Skip to main content
← All plants

Elephant Garlic

Allium ampeloprasum
Also known as: Great-Headed Garlic, Russian Garlic

Elephant Garlic is a herb in the Amaryllidaceae family. It grows best in full sun with medium moisture, and is listed for USDA zones 2-13. Plants reach harvest about 240–270 days after planting and sit about 4 inches apart.

Varieties

1 from Seeds Now · sorted by days to maturity
  • Elephant240–270 days

    Direct sow; Grows well with raised beds; Super easy to grow

    Elephant garlic (Allium ampeloprasum) produces enormous bulbs with a few very large, easy-peeling cloves and a mild, sweet garlic flavor. Though it resembles a giant hardneck garlic, it is botanically closer to a leek and stores well, more like a softneck. Planted in fall and harvested the following summer, it is a popular and profitable crop for market gardeners.

    View on Seeds Now
Family
Amaryllidaceae
Category
Herb
Form
Bulb
Lifecycle
annual
Zone
2-13
Height
1–2 ft
Spread
0.3333333333333333–0.5 ft
Sun
Full sun

Plant spacing

9 plants per square footSquare-foot planting diagram: a 1-foot square divided into a 3-by-3 grid holding 9 elephant garlic plants spaced 4 inches apart.
9 plants per square foot

In a square-foot bed, space elephant garlic about 4 in apart — that fits 9 plants in each 1-foot square (3×3). Wider rows or containers space the same.

Water
Medium

Plan your elephant garlic planting

Add elephant garlic 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
240–270 days
From transplant or sow to first harvest
Harvest style
Harvest once
One main harvest
Frost tolerance
Hardy · to ~10°F
Lowest temperature the foliage usually survives

Storing & preserving

Cure 2–3 weeks, then store cool, dark, and dry — keeps for months.

  • Cure & store: Dry the necks/skins fully, then store in a cool pantry.
  • Freeze: Freeze chopped for cooking (texture softens).

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 elephant garlicPlanting timeline for elephant garlic, relative to first frost: grow from 6 weeks before first frost to 28 weeks after first frost; harvest from 28 weeks after first frost to 33 weeks after first frost.GrowHarvestFirst frostDirect sow
Direct-sow elephant garlic 6 weeks before first frost; first harvest 28 weeks after first frost.
Outdoor planting
-42 to -28 days vs frost
Propagation
Clove
Schedule anchor
First 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 (3)

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

    Traditionally interplanted to help mask carrots from carrot rust fly.

    Source: S7

  • Common CabbageEvidence tier C: Traditional practice with plausible mechanism but limited empirical replicationpest-deter

    Alliums are reported to repel aphids and cabbage pests on brassicas via pungent volatiles.

    Source: S7

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

    Like garlic, elephant garlic's sulfur volatiles are reported to deter aphids and spider mites on tomato.

    Source: S7

Sources cited

S7
University of Minnesota Extension

Care & troubleshooting— extension-sourced, with citations

When to feed, prune & water

Feed alliums in spring

Feeding
  • Routine careFeed nitrogen every 3 weeks during active growth· every 3 wks · ~9 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Alliums build the bulb from spring leaf growth. Feed a nitrogen source every ~3 weeks through spring, then stop once bulbs start to swell so they cure well.

    Source: UMN Extension

Floating row cover timing

Protection

Unusual this time of year.

Something looks wrong?

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

Bacterial soft rot

Diseasesevere

Symptoms: mushy water-soaked decay of fleshy tissue; slimy soft rot of heads, bulbs, roots, or fruit; foul odor from rotting tissue; rapid collapse after wounding or in warm wet conditions; rot spreading in storage

  • CulturalRemove rotting plants and produce (manage, not cure)strong evidence — extension confidence

    Soft rot can't be cured once tissue breaks down; promptly remove and discard affected plants and produce so the bacteria don't spread to neighbors or other stored vegetables.

    Source: Cornell NYS IPM

  • CulturalAvoid wounds and excess moisturestrong evidence — extension confidence

    Harvest in dry conditions, handle gently to avoid bruising, control insects that create entry wounds, and improve drainage; cure and store bulbs and roots cool and dry.

    Source: Cornell NYS IPM

  • CulturalDon't overwater and rotatemoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Avoid waterlogged soil and overhead watering that splashes bacteria, and rotate away from previously affected fleshy crops to lower disease pressure.

    Source: Cornell NYS IPM

Onion & garlic white rot

Diseasesevere

Symptoms: yellowing and dieback of leaves; plants pull up easily; fluffy white mold at the base and on bulbs; tiny black poppy-seed sclerotia in the rot; spreads in patches in cool moist soil

Leafhoppers & aster yellows

Diseasemoderate

Symptoms: small wedge-shaped insects hop from leaves; stippled or yellowed foliage; with aster yellows: yellow stunted growth, witches-broom of thin shoots, deformed bitter carrots

Leek moth and thrips on leeks

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: whitish windowpane streaks or mottling on leaves (thrips); pale winding mines and holes in leaves; caterpillars tunneling in leaves and stems; distorted rotting foliage from secondary infection

  • CulturalCover and clean upmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Cover plants with insect netting or row cover at planting to keep egg-laying leek moths and thrips off, and remove and destroy badly infested leaves and crop debris. Rotate alliums to a new spot each year to break the pest cycle.

    Source: RHS: Leek moth; RHS: Thrips on Garden Plants

  • OrganicWash off thrips or spray· every 1 wkmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    For thrips, hose plants down to dislodge them, or apply a labeled insecticidal soap or neem product per the label. For leek moth caterpillars, a labeled spinosad or Bacillus thuringiensis product applied per the label when young larvae are active can help.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: RHS: Leek moth; RHS: Thrips on Garden Plants

Leek rust

Diseasemoderate

Symptoms: bright orange raised pustules on leaves; yellowing around the spots; heavily infected leaves drying and dying back; reduced size of usable shank

  • CulturalImprove airflow and remove infected leavesmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Leek rust is a fungal disease favored by damp, crowded conditions and lush growth; space plants well, avoid over-feeding with nitrogen, and remove badly affected leaves. Mild cases usually still produce a usable crop, and rotating alliums each year helps prevent buildup.

    Source: RHS: Leek rust; UMN Extension: Growing leeks

Onion thrips

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: silvery streaks and flecks on leaves; tiny slivers that scatter when disturbed; worst in hot dry weather

  • CulturalOverhead-water and remove debris· every 3 days · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Thrips dislike moisture; overhead irrigation and weed/debris cleanup reduce them. Reflective mulch deters them on young plants.

    Source: UMN Extension

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

    For heavy pressure a labeled soap or spinosad on a weekly schedule helps. Follow the label.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UMN Extension

Cabbage & onion root maggots

Pestmoderate

Unusual this time of year.

Symptoms: young brassica or onion transplants wilt and stunt; bluish off-color leaves; white legless maggots in roots; rotting tunneled roots; plants pull up easily