🍉 Watermelon Sunlight Calculator
Find out exactly how much sun your watermelon plants need based on type, climate, and garden conditions
| Watermelon Type | Min Sun (hrs) | Ideal Sun (hrs) | Shade Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crimson Sweet | 8 | 10–12 | Very Low |
| Sugar Baby | 8 | 8–10 | Low |
| Charleston Gray | 8 | 10–12 | Very Low |
| Jubilee | 8 | 10–12 | Very Low |
| Yellow Flesh / Desert King | 8 | 8–10 | Low |
| Seedless / Triple Sweet | 8 | 10–12 | Very Low |
| Icebox / Mini | 6 | 8–10 | Low |
| Moon and Stars | 8 | 10–12 | Very Low |
| Climate Zone | Avg Summer Temp | Sun Adjustment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hot (USDA 9–13) | 90°F+ / 32°C+ | Full sun ideal | Watermelons thrive in heat, no shade needed |
| Warm (USDA 7–8) | 80–90°F / 27–32°C | Full sun ideal | Excellent growing zone for all types |
| Moderate (USDA 5–6) | 70–80°F / 21–27°C | Maximize sun exposure | Choose short-season types like Sugar Baby |
| Cool (USDA 3–4) | 60–70°F / 16–21°C | Full sun essential | Use black mulch, row covers, and Icebox types |
| Watermelon Type | Spacing (ft) | Spacing (cm) | Area Per Plant (ft²) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crimson Sweet | 6–8 | 180–240 | 36–64 |
| Sugar Baby | 4–6 | 120–180 | 16–36 |
| Charleston Gray | 6–8 | 180–240 | 36–64 |
| Jubilee | 6–8 | 180–240 | 36–64 |
| Yellow Flesh / Desert King | 5–6 | 150–180 | 25–36 |
| Seedless / Triple Sweet | 5–6 | 150–180 | 25–36 |
| Icebox / Mini | 3–4 | 90–120 | 9–16 |
| Moon and Stars | 6–8 | 180–240 | 36–64 |
| Watermelon Type | Days to Maturity | Total Sun Hours Needed | Yield Per Plant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crimson Sweet | 80–90 days | 800–1080 hrs | 25–35 lbs (11–16 kg) |
| Sugar Baby | 75–85 days | 600–850 hrs | 8–12 lbs (4–5 kg) |
| Charleston Gray | 85–95 days | 850–1140 hrs | 28–35 lbs (13–16 kg) |
| Jubilee | 90–100 days | 900–1200 hrs | 25–40 lbs (11–18 kg) |
| Yellow Flesh / Desert King | 80–90 days | 640–900 hrs | 15–25 lbs (7–11 kg) |
| Seedless / Triple Sweet | 85–95 days | 850–1140 hrs | 15–20 lbs (7–9 kg) |
| Icebox / Mini | 70–80 days | 560–800 hrs | 5–10 lbs (2–5 kg) |
| Moon and Stars | 90–100 days | 900–1200 hrs | 20–30 lbs (9–14 kg) |
Watermelons belong to warm seasons and like lots of sunshine. One of the main secrets for growing them well is giving them enough sunshine. If light is lacking the fruits usually turn out small and without enough sweetness.
At least eight to ten hours of direct Sun daily counts as full Sun. Truly, Watermelons need that to form nice fruits. According to some sources, six hours is the minimum, but eight to ten are ideal for good flowering and fruiting.
How Much Sun Do Watermelons Need
For big plants like Watermelons, eight hours of Sun a day are needed, but ten to twelve or more make everthing even better.
Grow Watermelons is different from simply watching them. The plant handles a bit of shade, especially in warm regions. But lots of Sun stays needed to form the sugar inside the melons.
In places with little sunshine, the plants will seem dense and green, but fruits can stay small and below proper size. To reach proper size of Watermelon, give as much Sun as it is possible.
Using shiny soil, one can boost the Sun exposure too Watermelons. It forms a handy way to get more light to the plants.
In tropical regions, Watermelons benefit under full Sun. When shade risks, one can plant sweet corn or sunflowers near, which gives partial protection and also useful crops. They like soil that drains well, that is light and moist with plenty of compost.
Use fertilizer moderately, because otherwise the Watermelon vines will grow a lot, but the fruits will not succeed.
Full shade simply will not work. Places with less than three hours of direct light a day do not work for Watermelons or melons. The plant needs Sun to stay healthy and productive.
When young transplants stretch highly with big gaps between leaves and do not form compact, probably they lack light. Sunshine stays the best, but adding extra light also helps.
Young plants can get protection by means of floating covers, that are like thin fabric or other material kept above rings. But remove them after the plants bloom, because Watermelons depend on insect pollination.
After harvest of Watermelon, the situation changes. Direct Sun does not suit for picked fruits. Leaving harvested melon outside for a day or two, one can boost the sugar as the water dries.
But if it sits in warm Sun, problems will come. The best temperature for growing Watermelon ranges between 70°F and 90°F, andseeds sprout best in soil at around 70°F.
