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Basil Microgreens

Ocimum basilicum
Also known as: Sweet Basil, St. Joseph's Wort, Genovese Basil

Basil Microgreens is a microgreen in the Lamiaceae family. It grows well indoors with medium moisture, and is listed for USDA zones 2-13. Plants reach harvest about 10–30 days after planting and sit about 3 inches apart.

Varieties

9 from True Leaf Market & High Mowing · sorted by days to maturity
  • Red Rubin10–25 days

    Heirloom; Non-GMO; Annual

    68 Days. Annual. A dark-purple variety in both leaf and stem. Perfect for microgreens, this strain will also produce nice Italian large leaf type leaves with not only great color but wonderful fragrance and bold spicy taste as well. Really too pretty for the herb garden, mix it in with your ornamental beds and containers! **Note: This seed varies widely in color, please be aware that the percentages of green and purple vary from lot to lot and is in no way consistent.**

    View on True Leaf Market
  • Sweet (Organic)10–25 days

    Heirloom; Organic; Non-GMO; Annual

    Organic Sweet Basil Seeds. 85 Days. Annual. Ocimum basilicum. Non-GMO, Certified Organic by Oregon Tilth. Sweet basil is similar to genovese basil but with an extra hint of sweetness with notes of anise or cloves. All basil varieties are members of the mint family and are among the most popular, versatile and easy herbs to grow.

    View on True Leaf Market
  • Genovese12–16 days

    Heirloom / Open Pollinated; Non-GMO

    12-16 days. Use micro basil in place of regular basil in any recipe, for extra intense basil flavor. Micro basil pesto is amazing. Keep damp with regular misting until sprouted and the roots are established.

    View on True Leaf Market
  • Genovese (Organic)12–16 days

    Heirloom; Organic

    Genovese Basil microgreens are ready to harvest in about 12-16 days. These organic, open-pollinated microgreens have an intense, classic sweet basil flavor and can be used in place of mature basil in any recipe, including pesto. Keep the growing medium damp with regular misting until the seeds sprout and roots are established.

    View on True Leaf Market
  • Basil16–25 days

    Microgreen

    Aromatic half-circle shaped leaves, short stem

    View on High Mowing
  • Italian Large Leaf16–25 days

    Heirloom; Non-GMO

    Non-GMO Basil Italian Large Leaf seeds are an easy herb to grow. It thrives either in the traditional outdoor gardens and urban gardens or indoor planting containers and hanging baskets. Allow the herb to receive lots of sunlight and warm air. The lemony-sweet scent of basil is unattractive to aphids, mites, and hornworms, keeping them away from your other herbs and plants.

    View on True Leaf Market
  • Cinnamon18–30 days

    Heirloom; Non-GMO

    18-30+ days. This variety of basil may look like any other with faint shades of bronze in its stems, but the aroma and flavor will tell you otherwise. While still maintaining a licorice-like, classic basil flavor, spicy hints can be noted in its flavor, making it perfect for the holidays!

    View on True Leaf Market
  • Dark Opal18–30 days

    Heirloom / Open Pollinated; Non-GMO

    18-30+ days. This variety of purple basil seeds has a beautiful dark color, earning its name of Dark Opal. They are an ideal heirloom microgreens seed that growing consistently and uniformly. **Note: This seed varies widely in color, please be aware that the percentages of green and purple vary from lot to lot and is in no way consistent.**

    View on True Leaf Market
  • Thai18–30 days

    Heirloom; Non-GMO; Container

    18-30+ days. Thai Basil Microgreens Seeds are just as easy to grow as other varieties of basil microgreens seeds. Thai Basil, when grown as a microgreen, tastes like basil but with a hint of amazing Anise / Licorice flavor. Mucilaginous. Keep damp with regular misting.

    View on True Leaf Market
Family
Lamiaceae
Category
Microgreen
Form
Microgreen
Lifecycle
annual
Zone
2-13
Height
0.08333333333333333–2 ft
Spread
0.08333333333333333–2 ft
Sun
Indoors

Plant spacing

16 plants per square footSquare-foot planting diagram: a 1-foot square divided into a 4-by-4 grid holding 16 basil microgreens plants spaced 3 inches apart.
16 plants per square foot

In a square-foot bed, space basil microgreens about 3 in apart — that fits 16 plants in each 1-foot square (4×4). Wider rows or containers space the same.

Water
Medium

Plan your basil microgreens planting

Add basil microgreens to a free GardenDraft plan and get sow, transplant, and harvest dates computed for your ZIP code — with a drag-and-drop bed layout and reminders when it’s time to plant.

Start your free plan →

At a glance

Days to harvest
10–30 days
From transplant or sow to first harvest
Harvest style
Keep picking
Crops over several weeks
After harvest
Use right away
Quality drops fast past peak
Frost tolerance
Warm-season · to ~50°F
Lowest temperature the foliage usually survives
Succession
Re-sow every 21 days
Sow again at this interval for a continuous harvest
Germination
~70%
Typical minimum germination rate

Storing & preserving

Best used right away — quality drops fast. Keep on the counter in water like cut flowers — cold turns it black.

  • Freeze: Blend with oil and freeze in cubes, or freeze as pesto.
  • Dry: Dries easily but loses much of its aroma.

General home-preservation guidance — for tested processing times and safety, follow the National Center for Home Food Preservation.

Growing timeline

When to plant and harvest basil microgreensPlanting timeline for basil microgreens, relative to last frost: start indoors from 5 weeks before last frost to 1 week after last frost; grow from 1 week after last frost to 2 weeks after last frost; harvest from 2 weeks after last frost to 5 weeks after last frost.Start indoorsGrowHarvestLast frostTransplant
Start basil microgreens indoors ~6 weeks before transplanting 1 week after last frost; first harvest 2 weeks after last frost.
Seed to transplant
28-42 days
Outdoor planting
7 to 14 days vs frost
Propagation
Seed
Schedule anchor
Last Frost

Companion planting — with cited sources

From US/Canada cooperative-extension publications and peer-reviewed studies. Evidence-tier dots show how strongly each recommendation is backed: ●●● peer-reviewed mechanism · ●● extension consensus · traditional knowledge with a plausible mechanism.

Pairs well with (9)

  • Ají PepperEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter

    Companion interactions equivalent to other domesticated Capsicum spp.; see sweet-bell-pepper / hot-pepper entries for full data.

    Source: S7

  • AsparagusEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter, flavor-folklore

    Basil is traditionally interplanted with asparagus in kitchen gardens; basil volatiles may have mild repellent activity against asparagus beetle, but specific replicated extension data are absent. Tier C.

    Source: S1

  • Cayenne PepperEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter

    Companion interactions for cayenne are equivalent to other Capsicum annuum cultivars; see common-bell-pepper / hot-pepper entries for full data. Basil's eugenol and linalool volatiles have documented deterrent activity against thrips, aphids and whiteflies in lab assays.

    Source: S7, Bekele & Hassanali, 2001

  • Common TomatoEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter, flavor-folklore

    Basil volatiles (linalool, eugenol, methyl chavicol) repel whitefly and thrips in lab choice assays (Bekele & Hassanali 2001); field trials in tomato show mixed but generally favorable results. The traditional 'basil improves tomato flavor' claim has no empirical backing but is a deeply established practice. Basil also fills bed gaps and supports bees.

    Timing: Transplant basil after soil reaches 18 C, same window as tomato.

    Source: Penn State Extension, University of Maryland Extension, Bekele & Hassanali, 2001

  • Habanero PepperEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter

    Companion interactions equivalent to other domesticated Capsicum spp.; see sweet-bell-pepper / hot-pepper entries for full data.

    Source: S7

  • Hot PepperEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter, pollinator-attract

    Hot pepper companion interactions mirror those of sweet bell pepper since both are Capsicum annuum. Basil's volatile oils deter several pepper pests and basil flowers attract pollinators and parasitoids.

    Source: S7, Bekele & Hassanali, 2001

  • OkraEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpollinator-attract, pest-deter

    Basil interplanted with okra is a traditional Southern practice; basil volatiles may repel some thrips and whitefly, and the flowering basil supplies nectar for parasitoid wasps. Mechanism plausible but empirical replication in okra systems is limited.

    Region: Southeastern US summer gardens.

    Source: S11

  • Sweet Bell PepperEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter

    Same volatile-oil rationale as for tomato — basil interplanted with sweet pepper may reduce thrips and whitefly pressure; bed-mate benefit and pollinator support are the more consistent gains.

    Source: University of Maryland Extension

  • Tabasco PepperEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter

    Companion interactions equivalent to other domesticated Capsicum spp.; see sweet-bell-pepper / hot-pepper entries.

    Source: S7

Avoid planting near (3)

  • Black WalnutEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationallelopathy-negative

    Basil is commonly cited in garden references as juglone-sensitive, so siting it away from black walnut is a reasonable precaution. (Note: it is not consistently listed in university-extension juglone tables, so confidence is low.)

    Source: S5, Penn State Extension

  • Common RosemaryEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationflavor-folklore

    Traditional charts pair basil away from dry-loving Mediterranean herbs because of conflicting water needs rather than chemical antagonism. Spatial/cultural avoidance rather than allelopathy.

    Source: University of Maryland Extension

  • Common SageEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationflavor-folklore

    Traditional caution based on conflicting cultural needs (basil prefers richer, moister soil than sage); folklore-tier rather than chemical antagonism.

    Source: University of Maryland Extension

Sources cited

S1
Cornell University Cooperative Extension — vegetable production guides
S11
University of Georgia Cooperative Extension
S28
Bekele & Hassanali, 2001 — basil volatile bioassay
S5
Michigan State University Extension
S6
Penn State Extension
S7
University of Minnesota Extension
S9
University of Maryland Extension — Home & Garden Info Center

Care & troubleshooting— extension-sourced, with citations

When to feed, prune & water

Attract beneficial insects and protect pollinators

Protection
  • Routine carePlant insectary flowers and tolerate light pestsstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Grow a diversity of flowering plants (including small-flowered umbels and asters) to feed predators and parasitoids, and tolerate low pest numbers so natural enemies have prey to stick around.

    Source: UC IPM; UMN Extension

  • Routine careNever spray open bloomsstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Avoid insecticides on flowering plants and apply any needed sprays in the evening when pollinators aren't active, and favor selective products over broad-spectrum ones to spare bees and beneficials.

    Source: UC IPM

Mulch to suppress weeds and retain moisture

Mulch
  • Routine careApply organic mulch around plantsstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Spread a few inches of straw, shredded leaves, or compost around established plants (keeping it off stems) to hold soil moisture, suppress weeds, and moderate soil temperature; wait until soil has warmed for heat-loving crops.

    Source: UMN Extension; Missouri Botanical Garden

Pinch leafy herbs to stay productive

Pruning
  • Routine carePinch tips and flower buds weekly· every 1 wk · ~10 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Pinch the growing tips above a leaf pair and remove flower buds as they form. This keeps basil bushy and leafy instead of bolting to seed.

    Source: UMN Extension

Trim and divide perennial herbs

Pruning
  • Routine careShear after growth flushes; divide every few yearsmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Shear perennial herbs like mint, oregano, thyme and sage after flushes of growth to keep them compact and productive, and divide crowded clumps in spring or fall to renew vigor and airflow. Go easy on fertilizer — lean conditions give stronger flavor.

    Source: UMN Extension

Clean up debris and sanitize at season end

Sanitation

Unusual this time of year.

  • Routine careRemove spent plants and fallen debrisstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Pull and clear old plants, dropped fruit, and leaf litter at season end, since many pests and diseases overwinter in this debris; dispose of diseased material rather than composting it.

    Source: UMN Extension; Cornell

  • Routine careClean tools, stakes, and cagesmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Wash and sanitize stakes, cages, and tools that touched diseased plants before storing or reusing them to avoid carrying pathogens into next season.

    Source: Cornell; UMN Extension

Harden off seedlings

Protection

Unusual this time of year.

Read: starting seeds indoors

Something looks wrong?

Describe what you see on your basil microgreensand we'll rank the likely causes — most likely first, least-invasive fix first.

Japanese beetles

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: leaves skeletonized between veins; lacy chewed foliage; metallic green-bronze beetles clustered on plants; feeding worst in warm midsummer sun

Powdery mildew

Diseasemoderate

Symptoms: white powdery coating on upper leaf surfaces; starts as spots then spreads; leaves yellow and dry under the coating

  • CulturalImprove airflow + remove worst leavesstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Cut out the most heavily coated leaves and thin for airflow; avoid wetting foliage late in the day.

    Source: UC IPM

  • OrganicPotassium-bicarbonate or sulfur - label use only· every 1 wk · ~4 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Apply a labeled potassium-bicarbonate or sulfur fungicide weekly per the label. No sulfur within 2 weeks of oil or in high heat.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UC IPM

Root rot from overwatering / poor drainage

Diseasemoderate

Symptoms: stunted yellowing plants that wilt despite wet soil; soft brown mushy roots; sloughing root outer layer leaving thread-like core; poor growth in low or compacted wet spots; seedlings collapsing at the soil line

Slugs & snails

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: large ragged holes with smooth edges; slimy silvery trails; damage worst after rain and overnight

  • CulturalTrap, hand-pick at night, reduce cover· every 2 days · ~3 wksstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Pick at night with a flashlight, set shallow beer traps, water in the morning so soil dries by dusk, and clear damp hiding spots.

    Source: UC IPM: Snails and Slugs

  • OrganicIron-phosphate bait - label use only· every 1 wk · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Scatter a labeled iron-phosphate slug bait sparingly per the label; it's pet- and wildlife-safer than metaldehyde.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UC IPM

Spider mites

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: fine pale stippling/speckling on leaves; fine webbing on undersides in hot dry spells; leaves bronzing and dropping

  • CulturalHose down and raise humidity· every 3 days · ~2 wksstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Mites thrive in hot, dry, dusty conditions. Spray foliage (especially undersides) with water to dislodge them and reduce dust.

    Source: UC IPM

  • OrganicInsecticidal soap or horticultural oil - label use only· every 5 days · ~2 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Apply to undersides per label; mites resist many products, so soaps/oils are preferred. Not in extreme heat.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UC IPM

Whiteflies

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: clouds of tiny white insects fly up when plants are disturbed; yellowing stippled leaves; sticky honeydew and black sooty mold; weak stunted growth

  • CulturalRemove infested leaves and hose off· every 4 daysmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Pick off and discard heavily infested lower leaves and rinse colonies off undersides with a strong spray of water; yellow sticky cards help monitor numbers.

    Source: UC IPM: Whiteflies

  • OrganicApply a labeled soap or oil· every 1 wk · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Apply a labeled insecticidal soap or neem oil per the label, covering leaf undersides; these reduce but won't eliminate whiteflies, so repeat as needed.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UC IPM: Whiteflies

Aphids

Pestlow

Symptoms: clusters of tiny soft-bodied insects on new growth and undersides; sticky honeydew or sooty mold; curled distorted new leaves; ants tending them

  • CulturalBlast off with water· every 3 days · ~2 wksstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Knock colonies off with a strong jet of water in the morning; repeat every few days. Light infestations rarely need more.

    Source: UC IPM: Aphids

  • OrganicInsecticidal soap - label use only· every 1 wk · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    For persistent colonies apply insecticidal soap to undersides per label. Avoid open flowers.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UC IPM