How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (2024)

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (2)

Grow Your Own Tomatoes

Tomatoes are the crown jewel of any kitchen garden.

During my warm season, I grow various varieties of tomato plants up my two arch trellises. (Learn how to grow tomatoes up an arch trellis like I do.)

If you love garden-fresh tomatoes as much as I do, one of your pressing concerns in the garden is probably how you can harvest as many tomatoes as possible from a couple plants. Before we get into tomato yields and tips to maximize your production, let's look at some of my favorite tomato varieties to grow.

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (3)

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (4)

My three favorite tomato varieties to grow in the kitchen garden

sungold tomatoes

This super popular variety of cherry tomatoes is probably the most prolific that I grow. Sungold are so named because they ripen to a beautiful golden orange. Once they start producing fruit, you can harvest from them twice a week.

juliet tomatoes

Incredibly tasty, Juliets produce small red grape tomatoes in abundance.

black cherry tomatoes

This heirloom variety produces gorgeous dark purple cherry tomatoes in clusters.

All three varieties are indeterminate tomatoes, meaning they grow as a vine and will produce fruit in clusters over a longer period of time, instead of all at once, as bush varieties do.

Tomatoes are what we call a long and lengthy plant, meaning they take up a lot of space in the garden and they grow for a long time—but the results are so sweet and worth the space and time commitment!

I start my tomatoes by seed indoors. After about a month, I plant them outside in my raised garden beds at the end of May. I harvest regularly from my tomatoes throughout the summer, before their production begins to slow down at the beginning of September.

shop Gardenary arch trellises

A lot of information on the internet about fruit production for a tomato plant will pertain to large tomatoes, rather than the cherry and grape varieties. I personally prefer to grow smaller tomatoes because I get to harvest them more often and pop out to the garden for juicy snacks. I'm not much one for making my own tomato sauces or salsas, nor am I into jarring and canning. For those reasons, I stick to smaller varieties.

When I googled how many tomatoes you can expect to harvest from one plant, I found articles that gave answers ranging from 20 to 200 tomatoes. That's a pretty significant margin!

For simplicity's sake, I'll say that you can expect to enjoy between 20 and 30 tomatoes from a strong and healthy indeterminate tomato plant that's a larger variety.

Now, if we're looking at smaller varieties like the ones I prefer to grow, then we're talking about several hundred tomatoes off of one vine in a given season.

For those of you skeptics out there, let me say that I harvest around 60 or so tomatoes from four plants about every five days during their production window. At six harvests per month, I'm pulling in 360 tomatoes. That means a conservative estimate for the total number of tomatoes harvested during the season would be over 400 tomatoes, or roughly 100 tomatoes per plant.

If you grow tomatoes the way I do, it's safe to bet on getting at least 100 tomatoes off your plants within four to five weeks during your peak season. And believe me, each one of those 100 tomatoes tastes so good.

Let's now look at ways you can maximize your tomato production to ensure you get as many juicy little fruits as possible.

Learn to Set Up Your Kitchen Garden Step by Step

Get your own copy of the Kitchen Garden Revival to learn each step of setting up and growing your own organic kitchen garden.

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (8)

Four tips to maximize your tomato production

These plants love to grow in warm to hot temperatures and receive loads of sunshine. They prefer a lot of space for their roots to dig down deep, they need support, and they'll take whatever nutrients the soil gives them and still want some more.

Follow these four tips to keep your hungry tomatoes happy and, in turn, get tons of fruit from each plant that you're growing.

Start with a good setup

The first thing you want to do is have a really healthy home for your plants, and that means raised beds filled with great soil. A general rule about plants is that however much growth you see above the ground, that same kind of growth is happening below the ground, as well. So when you have a plant that needs a ton of space above the dirt, then that means it needs a lot of space below the dirt, too. Raised beds give the large root systems of your tomato plants room to spread out and dig down deep.

Dig a really deep hole for your tomato plant

When you put your tomato plant in the garden (this would be either a plant you started from seed indoors or a healthy plant you bought from a local farmer or grower), you're going to bury it deeper than what might feel normal. You bury most plants up to their neck, or where the stem grows above the roots, but you'll actually plant your tomatoes much lower under the soil line. You can even bury some leaves. Tomatoes will produce roots on whatever plant parts nestle below the ground, and this helps form a strong structure for the plant, which you'll need later when it's bearing lots of fruit for you.

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (10)

Feed your tomato plants often

Plants in the Nightshade family (i.e., your tomatoes) are heavy feeders, which means the plants take up a lot of nutrients from the soil often. But how often is too often to fertilize tomatoes?

I learned from another gardener that every time your plant is doing something new, you should feed it. When I see my plants starting to flower, setting fruit, or growing new vines, I know it's time for me to come in and give it a little bit of extra food.

The food that you'll give your plants depends on what they're growing. When your plant is just getting started in the garden, you'll want to add nitrogen to strengthen the plant's main stalk and help it form green leaves. If your plant is fruiting or flowering, you'll want to give it a phosphorus-rich fertilizer to help it form fruit. You could also add more compost to the base of the plant. Make sure to water deeply after fertilizing.

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (11)

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (12)

Take the Green Thumb Quiz

Discover your own gardening strengths and find inspiration to grow your self further.

take the quiz

Prune your tomato plant weekly

Pruning is a way of talking to your plants. You can speak their plant language and tell them, “I want less of this and more of that, please.” If your plant is producing too many non-fruiting branches, you can say, "Hey there, I actually want more fruit and fewer leaves," to your plant. About once a week during the growing period of your tomato plant, prune from the bottom up and take the oldest leaves away to help your plant focus on fruit production. This is essential for getting more tomato fruits from your plant.

Help your tomato plants grow in optimal conditions

As I like to say, plants growing in optimal conditions love to thrive. Tomatoes growing in optimal conditions will literally take over your garden space. The caveat here is that their lush growth may not be the kind you actually want. I've had years where I got tons of growth and my tomato plants were huge, yet there was little to no fruit forming on the vines. It wasn't until the year I started pruning them that I got way more fruit than leaves from my tomato plants.

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (14)

Get growing

Keep these four tips in mind to get impressive results from your tomato plants. You'll soon be picking tomatoes for weeks on end and popping them into your mouth for a light snack right there in the garden.

Thanks for bringing back the kitchen garden with me!

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (15)

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (16)

Ready to master growing in the garden?

Join Gardenary 365

Gardenary 365 gives you on-demand access to our bestselling online gardening courses including Salad Garden School, Herb Garden Guide, Microgreens, and Indoor Seed Starting, as well as monthly coaching, habit tracking, and a private community. There's no other place on the internet where you can grow like this.

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (18)

How Many Tomatoes Can You Get From One Plant? • Gardenary (2024)

FAQs

How many tomatoes will one plant produce? ›

That means a conservative estimate for the total number of tomatoes harvested during the season would be over 400 tomatoes, or roughly 100 tomatoes per plant. If you grow tomatoes the way I do, it's safe to bet on getting at least 100 tomatoes off your plants within four to five weeks during your peak season.

How many tomato plants for a family of 4 for a year? ›

How many vegetable to plant for a family
Vegetable cropPlants per 1 personPlants per 4 People
Radishes10 to 1560
Spinach4 to 816 to 32
Squash (Summer & Winter)1 to 22 to 4
Tomatoes1 to 41 to 16
18 more rows
Mar 12, 2018

How many times can you harvest one tomato plant? ›

If you plant what are known as determinate (or bush) tomato varieties, you'll have just one harvest of tomatoes before the plants die. Determinate tomato plants are "programmed" to grow, bloom and fruit just once during a growing season.

Do tomato plants bear fruit more than once? ›

The greenhouse industry uses indeterminate tomatoes and will sometimes have tomato plants of 40 feet or more! The average height is about 6 to 8 feet for a home garden. This type of tomato plant will grow some, set some flowers, produce fruit and continue to grow and repeat the process all season long.

Do tomatoes regrow once picked? ›

Do tomatoes grow back after picking? When you have picked tomatoes they can grow back during the harvest season depending on the variety. Tomato plants are unlikely to reproduce tomatoes each year, however, as they do not tend to survive the winter.

What is the average yield of tomatoes? ›

The national average yield per acre for field-grown fresh market tomatoes was 28,700 pounds per acre in 2015.

How long will tomato plants keep producing? ›

All determinate variety tomatoes produce fruit over a two-to-three-week window. Indeterminate varieties continue growing and fruiting until the plants are killed by frost. Indeterminate varieties can produce fruit for 2 to 3 months. Add weeks to the end of your tomato season by planting several indeterminate varieties.

How big of a garden to feed a family of 6? ›

Generally speaking, 200 square feet of garden space per person will allow for a harvest that feeds everyone year-round.

How many tomato plants can you have in a 4x4 bed? ›

A 4ft. x 4ft. raised garden bed gives you 16 square feet of growing space (more if you add some trellises for vertical space). That means you can grow around 10 to 11 indeterminate, or vining, tomato plants in one raised bed—if you really love cherry tomatoes, that is.

Should I water my tomato plants twice a day? ›

You'll know you've watered enough when the water trickles through the pot's drainage holes. A mature tomato plant in a pot uses a gallon of water daily but you may need to hydrate the plant twice a day in hot, dry conditions.

What month to plant tomatoes? ›

Tomatoes are warm weather plants which need plenty of sun to thrive and grow best at temperatures between 70 and 75°F (21 and 24°C). Seeds are best sown under cover in March and April ready for harvesting from July to September.

What month are tomatoes ready to pick? ›

August is prime time throughout most of the country for harvesting tomatoes. Home-grown tomatoes picked at or near the peak of ripeness can't be beaten for flavor, but it's not always obvious when the best picking time is. You can't go strictly by color when deciding when to pick.

Should I pinch off tomato flowers? ›

Remove flowers until plants are 12 to 18 inches tall, so plants can direct more energy to the roots. Remove all leafy suckers beneath the first fruit cluster so they won't slow the development of the fruit.

What triggers tomatoes to fruit? ›

If you're wondering how to increase flowering in tomatoes, try increasing how much light they receive. Tomatoes need eight hours of daylight to flower. Sunlight gives your tomato plants the energy to produce fruit, so if your plant doesn't have enough sunlight, you're less likely to see tomatoes fruiting.

How to trim tomatoes for better yield? ›

Removing suckers (new shoots that develop in the leaf axils) reduces potential yields, but increases airflow. Leave the sucker just below the first flower cluster (remove all other suckers below that one), and allow all suckers above the first flower cluster to grow.

What is the record number of tomatoes per plant? ›

A man has broken his own world record for growing the most tomatoes from a single stem. Douglas Smith from Stanstead Abbotts, Hertfordshire, grew 1,269 tomatoes on a single truss last September, a feat which has just been verified by Guinness World Records.

How to get more tomatoes per plant? ›

More Sun Equals More Fruit

It's important to choose the sunniest spot in your garden for your tomatoes. They soak up sunshine just like water. Aim for plants to get seven hours of sun a day. Give your plants room to grow, too.

What is the average lifespan of a tomato plant? ›

What is a tomato plant's natural lifespan? A tomato plant typically lives for one growing season (6-8 months) when grown outdoors, but when nurtured in ideal or controlled growing conditions indoors, tomato plants can survive between 2-5 years.

How much space does a tomato plant need? ›

In Ground: If you're planting directly in the ground, you may have more space and be planting in rows. In that case, space your tomatoes 18-24 inches apart along a row, but space your rows about 36 inches apart. This will leave enough room for you to work between rows.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Laurine Ryan

Last Updated:

Views: 5863

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (77 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Laurine Ryan

Birthday: 1994-12-23

Address: Suite 751 871 Lissette Throughway, West Kittie, NH 41603

Phone: +2366831109631

Job: Sales Producer

Hobby: Creative writing, Motor sports, Do it yourself, Skateboarding, Coffee roasting, Calligraphy, Stand-up comedy

Introduction: My name is Laurine Ryan, I am a adorable, fair, graceful, spotless, gorgeous, homely, cooperative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.