by late morning on a sunny day.
Overwatering. Daily watering works in July. In December it drowns the roots. Cut back to an occasional deep soak when the soil feels dry at a knuckle’s depth.
Ignoring condensation. A sealed greenhouse looks efficient, but humidity trapped inside breeds gray mold and powdery mildew. Venting for even 10 minutes on a 40°F day drops the humidity enough to stay safe.
Choosing the wrong varieties. Basil, beans, sunflowers, and tomatoes have no place in a winter greenhouse. Stick with cool-tolerant crops — kale, arugula, spinach, and the others on the table above.
Winter Harvest Checklist: What to Do Now
Start succession planting in early summer, late summer, and fall so crops are near maturity when the cold hits. Hang yellow sticky traps near the vents to catch early pest warnings. Keep a frost blanket or low-tunnel kit on hand for the coldest nights. Harvest leafy greens by removing individual leaves from the outside of the plant rather than taking whole heads — this keeps the plant producing for months. If you’re still building your setup, aim for insulation first (bubble wrap and thermal mass) and worry about supplemental lighting only if you plan to start seeds indoors.
FAQs
Can I grow tomatoes in an unheated winter greenhouse?
No. Tomatoes are warm-season plants that stop growing below 50°F and die at frost. Even cold-tolerant tomato varieties can’t survive the 28°F temperatures that a winter greenhouse routinely sees.
Should I use grow lights in an unheated winter greenhouse?
Grow lights are useful for starting seeds indoors but are not necessary for growing cold-hardy crops in an unheated greenhouse. The crops listed above produce well on natural winter daylight if they reach maturity before day length drops below 10 hours.
How often should I water a winter greenhouse?
Reduce watering to once every 7-10 days in winter, or only when the soil is dry at a knuckle’s depth. Overwatering in cold weather is the fastest way to cause root rot, since the plant’s vascular system runs much slower than in summer.
What does “thermal mass” mean for a greenhouse?
Thermal mass refers to materials — typically water barrels or stone — that absorb heat during the day and release it slowly at night. A 55-gallon black water barrel inside a greenhouse can raise the overnight temperature by several degrees, reducing frost risk.
Can I keep rosemary alive in a winter greenhouse in Zone 6b?
Rosemary is a tender perennial and may survive Zone 6b winters in a greenhouse, but it depends on your microclimate and how cold the greenhouse gets. Test it with one plant and have a backup plan; parsley, thyme, and chives are more reliable winter herbs.
References & Sources
- Abundant Permaculture. “Winter Greenhouse Garden.” Comprehensive guide to winter planting schedules, watering, insulation, and venting for unheated greenhouses.
- Growing Spaces. “7 Best Winter Crops.” Temperature tolerances, soil pH, and watering requirements for winter greenhouse crops.
- Savvy Gardening. “A Winter Greenhouse: How to Harvest Vegetables All Winter.” Planting timeline calculations, frost blankets, and frost-crop management tips.
