The Plant Hardiness Zone Map was updated for the 2024 gardening season with the addition of thousands more local weather stations. Look at your growing zone or gardening zone to understand which plants can survive your area’s climate. Did your planting zone change?
What Are Planting Zones?
When choosing perennial plants for your garden, it’s important to select varieties that can thrive year-round in your area, especially in regions where extreme winter temperatures are normal. Planting zones generally define which plants can survive winter in your area, and zones are typically listed in plant growing guides for reference.
The two most commonly referenced hardiness zone maps are those produced by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Natural Resources Canada (NRC). Different measures are used to create each country’s map, as explained below.
Zone maps are not absolute; if you find the information contradictory to your own experience, you may live in a microclimate. Soil, moisture, humidity, heat, wind, and other conditions also affect the viability of individual plants.
Find Your USDA Planting Zone
Considered the current standard measure of plant hardiness, the USDA 2023 Plant Hardiness Zone Map is based on average annual minimum winter temperatures. The map is divided into thirteen distinct 10ºF zones, which are further divided into subzones of 5°F.
Check the official USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map below, or visit the USDA website to find out exactly which zone you live in!
Plant Zone Map Courtesy of USDA
Note: The USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map was just updated in November 2023, the first update since 2012. According to the USDA, the new 2023 map uses data from 13,412 weather stations compared to 7,983 from the previous map. Compared to the 2012 map, the 2023 version shows that half of the country moved up to a warmer zone (including much of Alaska) while the other half stayed in the same zone.
The scientists are using 30 years of long-range data and more sophisticated computers for a more accurate map, especially in challenging areas such as mountain zones and Alaska, which may have been rated too cold or warm in prior map iterations. Learn more about the updated map here.
How to Use Your Planting Zone
Planting zones are most helpful to gardeners growing perennial plants since they live beyond just one growing season, regrowing each spring. Perennials need to be able to survive winter in your area, so it’s essential to know how cold it typically gets in your area and whether a particular plant is hardy enough to survive those temperatures.
Perennial flowers, shrubs, and trees grow best when planted in the appropriate zone. You’ll find that winter damage occurs most often when plants are out of their range or comfort zone. When you choose plants for a garden or landscape, avoid selecting plants that are only marginally hardy for your region; that’s when you’ll see winter damage, poor growth, and a reduction in flowering.
For annual plants, like most vegetables and some flowers, it’s far more important to pay attention to things like the length of your growing season and the typical dates of your first and last frosts. (See local frost dates here.) Because annuals are only meant to last the length of one growing season, planting zones don’t necessarily factor into the equation.
NRC Canadian Planting Zones Map
Unlike the USDA map, which is based only on minimum winter temperatures, the planting zones map produced by Natural Resources Canada considers a wider range of climatic variables, including maximum temperatures and the length of the frost-free period. However, the NRC also produces a map that shows plant hardiness zones for Canada based on the USDA extreme minimum temperature approach. Click here to see both Canadian planting zone maps.
Check out a simplified version of the official Natural Resources Canada Plant Hardiness Zone Map below, then go to the Natural Resources Canada website to find out which zone you live in!
Yes, Kitty, it’s disgraceful. The article doesn’t bother to mention that the last time the zone map was updated we had just come through a stretch of record breaking cold winters which skewed the data. But we’re the crazy ones. smh
Kitty, Ms. Betty is correct. Climate change is a natural occurrence that has been happening for thousands if not millions of years. And no, I do not think the earth is flat. Only WOKE people believe in "climate change" in the current sense.
The rapid climate change that is occurring now had occurred in history only under the influence of catastrophic events like extreme volcanic eruptions and collision with a meteor. It is naive to call what is happening now a natural change. Scientific data fully supports the underlying cause to be excessive carbon dioxide pouring into the atmosphere by our burning fossil fuels and industrial emissions. Also, we are destroying forests which help keep the CO2 levels balanced at an unnatural rate. The rapid, unnatural environmental changes are well documented. Climate change is real!
The Scientific Data you speak of was PAID FOR to get the numbers they want. Scare Tactics are used to make people believe. Watch this video and learn how they are lying to everyone. https://www.foxnews.com/transcript/dr-patrick-michaels-on-the-truth-about-global-warming