Best Fertilizer for Cucumber
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GardenSays
Work about 0.5 lb of balanced garden fertilizer (e.g., 10-10-10) into your 32 sq ft bed before planting.
- Fertilizer
- 10-10-10
- Amount
- ≈ 0.5 lb
- Next feeding
- At first fruit
For a 32 sq ft bed, that's roughly 0.5 lb (8 oz) of balanced fertilizer, spread evenly and worked into the top 6 inches a few days before transplanting. A soil test beats any rule of thumb — if you have one, follow it instead.
Then hold off: no more fertilizer until when the vines start to run (or first flowers on bush types). Feeding again too early is the classic way to get a huge green plant with no fruit.
- ⚠ Bitter cucumbers come from drought stress and heat, not feeding — keep water steady before reaching for fertilizer.
Why
- ✓One balanced pre-plant application plus a fruit-set sidedress matches how demand actually rises.
- ✓Moderate, steady feeding — excess nitrogen grows vines and leaves at the expense of fruit.
When this doesn't apply
- →Soil test results override this: high-P soils need nitrogen-only products.
- →Beds heavily amended with compost each year may need only half this rate.
How this was calculated
- 1. Feeding profile
Cucumber: Moderate, steady feeding — excess nitrogen grows vines and leaves at the expense of fruit.
- 2. Pre-plant rate1.5 lb/100 sq ft (our estimate)
balanced garden fertilizer (e.g., 10-10-10): 1.5 lb per 100 sq ft (midpoint of published extension rates), worked into the top 6 inches
Our estimate, derived from the cited guidance.
- 3. Your bed≈ 0.5 lb (8 oz)
1.5 lb/100 sq ft × 32 sq ft
Data sources
- University of Minnesota Extension — Growing cucumbers in home gardens — Use a soil test where possible; sidedress vine crops lightly once vines run — heavy nitrogen favors foliage over fruit. (checked 2026-07-15)
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