Horticultural Planning Records Est. data · NOAA 1991–2020 · USDA 2023

Vegetable · Amaryllidaceae

How to Grow Bunching Onion

Cool season Frost hardy Full sun
Days to maturity 60–80
Spacing 2"
Plants / sq ft 12
Season Cool

Planting Bunching Onion

Bunching Onion is a cool season vegetable in the Amaryllidaceae family. Getting the timing right is the difference between a strong stand and a disappointing one, so the windows below are given relative to your own last spring frost and first fall frost rather than a generic calendar date. Look up your local frost dates and count back or forward from there.

Bunching Onion is started indoors 6–8 weeks before your last spring frost date, giving seedlings a head start before they move outside.

You can sow Bunching Onion directly into the garden 2–4 weeks before your last frost.

Bunching Onion can be grown by direct sowing and starting indoors. Starting indoors gives the longest, most controlled season, while direct sowing is simplest where the season is long enough.

Spacing and Planting Depth

Give Bunching Onion room to mature. The figures below come from verified extension and seed-supplier data for typical varieties.

Spacing in row2 inches
Row spacing6 inches
Plants per sq ft12
Planting depth0.5 inches
Sun requirementFull sun

Days to Maturity

Bunching Onion reaches maturity in 60–80 days from transplant.

For a continuous harvest, sow a new batch every 21 days. Use the succession planting scheduler →

Bunching Onion is ready to harvest after about 70 days. Harvest before summer heat or, for fall crops, before a hard freeze, to keep quality high.

Conditions and Care

As a cool-season vegetable, Bunching Onion does its best growing in the cooler weather of spring and fall and tends to bolt or turn bitter in summer heat. It is frost hardy and can shrug off light freezes, so it can stay in the ground later into the season than tender crops.

Bunching Onion needs full sun — give it at least six hours of direct light a day for the best growth and flavor. Sow seed about 0.5 inches deep, then keep the soil evenly moist until seedlings establish.

Bunching Onion belongs to the Amaryllidaceae family; rotating where you grow members of this family each year helps limit the build-up of soil-borne pests and disease. Because it matures relatively quickly, Bunching Onion rewards succession sowing: small, repeated plantings keep a steady supply coming rather than one short glut.

Companion Plants

Pairing Bunching Onion with the right neighbors can improve growth and deter pests; a few combinations are best avoided.

Grows well with: Carrots, Lettuce (Loose-leaf), Tomato

Keep away from: Shelling Peas, Green Beans (Bush)

Growing Notes

Non-bulbing perennial scallion type.

Plan your Bunching Onion schedule
Data sources
  • Johnny's Selected Seeds