March is the month when seed sowing genuinely opens up in the UK. January and February required heat, supplemental light and patience – March brings improving temperatures, significantly better natural light and, in the southern half of the country by mid-month, soil that is beginning to warm enough for direct outdoor sowing of hardy crops. The range of what can be started this month is substantially broader than the two preceding months and includes the first proper outdoor sowings of the season. For many UK gardeners, March is when the excitement of the growing year begins in earnest.

The practical challenge in March is managing multiple simultaneous sowings across different temperature requirements and locations. Tender crops like tomatoes and courgettes still need indoor warmth. Hardy crops like spinach, peas and broad beans can go under cover or outside depending on the weather. Brassicas – cabbages, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, kale – need to be started in March for transplanting in May and June. Getting the timing and location right for each type avoids the twin failures of tender crops killed by cold and hardy ones that bolt because they were raised in too much warmth. The sowing guide below works through each category clearly.

Sowing indoors

March indoor sowings – what needs warmth
Crop
Temp
Weeks to plant out
Notes
Tomatoes
18-22°C
10-12 weeks
March sowing is the most common – matches planting time perfectly
Courgettes and squash
18-22°C
6-8 weeks
End of March only – fast growing, can outgrow space quickly
Brassicas
15-18°C
8-10 weeks
Cabbage, broccoli, kale, Brussels sprouts – sow in modules
Leeks and celery
15-18°C
10-12 weeks
Still time for leeks – sow thinly in a tray, transplant when pencil-thick
Bedding and flowers
18-20°C
10-12 weeks
Petunias, antirrhinums, begonias, salvias – main sowing month

March is the primary month for starting brassicas from seed in the UK. Cabbages, broccoli, purple sprouting broccoli, kale and Brussels sprouts all benefit from an indoor module sowing in March – they are transplanted to their final positions in May and June once they have developed into robust seedlings. Sow one or two seeds per module cell at 15-18°C and thin to the strongest. Brassicas do not need the high temperatures required by tomatoes and can be germinated on a cool windowsill or in an unheated propagator – indeed, excessively warm germination conditions can cause them to grow too quickly and produce weak, drawn seedlings.

Courgettes and squash are best started at the very end of March rather than the beginning – they germinate within days and grow so rapidly that a March sowing is planting-ready by late May, which is exactly the right time. Start them any earlier and you will have large, pot-bound plants sitting waiting for the weather to improve. Sow one seed per 9cm pot on its side – this prevents water sitting on the flat seed surface and causing rot – and keep at 20°C until germinated.

Direct outdoor sowing

Early March
Hardy crops that tolerate cold soil – broad beans, peas, spinach and onion sets can be planted outside in early March in the south. In the north, wait until mid-month or conditions feel right. Cover with fleece after sowing to conserve warmth and speed germination.
Mid March
Parsnips can go in from mid-March when soil has warmed above 7°C – they are notoriously slow to germinate and benefit from mixing with radish seed as a marker row. Salad leaves, rocket and early carrots can also go outside under cover of a cloche or fleece.
Late March
Beetroot, summer cabbages, Swiss chard and kohl rabi can all go outside in late March in sheltered positions. In the south, early potatoes can go in too. Hardy annual flowers – cornflower, nigella, calendula – can be scattered directly where they are to flower.
Not yet
Runner beans, French beans, sweetcorn, cucumbers, courgettes and any frost-tender plant must wait until after the last frost – late May in most of the UK. Sowing tender crops outside in March is a waste of seed and effort.
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Best varieties for March sowing

Tomatoes – best for March sowing
Gardener’s Delight (reliable cordon cherry), Sungold (exceptional flavour), Alicante (classic all-rounder), Shirley (good disease resistance for UK conditions). Avoid very large beefsteak varieties unless you have a reliable heated greenhouse.
Brassicas – best for March sowing
Cabbage: Hispi (fast) or January King (autumn use). Broccoli: Calabrese for summer, Purple Sprouting for winter. Kale: Cavolo Nero or Red Russian. Brussels sprouts: Trafalgar or Igor for reliability.
Salads – direct or module sow
Little Gem lettuce for compact heads. Lollo Rossa or Oak Leaf for cut-and-come-again. Rocket is the fastest crop to harvest – ready in 3-4 weeks from a March sowing under fleece. Mizuna and mustard leaves add variety.
Hardy annuals – scatter direct
Cornflower, nigella, calendula, ammi majus, larkspur and phacelia can all be scattered directly in March where they are to flower. Rake in lightly, water and leave. They will establish quickly once soil warms.

March sowing tips and checklist

March sowing checklist
Start tomatoes mid-month
Sow brassicas in modules
Direct sow peas and spinach
Scatter hardy annual flowers
Sow courgettes end of month
Plant onion sets outside
Sow salad leaves under cover
Prick out February seedlings

Hardy annual flowers scattered in March establish better than later sowings because they have time to develop strong root systems before summer heat arrives. Cornflowers, nigella, calendula, larkspur and ammi majus are all straightforward from a direct March sowing – rake the soil surface to a fine tilth, scatter the seed thinly, rake in very lightly and water. Do not cover with fleece as most hardy annuals germinate best with exposure to light. Thin seedlings to 20-30cm apart once established. The only mistake to avoid is sowing into wet, cold soil that has not been allowed to drain – seeds sown into waterlogged soil rot rather than germinate, and March can still produce days where the soil is saturated after winter rain. Wait for a dry spell and the surface to begin to lose the grey, wet sheen before sowing.

Peas direct sown in March perform particularly well if the soil has been prepared in advance. Peas fix atmospheric nitrogen through root nodule bacteria and do not need a rich soil – they actually perform better in a moderately fertile soil than a heavily manured one, which produces excessive leafy growth at the expense of pods. What they do need is good drainage and a soil pH of 6.0-7.0. Sow in a flat-bottomed drill 5cm deep and 5cm wide, placing seeds in a double row 7cm apart. Support with twigs, netting or a proper pea frame before the plants need it rather than after – trying to thread established pea growth through netting is an exercise in frustration.

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March is the one month you can sow too early outdoors as well as too late. The temptation in a warm spell is to get seeds straight into the ground, but a cold snap after sowing – common in March – can either kill seedlings outright or trigger bolting in crops like spinach and some lettuces that interpret cold as a signal to set seed. Use fleece over outdoor sowings throughout March and be patient with tender crops. The soil will be warm enough by late April for direct sowing without protection.

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Heated propagator thermostat

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Horticultural fleece for frost protection

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Module seed tray set

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As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Prices correct at time of publishing.