Zucchini Plant Spacing Calculator – How Far Apart to Plant?

🥒 Zucchini Plant Spacing Calculator

Find exactly how many zucchini plants fit your garden bed — with spacing recommendations by growing method

Quick Presets
📏 Garden Details
✅ Your Zucchini Spacing Results
📊 Spacing by Growing Method
36–48"
Traditional Row
24–36"
Raised Bed
48–60"
Hill Planting
18–24"
Vertical Trellis
18–24"
Compact Variety
1 per pot
Container
48–72"
Row Width
2–3
Plants per Hill
📏 Plants per 100 sq ft by Spacing
Plant Spacing Metric Equiv. Plants/100 sq ft Plants/10 m² Recommended For
18 in46 cm~25~27Compact / Trellis
24 in61 cm~16~17Raised Bed / Trellis
30 in76 cm~10~11Raised Bed
36 in91 cm~7~8Traditional Row
42 in107 cm~5~6Traditional Row
48 in122 cm~4~4Hill / Standard
60 in152 cm~3~3Large Varieties
72 in183 cm~2~2Very Large / Hill
🌱 Row Spacing Reference
Method Plant Spacing Row Spacing Plants per Row (10 ft) Rows per 10 ft Width
Traditional36–48 in60–72 in3–41–2
Raised Bed24–36 in36–48 in4–52–3
Hill Planting48–72 in48–72 in2–31–2
Vertical Trellis18–24 in24–36 in5–73–5
Compact Variety18–24 in24–36 in5–73–5
📦 Common Garden Sizes – Plants Needed
Garden Size Area (sq ft) Traditional (36 in) Raised Bed (24 in) Trellis (18 in)
4 × 4 ft16 sq ft1–22–33–4
4 × 8 ft32 sq ft2–34–56–9
8 × 8 ft64 sq ft4–57–1012–18
10 × 10 ft100 sq ft6–810–1618–25
10 × 20 ft200 sq ft12–1620–3236–50
20 × 20 ft400 sq ft24–3340–6572–100
🌾 Hill Planting Guide
Garden Size Hill Spacing Number of Hills Seeds to Plant Final Plants (thinned)
10 × 10 ft48 in3–412–246–12
10 × 20 ft48 in6–824–4812–24
20 × 20 ft60 in9–1236–7218–36
30 × 30 ft72 in12–1648–9624–48
💡 Spacing Tip: Always err on the side of more space rather than less. Overcrowded zucchini plants compete for nutrients and water, reduce air circulation, and are more prone to powdery mildew. The minimum recommended spacing is 24 inches for compact varieties and 36 inches for standard types.
💡 Hill Planting Tip: When planting in hills, sow 4–6 seeds per hill and thin to the 2–3 strongest seedlings once they reach 3–4 inches tall. Hills should be spaced 48–72 inches apart (center to center) to give each group ample room to sprawl.

Note: This article is based on actual experience in gardening and practical advice for growing.

Zucchini plants reach really big sizes in good conditions. They spread their leaves during growth hence give them enough space. The right spacing depends on the state of the crop and if the species is a bush or vine type.

How far apart to plant Zucchini

Common advice is to lay one Zucchini plant for every two to three feet of space. At least, plants should stand two feet or sixty centimetres from each other. Some gardeners lay them 18 to 24 inches from each other with rows six feet apart.

Others plant them one foot from each other with rows 1,5 feet apart, but only if one does heavy pruning. Laying them only one foot apart without pruning does not work, because the plants become huge.

When one plants from seeds, place them one inch deep. Put two or three seeds in every hole and space the holes three feet from each other. Instructions on seed packets commonly say plant every hill with four to five seeds, later thin to three plants when they reach three inches tall.

After thinning, remove at least one plant per hill and leave only one or two of the strongest. If plants are too dense, they will compete for water and food.

Growing Zucchini vertically helps to save space. Even so, Zucchini plants do not climb naturally. They do not have tendrils like cucumbers.

Because most Zucchini are bush plants, one can grow them in big round tomato cages, guiding the leaves upward in the cage so that they stay held off the soil. Tomato cages work well for this, surely better then walking on the leaves always to reach the fruits. During vertical growth, one plant needs only two squares in a square foot garden.

Normal bush Zucchini need nine squares.

In a 4×4 raised bed, every plant takes around nine square feet. So one can lay two plants in a box, or maybe three in a bigger bed. For vertical growth in raised beds, one can narrow the spacing to 12 to 15 inches between plants.

Using smaller species is also useful. Growing tinier squash means harvesting fresh Zucchini almost daily. The amount of production will not be better with narrow spacing, because squash can carry several stems after rooting, but it works much better in small space.

In cool climates, spacing plants one metre from each other works for traditional growth. Mixing the rows a bit also allows one to fit some extra plants. When one hesitates, follow the directions onthe seed packet.

Zucchini Plant Spacing Calculator – How Far Apart to Plant?

Leave a Comment