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Are your tomatoes not fruiting? Check out our helpful guide on ways to combat this common issue when growing your own tomatoes.
You chose your tomato seedlings carefully. You planted them. You waited for those first beautiful flowers—and waited. Eventually you found yourself googling some version of, "tomato plant growing but no flowers" and landed here.
While gardening can be incredibly rewarding, it can also feel frustrating when something doesn't grow as intended. Take a deep breath, and know we have some simple fixes to help improve the health of your tomatoes.
Whether you're dealing with determinate or indeterminate tomatoes, it's not unusual to have a tomato plant not flowering. We'll break down four reasons your tomatoes might not be fruiting so you can learn how to increase flowering in tomatoes. With a few small changes to their growing environment, you could have flourishing tomatoes soon.
1. Insufficient Pollination
Your tomatoes might have trouble flowering if they’re not pollinating enough. While tomatoes are self-fertile—meaning, the flowers can pollinate themselves—bees can help improve pollination.
When a bee nudges a flower, it can dislodge the pollen from the stems. So if you’re growing tomatoes inside, your plant might have trouble pollinating without a visiting bee to help shake things loose.
To help your tomato plants pollinate indoors, you could try:
This is a common challenge for tomato gardeners growing their plants indoors, so don’t feel discouraged. Your plant could be pollinating again soon with a little help from you.
2. High Heat Levels
If you’re sweating through a heat wave, that same heat could affect your plant’s ability to effectively produce pollen. Most tomatoes need a daytime temperature that stays below 87 degrees Fahrenheit, and nighttime temperature that falls below 76 degrees Fahrenheit if they’re going to pollinate and produce fruit.
Fortunately, if you keep your tomato plant healthy and watered throughout the heat weave, it should start flowering and eventually fruiting tomatoes once the temperature calms down.
Here’s how to take care of your tomatoes during a heat wave:
3. Insufficient Light
If you’re wondering how to increase flowering in tomatoes, try increasing how much light they receive. Tomatoes need eight hours of daylight to flower. Sunlight gives your tomato plants the energy to produce fruit, so if your plant doesn’t have enough sunlight, you’re less likely to see tomatoes fruiting.
To increase sunlight, try:
While tomato plants need sunlight (or a grow light) to flower and fruit, tomatoes don’t actually need sunlight to ripen. In fact, once the plant has fully grown its tomatoes, those tomatoes will ripen fastest in the shade and at night.
4. Fertilizer and Nutrient Issues
Those growing tomatoes using hydroponic gardening can help give their plants a nutrient boost by using plant food in 3 oz. or 1 liter sizes.
Here’s why we love dispensers:
If you have any questions about when to use plant food—and how much to use—follow the instructions on the packaging, or reach out to the customer service team with more detailed questions.
You should see yellow flowers on your tomato plants at 5–7 weeks, and soon after that, you should see some of those flowers turning into little green tomatoes. If you don't get flowers, you will never get fruit! Sometimes, healthy tomato plants don't seem to want to flower, but very often you can turn them around by changing their environment:
Tomatoes can be a little finicky! Outdoors, they may not set fruit if days are too hot or too cool, if nights are too warm or too cool, if the soil is too wet or too dry, and so on. If your tomatoes are blooming, then you are on the right track, and hopefully some of the ideas here will start those tomatoes coming:
If your tomato plants have lots of fruit that isn't ripening, it may be that the plant doesn't have the energy to "feed" all of them. Imagine a mother cat trying to feed a litter of twenty-five kittens! If your plants are loaded with green tomatoes, consider removing some to let the rest get more of the mother plant’s energy.
Tomatoes are a summer-time crop; the fruit needs warmth to ripen. If the ambient daytime temperature of the AeroGarden is under 70 degrees, you need to find a warmer place for it, or use a space heater (but avoid radiant heat!) to bring the temperature up.
Tomatoes grown in the AeroGarden should be pruned early and often in order for them to grow full and bushy, as well as to flower prolifically. If tomatoes are not pruned early enough in their growth, they will grow tall with lots of leaves and flowers at the top, but no growth on the lower stems.
Once this has happened, it will take some patience to train your tomatoes to leaf out again at the base. Prune off about a third of the leaves (and flowers, if any are present) at the top of the plant, removing the newest, smallest leaves.
This will stimulate the plant to branch out lower on the stem, and eventually to produce flowers and fruit throughout its height. You will need to continue to prune the top of the plank here to see a detailed article with a slideshow on how to prune plants that have grown up into the lights.
Click here to see a detailed article with a slideshow on how to prune plants that have grown up into the lights.
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