Garden Tulip

How to Plant a Tulip

Tulipa gesneriana
Reviewed by Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Quick Answer

Plant tulip bulbs in fall, six to eight weeks before your ground freezes hard. Set each bulb six to eight inches deep with the pointed end up, four to six inches apart, in a sunny well-drained spot. The bulbs root through fall, rest through winter, and bloom in spring about five to seven months after planting.

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When and where to plant

Tulips want full sun, six or more hours of direct light a day. They tolerate dappled light, but blooms get smaller and shorter-stemmed in shade. Choose a spot where the spring sun hits before nearby trees leaf out.

Plant in fall, six to eight weeks before the ground freezes hard in your area. The bulbs need this window to grow roots before winter dormancy. They also need 12 to 14 weeks of cold soil below 55 degrees Fahrenheit to trigger bloom, so growers in zones 8 and warmer should pre-chill bulbs in the fridge for two to three months before planting.

Soil must drain well. Tulip bulbs rot fast in soggy ground. Avoid low spots where water pools after rain, and amend heavy clay with grit or coarse sand before planting. Cluster bulbs in groups of five or more for the strongest visual display in spring.

Timing Fall planting Before ground freezes
Sun 6+ hours Full sun, no deep shade
Soil Well-drained Avoid wet spots
Spacing 4โ€“6โ€ณ Apart, in clusters of 5+

Planting your tulip bulbs

Pick firm, paper-skinned bulbs from a garden store. Soft, moldy, or wrinkled bulbs rot in the ground and never emerge. The single most important rule when planting is depth. Each bulb goes six to eight inches deep, which is three times its height, with the pointed end facing up. Bulbs planted too shallow heave to the surface in winter freezes and never get enough chill to bloom.

Depth 6โ€“8โ€ณ below soil
Spacing 4โ€“6โ€ณ apart
First bloom 5โ€“7 months later
  1. 1
    Dig the holes six to eight inches deep Use a bulb planter, trowel, or shovel. The bottom of the hole should sit three times the height of the bulb below the soil surface. Too shallow means frost-heave and weak shoots. Too deep means delayed or missing emergence in spring.
  2. 2
    Set each bulb point up The pointed tip is where the shoot emerges. Orient the bulb with the point straight up and the flat or rounded root plate on the bottom. Bulbs planted upside-down often fail to emerge or come up weakly and months late.
  3. 3
    Backfill and water in once Fill the hole with the native soil you dug out, pressing gently to settle. Water once, deeply, to settle the soil around the bulb and trigger root growth. Skip further watering through winter, since wet soil during dormancy is the most common rot cause.
  4. 4
    Mulch lightly and wait Spread a two-inch layer of bark or shredded leaf mulch over the planted area. The mulch insulates against winter temperature swings and protects against frost-heave. From here, the bulbs are doing their work below ground for the next four to five months.

From planting to bloom

A planted tulip bulb spends four to five months underground before you see anything above the surface. That is normal. The plant is growing roots all through cool fall, resting through winter, and waiting for soil to warm in spring.

Skip watering during dormancy. The one good soak right after planting is enough, and fall rain and winter precipitation handle the rest. Extra water during the cold months only invites bulb rot.

Once foliage emerges in spring, the plant flowers in 60 to 75 days. After the petals drop, let the leaves yellow naturally before cutting them back. The yellowing leaves are how the bulb stores energy for next year.

MONTH 1
Roots establish before winter No surface growth. Water once if fall rain is sparse, otherwise leave alone.
MONTHS 2โ€“5
Quiet dormancy under cover Bulbs rest below ground. Snow and mulch insulate from temperature swings.
MONTHS 6โ€“8
Emergence and bloom Foliage breaks ground in early spring. Plants flower 60 to 75 days later.

What can go wrong

  1. Bulbs heaved up by frost

    Planted too shallow. Repeated freeze-thaw cycles push shallow bulbs up to the surface, where they dry out or get eaten. Replant six to eight inches deep, which is three times the bulb's height. A two-inch layer of mulch helps insulate against temperature swings and keeps bulbs in place.
  2. Squirrels digging up bulbs

    Surface scent and shallow planting. Squirrels are most likely to dig in the first two weeks after planting, before the soil settles and the scent fades. Plant deeper, cover the area with chicken wire pinned to the ground for the first month, or sprinkle crushed oyster shell over the soil. Remove any papery bulb wrappers from the surface, since these attract attention.
  3. No emergence in spring

    Several possible causes. Dig down gently next to where you planted. A firm bulb that did not emerge is likely planted wrong-side-up or too deep. A mushy bulb has rotted from wet soil. An empty hole means an animal got it. Replace with new bulbs next fall and double-check depth and orientation.
  4. Stunted or weak shoots in spring

    Bulbs did not get enough chill, or were planted too late or too dry. Tulips need 12 to 14 weeks of cold soil below 55 degrees Fahrenheit to push strong shoots. In zones 8 and warmer, pre-chill bulbs in the fridge for two to three months before planting. In cooler zones, plant earlier in fall next year so the cold window starts in time.
  5. Foliage but no flowers

    Insufficient chill, planted too shallow, or in too much shade. Tulip bulbs often skip blooming in warm zones because they cannot get enough cold to set flower buds. Pre-chill next year, plant deeper, and move to a sunnier spot. Some growers treat tulips as annuals in warm zones, buying fresh bulbs every fall.
  6. Mushy or rotted bulbs

    Wet soil. Tulip bulbs rot fast when planted into soggy ground or watered through winter dormancy. Pick a well-drained spot, amend heavy clay with grit or coarse sand before planting, and skip watering during the cold months. If your site stays wet, plant in raised rows or containers next time.
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About This Article

Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Kiersten Rankel, M.S.
Botanical Data Lead at Greg ยท Plant Scientist
About the Author
Kiersten Rankel holds an M.S. in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology from Tulane University. A certified Louisiana Master Naturalist, she has over a decade of experience in science communication. At Greg, she curates species data and verifies care recommendations against botanical research.
See Kiersten Rankel's full background on LinkedIn.
Editorial Process
Planting recommendations verified against species growth data from Greg's botanical database, cross-referenced with USDA hardiness zone data and published horticulture research.
3,450+ Greg users growing this plant
USDA hardiness zones 3a–8b