• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • Gardening
    • Butterfly Gardens
    • Home Garden Tips
    • Seed Starting
    • Compost and Fertilizer
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Tools & Equipment
    • Pests & Problems
  • Plants
    • Plant Profiles
    • House Plants
    • Vegetables
    • Fruit
    • Herbs
    • Growing Flowers
  • Garden to Table
    • Easy Recipes
    • Canning and Food Preservation
  • Seasonal Living
    • Home for the Holidays
    • Birds and Wildlife
    • Vintage Finds
  • Shop
    • Books for Christian Herbalists
    • Herbalism Classes
    • Books by Jeanne Grunert
  • About
    • Privacy Policy

Starting Peppers from Seeds

January 24, 2018 by Jeanne

Starting peppers from seeds is similar to starting other vegetables from seeds. There are a few tricks to know to help your pepper seeds germinate and grow into strong, healthy plants.

Starting Peppers from Seeds

The first step to starting peppers from seed is to decide which type of peppers you wish to grow in your backyard garden.

  • Sweet Peppers: These are the traditional green, red, or yellow “sweet” peppers found in the grocery store. They can be used in a wide range of dishes including stuffed peppers and have a mild, sweet flavor. Most bell peppers fall into the ‘sweet’ category although not every sweet pepper has to have a rounded, bell-like shape. Some sweet peppers can be long and slender, like a hot pepper, or an oval shape.
  • Hot Peppers: Hot peppers are the spicy kind that livens up Mexican and Spanish cuisine. Chili peppers, habanero, and other hot peppers vary in spiciness from tolerable to 5-alarm fire levels.

Peppers are typically green, although you can find colorful blends that include green, red, orange, yellow, and purple. The color doesn’t tell you as much about the heat of the flavor as the variety name. Some sweet bell peppers, like the Burpee “Carnival” blend of bell pepper seeds, offer a colorful rainbow of peppers that are very mild flavored, while there are green chili peppers that are so hot they make your eyes water.

peppers

Pepper plants can be grown from seeds, which I’ll tell you about here, or you can purchase plants at your local garden center and transplant them into the backyard garden after the danger of all frost has passed in the spring. Peppers are warm weather plants and cannot tolerate a frost of any kind, so do not plant them outside until you are sure the weather is warm enough for them.

To find the frost-free date for your region, see the USDA hardiness zone map for your region. Find your zone, and then look up the dates for the zone number.

Starting Pepper Seeds

In almost all parts of the United States, it is recommended that you start pepper seeds indoors. Peppers need a long growing season and most parts of the country do not have long enough warm-weather seasons to allow seeds to germinate in garden soil and attain a mature size to bear fruit.

Instead, the majority of gardeners start pepper seeds indoors during the winter months to get a head start on the season.

The steps for starting pepper seeds are:

  1. Purchase good-quality pepper seeds for the desired variety you wish to grow.
  2. Clean and sterilize your seed starting trays and pots if you have used them before. If they are new, skip to step 4.
  3. Dry the trays and pots.
  4. Fill the trays or pots with seed starting mixture. This is a mixture of soil and vermiculite (the white particles in bagged potting soil). It is lighter than typical garden or potting soil and better suited for seed starting.
  5. Open the package of seeds and gently press one seed in the center of each cell in the tray.
  6. Gently sprinkle the seed starting mixture over the seeds.
  7. Water the seeds and place in a warm, sunny spot.
  8. Keep the soil moist until seeds germinate.
  9. Water well and keep them in a warm, sunny area for 8 to 10 weeks.
  10. Move outdoors during warm days and back inside at night until you are ready to plant peppers in the garden.

Tricks for Pepper Seed Germination

One trick is to germinate pepper seeds in a plastic bag first, then transplant them to the seed starting trays. Place peppers seeds between sheets of dampened paper towels. Place damp paper towels inside a plastic ziplock bag. Then put the bags in a warm location for a few days and check daily. Once you see the seeds sprouting, move them into the soil and keep them warm.

Warmth is the secret to starting pepper seeds. Poor germination is often the result of a cold or cool basement area. Seed starting mats, which are special heated mats used under seed trays, can be helpful. Do not try to make homemade ones as you run the risk of starting an electrical fire if the heating element gets wet. Special seed starting mats are made for gardening and are safer and more durable.

You May Also Liked These Gardening Articles

Having problems with your peppers? I have an article to help you with pepper problems.

Filed Under: Seed Starting, Vegetable Gardening

Previous Post: « Gardening Is Good for You: The Health Benefits of Gardening
Next Post: How Do You Define Homesteading? »

Reader Interactions

Trackbacks

  1. Growing Your Own Organic Vegetables Saves Money - Home Garden Joy says:
    July 8, 2019 at

    […] Peppers: 26-pint jars pickled and canned, 2 contains 1 1/2 pints each, frozen […]

Footer

a red knockout rose

June Gardening Tips: Everything You Need to Do in Your Garden This Month

I’m sharing these June gardening tips for gardening zone 7B. However, you can easily adapt them to your gardening zone. June is one of those months that feels like there’s so much to do in the garden you don’t know where to start. Fortunately, nature gives you extra-long days and plenty of sunshine! Whether you…

Read More

watering can with plants

Growing Ginger in the Home Garden

Growing ginger is fun. I was surprised to learn that I could grow ginger in Zone 7B, central Virginia. I attended a lecture by Ann Codrington of Nisani Farms several years ago. She discussed growing both ginger and turmeric. Her farm is in Maryland, but I discovered that both plants can be grown in both…

Read More

borage flower

Companion Planting with Herbs: Your Secret Weapon for a Healthier, Happier Garden

Every summer, without fail, I plant basil at the end of the raised beds. These are the beds filled with Roma tomatoes, the ones we harvest by the bushel to make our salt-free organic tomato sauce. My tomatoes thrive. “Did you know that basil repels aphids?” an organic gardener friend mentioned to me casually one…

Read More

a vintage folk art weather house which accurately predicts the weather

The Folk Art Weather House

I’ve loved this little folk art weather house all my life. It still makes me smile. What gardener doesn’t need to know the weather? I grew up with many German relatives. Thank-you notes were written to “Oncle Ludwig” and “Tante Marie.” During visits to their homes, I was fascinated by the little folk art German…

Read More

  • About
  • Plant a Row for the Hungry
  • Awards
  • Privacy Policy

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Substack
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2026 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme