🍅 Cherry Tomato Sun Calculator
Estimate daily sunlight hours, light adequacy, and growing conditions for your cherry tomatoes
| Daily Sun Hours | Light Category | Expected Yield | Fruit Quality | Ripening Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under 3 hrs | Deep Shade | Very poor / none | Pale, tasteless | Very slow / fails |
| 3–5 hrs | Partial Shade | Low (20–40%) | Less sweet | Slow |
| 5–6 hrs | Min. Full Sun | Moderate (50–65%) | Acceptable | Moderate |
| 6–8 hrs | Full Sun | Good (70–85%) | Good flavor | Normal |
| 8–10 hrs | Optimal Sun | Excellent (90–100%) | Sweet, rich | Fast |
| 10+ hrs | Intense Sun | Excellent (95–100%) | Very sweet | Very fast |
| Season | Avg. Daylight | Effective Sun Hrs | Grow Suitability | Adjustment Needed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Summer (Jun–Aug) | 14–16 hrs | 8–10 hrs | ✅ Ideal | None |
| Spring (Mar–May) | 11–14 hrs | 6–8 hrs | ✅ Good | Light row covers |
| Fall (Sep–Nov) | 10–13 hrs | 5–7 hrs | ⚠ Marginal | Reflective mulch |
| Winter (Dec–Feb) | 8–10 hrs | 3–5 hrs | ❌ Poor outdoors | Grow lights needed |
| Location Type | Typical Sun Hrs | Best Orientation | Suitability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open In-Ground Garden | 8–12 hrs | South-facing | Excellent |
| Raised Bed | 7–11 hrs | South or west | Excellent |
| Container / Patio | 5–10 hrs | Moveable advantage | Good – Excellent |
| Balcony (south-facing) | 4–8 hrs | South ideal | Good |
| Balcony (north-facing) | 1–3 hrs | — | Poor |
| South Window Indoor | 3–6 hrs | South | Marginal |
| Greenhouse | 6–14 hrs | Any with glazing | Excellent |
| Indoor Grow Lights | 14–18 hrs | N/A | Excellent (full control) |
| Plot Name | Dimensions | Area (sq ft) | Area (m²) | Plants at 2 ft spacing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patio Pot (single) | 1.5 ft dia. | 1.8 sq ft | 0.17 m² | 1 plant |
| Window Box | 3 ft x 0.5 ft | 1.5 sq ft | 0.14 m² | 1–2 plants |
| Small Raised Bed | 4 ft x 4 ft | 16 sq ft | 1.49 m² | 4 plants |
| Standard Raised Bed | 4 ft x 8 ft | 32 sq ft | 2.97 m² | 8 plants |
| Medium Garden | 10 ft x 10 ft | 100 sq ft | 9.29 m² | 25 plants |
| Large Garden | 20 ft x 20 ft | 400 sq ft | 37.2 m² | 100 plants |
Cherry Tomatoes need Sun for well growing, but how much amount is enough? The ideal is 6 to 8 hours of direct light daily. One commonly calls that “full Sun” and it has precise meaning in gardening.
Aim for 8 or more hours worth, because those extra two hours do marked difference.
How much sun do cherry tomatoes need?
But here the key spot. Cherry Tomatoes however manage to give fruits even with fewer Sun. Only 4 hours of morning light already is enough for good result.
Varieties like Sungold or Sweet 100 last even with this little amount. Tomatoes that received only 4 hours of Sun, gave more than quite a lot to eat from some plants. They are not as Sun needing as one commonly thinks.
Little tomato types, for instance Cherry Tomatoes, need fewer light than big beefsteak species. So, if your garden receives only 4 to 6 hours of full Sun, best plant species with little fruits, like Cherry Tomatoes. They adapt to weaker light much better than big tomato types, although the total harvest maybe will drop.
In limited light the production does sink, but the few fruits that appear usually have strong taste, nice reward.
Some species answer especially well for dark places. The Barry’s Crazy Cherry give such plenty of fruits, that even weak light probably only drops the amount too average or a bit more than that. The Chocolate Cherry likes direct rays, but one successfully grew it also in shady parts.
The Solar Gold is seen as the king between Cherry Tomatoes.
Windows facing north, without direct sunshine, form difficult conditions. Tomatoes can exist here, but they probably no fruit well. Cherry Tomatoes need direct rays, whether outside or beside glass, together with warmth of 70 degrees Fahrenheit or more.
They need rich ground, enough water and a bit of attention.
Afternoon Sun together with heat can create problems. Young plants best fare with only morning light, until they grow two pairs of real leaves and their roots manage to last the warming and drying of afternoon rays. In very warm regions tomatoes would like a bit of shade during the warmest period.
They stop their growth in too high degrees. In strong rays and heat shading helps to control splits and lower the warming.
Cherry Tomatoes last strong Sun. They cope with fierce rays, but then one must water fully even twice daily, when the plants fruit. While spreading of slices, lay them in indirect rays or use grow lights rather than direct Sun.
Reflected light from bright zones, directed to shady corners by means of whitereflectors, can add a lot of useful light.
