How to grow potatoes this winter for a delicious harvest

Have fresh potatoes all winter by growing them indoors. Here's how

Potatoes are one of the most versatile vegetables you can add to your garden, as they can be eaten on their own or added to almost any meal. This low-maintenance vegetable can grow in traditional gardens, container gardens, and even hydroponically. They're full of nutrients and are a key ingredient in many hearty winter dishes, from the classic baked potato to thick potato soup. It's no wonder that many gardeners want to continue growing potatoes through winter for a constant supply of fresh potatoes.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

1 hour

What You Need

  • Compost

  • Potting soil

  • 5-gallon bucket, unused trash can, or similar container

  • Drill

  • Tarp, trash bag, tray, or drop cloth

  • Grow light

If you’re one such gardener, looking for an easy way to keep your potato production going through the changing seasons, then you might want to try growing potatoes indoors. In this guide, we'll answer all your questions about how to grow potatoes indoors during winter.

JESHOOTS.COM / Unsplash

When should you start potatoes for winter?

Your start date will depend on how harsh your winters are and how you intend to grow your potatoes. In regions with mild winters, potatoes can be grown outdoors and planted at the end of summer or the beginning of fall. However, hard freezes or heavy snow can damage or kill potatoes.

In regions with harsher winters, you should avoid growing potatoes outdoors during winter. You can still grow potatoes in containers indoors or in greenhouses, though. You can start your indoor potatoes at any time, since you won’t need to worry about damage from the cold. Potatoes typically take two to four months to be ready for harvest, so consider that when choosing a start time.

1muh / Pixabay

Getting your potatoes started

Starting your potatoes off right can save you a lot of trouble in the future. Here's what you need to do:

Step 1: Choose a variety that grows quickly and can be harvested early.

In general, you’ll see better results with faster-growing, earlier harvesting potatoes, such as Yukon gold or Belmondo. Some potatoes can also be harvested before they’re fully mature. These immature potatoes are called new potatoes. Belmondo and Yukon gold are good choices for this as well.

Step 2: Make sure your soil is rich in nitrogen and has decent drainage.

If you’re growing your potatoes indoors, you can use a mixture of potting soil and compost as your base. For outdoor potatoes, mix some compost into your garden before planting for the same effect.

Step 3: Grow potatoes indoors in a 5-gallon bucket or unused trash can.

This is due to the way potatoes grow. They can get quite tall, forming more potatoes along any part of the stem that is under dirt. While you can grow them in most containers, you'll see the biggest harvest with a tall container.

There are some potato grow bags available to purchase, which are more flexible. The benefit of these is you can fold the sides of the container down, making it easier to reach the potato plants when they are still small.

Step 4: Drill drainage holes in the bottom of the container if there are not some already there.

Step 5: Lay something on the ground underneath the bin to keep your floors clean.

If your potatoes are outdoors, you can skip this step. For indoors potatoes, set the container on a tarp, trash bag, drop cloth, or tray to keep any spilled dirt or excess water off of your floors.

Step 6: Add a layer of soil to the bottom of the container, add your seed potato, and cover it with another 2 inches of soil.

As the potato plant grows, you'll be adding more soil to the container. Your bottom layer of soil should only be a few inches. Make sure there is plenty of room left at the top of the container for the plant to grow.

Graham Corney / Shutterstock

Caring for your potatoes

Once your potatoes are planted, caring for them is easy. Here's how to grow potatoes:

Step 1: Plant your potatoes in full sun.

For indoor potatoes, you may need to supplement with a grow light.

Step 2: Water them thoroughly whenever the soil is dry below the top inch.

Remember that the water will need to reach deeper into the soil, since potato plants are grown in mounds or towers. Make sure you give them enough!

Step 3: Let the plant grow roughly half a foot, then add more soil on top until only the top few inches are above the soil.

This keeps it growing upwards, with the stem that’s underground producing roots and potatoes.

Step 4: Repeat this process twice more, or until your bucker/bin is full.

In general, most gardeners only add soil twice, but you can repeat the process a third or even fourth time, as long as your potato plant keeps growing.

Jurga Jot / Shutterstock

How and when should you harvest your potatoes

Here's what to do when it's harvest time:

Step 1: Check when your potato variety can be harvested.

Harvest times vary depending on the type of potato you're growing. In general, new potatoes can be harvested starting two months after planting. For a fully mature potato, the times range from two and a half months to four months. The potato varieties mentioned earlier, Yukon gold and Belmondo, take between 75 and 90 days, or two and a half to three months on average.

Step 2: Dig the potatoes out by following the stem of the potato plant down, brushing dirt away as you go.

Be careful to avoid damaging the potatoes!

Step 3: Harvest potatoes grown in a bin or buck by carefully tipping it over, emptying the bucket onto a tarp or garbage bag for easier sorting.

However, if you do this and the potatoes aren’t ready to be harvested, getting the plant back into the container is tough. You may want to dig up a few potatoes first to be sure they're ready.

Step 4: Store your potatoes in a cool, dry place for up to a few months.

Lars Blankers / Unsplash

What type of potato grows best indoors?

While any type of potato can be grown indoors, you might be wondering if there are any that grow particularly well or are particularly difficult. We've mentioned choosing a fast growing variety such as Yukon gold or Belmondo, but you should also consider the amount of space you have. Smaller potatoes such as fingerlings and red potatoes are especially good choices.

Most importantly, choose a variety of potato you love! Faster, smaller potatoes might be easier to grow, but if you don't enjoy eating them then you should opt for a different variety. Once you know the basics of how to grow potatoes, the specific care requirements only vary a little.

The only type of potato you might want to avoid are sweet potatoes. Sweet potatoes are actually not related to other potatoes, and while they can be grown indoors it is slightly more difficult. Sweet potatoes take longer to mature and need more space to grow, so you may need extra preparation to grow them indoors.

Now that you know how to grow potatoes, you’re ready to get started planting potatoes for winter. Enjoy your hot, fresh-baked potatoes or hearty winter potato soup throughout winter with this simple and effective planting method. Pick your favorite potato and get started. Soon enough you’ll have plenty of potatoes to last you until spring!

Editors' Recommendations

Cayla Leonard is a writer from North Carolina who is passionate about plants.  She enjoys reading and writing fiction and…
Focus on color: Grow these peach-colored flowers to celebrate the Pantone color of the year
The best flowers to add this soft and inviting color to your garden

Colorful flower gardens can brighten your day, support your local wildlife, and even help you celebrate a new year. Pantone, the company best known for the Pantone Matching System that helps people find and create specific colors of paint, has been choosing a color of the year every year since 1999. This year’s color isn’t just great for interior decorating -- it’s also a great choice for your garden! Here’s what you need to know about bringing the color of the year to your home and garden with peach flowers.
What is the 2024 Pantone color of the year?

The 2024 Pantone color of the year is Peach Fuzz. It is a warm shade of pink that, as the name implies, is reminiscent of peaches. This inviting pink is soft, sweet, and luckily, is the color of many flowers. While you can celebrate this color in your garden by planting peach trees, there are also faster growing plants you can choose. If you’re curious about the color of the year, consider reading all about it on Pantone’s website, where you can learn all about the selection process and explore previous colors of the year.
Peach-colored flowers for your garden

Read more
How to care for gardenia, a fragrant, heat-loving bloom
Grow beautiful gardenias with these tips

 

Spring and summer are known for their warm weather, but for some flowers, it might be a little too warm. Luckily, gardenias aren’t one of those flowers! These beautiful blooms love hot weather and are easy to plant and care for. If you want to grow gardenias in your garden, then this is the care guide for you. We’ll answer all your gardenia care questions so you can plant them confidently and keep them happy and healthy all season long.
Planting gardenias

Read more
How often should you water your grass seeds? Here’s what we know
Tips for watering grass seed to get the lawn of your dreams

A beautiful, lush green lawn is something that many homeowners strive for, but sometimes cultivating that lawn can be quite the headache. Growing the grass from seed complicates matters further, since young plants are naturally more fragile. Ensuring your grass seed survives to become the lawn of your dreams involves many factors, but watering your grass seed correctly can solve many problems before they arise.

Read more