Can You Grow Peanuts in Ohio? 5 Best Varieties to Plant Now

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Grow Peanuts in Ohio

Yes, you can grow peanuts in Ohio, especially in the southern half of the state where the growing season stretches past 150 frost-free days. This guide walks through what works, the right varieties, planting timing, soil prep, and the realistic yield you can expect on small plots.

What Are Peanuts and Why Ohio Is Borderline

Peanuts are a warm-season legume (Arachis hypogaea) that pegs flowers down into the soil to form pods underground. They need long, hot summers and loose, sandy ground. Ohio sits at the cool edge of the peanut belt, but home growers pull off solid harvests with the right variety and a little patience. If you’ve read my piece on what climate peanuts prefer, you already know they want heat, but Ohio summers do deliver enough of it.

When to Plant Peanuts in Ohio

Plant peanuts in Ohio between mid-May and early June, once soil temperature at 4 inches reaches 65°F and frost danger has passed. Southern Ohio (Zone 6b) usually hits this window by May 15. Northern Ohio (Zone 5b–6a) waits until late May or the first week of June.

Ohio peanut planting timeline by region and zone

Peanuts need 110 to 150 days to mature, depending on variety. That’s tight in Ohio, so timing matters more than it does in Georgia. For a deeper look at scheduling, see my peanut planting timing guide.

Region in OhioUSDA ZonePlant ByFirst Frost (avg)
Southern Ohio6a–6bMay 15–25Oct 15–25
Central Ohio6aMay 25–Jun 5Oct 5–15
Northern Ohio5b–6aJun 1–10Sep 30–Oct 10

Where Peanuts Grow Best in Ohio

Peanuts thrive in sandy loam soils along the Ohio River valley, parts of Scioto, Pike, and Lawrence counties. Heavy clay soils common across central Ohio slow root growth and trap moisture, which rots developing pods. According to Ohio State University Extension, legume crops perform best on well-drained ground with a soil pH between 6.0 and 6.5.

Loose sandy loam soil prepared for planting peanuts

If your yard has dense clay, build a raised bed or amend with coarse sand and compost. You can also grow them in containers, which I covered in container peanut growing.

Best Peanut Varieties for Ohio

Pick a short-season variety. Virginia and Runner types (the kind grown in the South) often run out of season here.

  • Spanish peanuts — mature in 100–110 days, small kernels, high oil content
  • Valencia peanuts — mature in 95–110 days, sweet flavor, 3–4 seeds per pod
  • Tennessee Red Valencia — handles cooler nights, reliable for Ohio gardens
  • Early Spanish — fastest to finish, good fit for northern counties

I’d skip Virginia jumbos in Ohio. They want 140+ days and you’ll be racing frost.

How to Grow Peanuts in Ohio: Step-by-Step

1. Prepare the Soil

Loosen soil 8 inches deep. Work in 2 inches of compost. Test pH and add agricultural lime if it reads below 6.0. Skip nitrogen fertilizer; peanuts fix their own through root nodules.

2. Source Raw Seed

Use raw, unroasted peanuts in the shell from a seed supplier. Grocery store peanuts are roasted and won’t germinate. My peanut germination walkthrough covers shell-on vs shelled seed.

3. Plant the Seeds

Plant 1.5 to 2 inches deep, 6 inches apart in rows spaced 24–30 inches. Water lightly after planting. Seeds emerge in 7–14 days when soil holds at 65–70°F.

4. Cultivate and Hill

When plants reach 6 inches tall, mound loose soil around the base. This gives the flower pegs soft ground to push into. Hill again 2 weeks later. Pegs that hit hard soil never form pods.

Gardener hilling soil around young peanut plants

5. Water Steadily

Give peanuts 1 inch of water per week during pod fill (roughly weeks 8–12). Cut back on water in the final 2 weeks before harvest to firm up the kernels.

6. Harvest Before Frost

Pull plants when leaves yellow and inner pod shells show dark veins. In Ohio, that usually falls in late September or early October. A killing frost ruins flavor and ends drying. See my peanut harvest guide for the dig-and-cure routine.

Realistic Yields in Ohio

Expect 1 to 1.5 pounds of peanuts per 10-foot row in a good Ohio season. Commercial yields in Georgia run 4,000+ pounds per acre. Ohio home plots usually land closer to 1,500–2,500 pounds per acre, per data from the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. It’s a hobby crop here, not a cash crop.

Common Problems and Troubleshooting

Pods rotting in soil — drainage is poor, or you watered too late in the season. Lift plants sooner next year.

Flowers but no pods — pegs can’t penetrate hard soil. Hill earlier and keep the bed loose.

Slow germination — soil planted too cold. Wait until it hits a steady 65°F.

Yellow leaves mid-season — possible iron or manganese issue on high-pH soil. Test and adjust.

Animals digging plants up — squirrels, voles, and crows go after planted seed. Cover rows with bird netting until plants are 4 inches tall.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Planting roasted grocery store peanuts (they’re dead seed)
  • Using nitrogen-heavy fertilizer (causes leafy plants, few pods)
  • Picking a Virginia variety in northern Ohio
  • Skipping the hilling step
  • Harvesting after the first frost
  • Storing damp peanuts (they mold fast)

Safety and Storage Notes

Cure dug plants in a dry, ventilated space for 2–3 weeks before shelling. Damp peanuts can develop Aspergillus flavus, a mold that produces aflatoxin. The CDC flags aflatoxin as a serious health risk, so toss any peanuts that smell musty or show dark spots inside the shell. Store cured peanuts in airtight jars in a cool, dry pantry.

FAQs About Growing Peanuts in Ohio

Question

How long do peanuts take to grow in Ohio?

Spanish and Valencia peanuts mature in 100 to 120 days in Ohio. That fits the southern Ohio season comfortably and just squeezes into northern Ohio if you plant by early June and harvest before mid-October frost.
Question

Do peanuts need full sun in Ohio?

Yes, peanuts need at least 8 hours of direct sun daily. Ohio summers provide enough light, but shaded yards or north-facing slopes won’t work. Pick the sunniest, warmest spot you have for the planting bed.
Question

Can I grow peanuts in northern Ohio near Cleveland?

Northern Ohio works for Spanish or Early Spanish peanuts only, planted by June 1 and protected with row covers on cool nights. Expect lower yields than southern Ohio, but a backyard harvest is realistic with a warm summer.
Question

What soil pH do peanuts need?

Peanuts grow best at soil pH 6.0 to 6.5. Ohio soils often run slightly acidic, so a soil test before planting helps. Add agricultural lime in fall if the pH falls below 5.8 to give it time to adjust.
Question

Should I rotate peanuts with other crops?

Yes, rotate peanuts with corn, sorghum, or grasses. Avoid planting peanuts where soybeans, beans, or other legumes grew the prior year. Rotation breaks disease cycles and keeps soil nitrogen balanced for the next crop.

Final Thoughts

Growing peanuts in Ohio works if you match the variety to your season, prep loose soil, and harvest before frost. Southern counties have the easiest time; northern gardeners need short-season Spanish or Valencia types and a warm summer. It’s not a high-volume crop here, but the novelty and flavor of fresh-cured peanuts make the effort worth it for any home grower curious enough to try.

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