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Grow Guides · April 28, 2026

The Most Common Mistake First-Time Tomato Growers Make

The spacing, water, and pruning trifecta

SSUS Farms·12 min read
What happens when you ignore spacing (spoiler: disease)
What happens when you ignore spacing (spoiler: disease)

The Most Common Mistake First-Time Tomato Growers Make

We sell a lot of tomato plants every spring. By July, about half the people who bought them come back looking discouraged. Their plants are diseased, unproductive, or both. And every time, it's one of three connected problems: spacing, water management, and pruning. They're connected because they all affect airflow and moisture at the leaf level.

The Mistake: Planting Too Close Together

Growers space tomato plants 24–36 inches apart. First-timers plant them 12 inches apart. Why? It looks bare. And besides, there's space.

Wrong. Here's what happens: as plants grow, leaves overlap. Bottom leaves (the ones making food energy) stay wet longer after watering or rain. Fungal spores—early blight, fusarium, septoria—love wet foliage. By mid-season, you've got disease. Lots of it.

The Mistake: Inconsistent Watering

First-timers either underwater (checking soil daily and watering "if it looks dry") or overwater (daily sprinkling, thinking that's care). Both are disasters.

Tomatoes need deep, infrequent watering. 1–2 inches per week, delivered all at once. This encourages deep rooting. Daily light watering keeps roots near the surface, where they're vulnerable to heat stress.

And critically: wet foliage + fungal spores = disease. Water at soil level only, not overhead. Never water in evening. Water early morning so any splash dries quickly.

Inconsistent soil moisture is the primary factor in blossom-end rot and fruit cracking. Consistent deep watering is the foundation of tomato health.

Utah State University Extension—Tomato Disease Management — Dr. Brent Black (2023)

The Mistake: Not Pruning Indeterminate Varieties

Indeterminate tomatoes (the ones that grow indefinitely) need pruning. Specifically, "suckers"—shoots that grow between the main stem and branches—need to come off. If you don't prune them, you get a massive bush with poor airflow, weak fruit, and disease.

Pruning improves air circulation. The foliage dries faster after rain or watering. Spores don't germinate on dry leaves. Simple cause and effect.

The Comparison: Indeterminate vs. Determinate

FactorIndeterminateDeterminate
Growth PatternGrows indefinitely; vine-likeStops at fixed height; bush-like
Harvest WindowAll season (until frost)Concentrated (2–3 weeks)
PruningRequired (suckers, lower leaves)Minimal
Utah SuitabilityBetter (beats frost)Good for sauce (all at once)
Best ForFresh eating; long seasonCanning and processing

The Fix: Do This Instead

1. Space plants 36 inches apart (indeterminate) or 24 inches (determinate). Yes, it looks bare. Wait three weeks.

2. Water deeply at soil level early morning, 1–2 inches per week. Use a drip line or soaker hose to keep foliage dry. Check our guide on setting up drip irrigation.

3. Prune suckers on indeterminate varieties every two weeks. Pull lower leaves once plants are 3 feet tall (disease pressure gets worse lower down).

The biggest difference between successful and frustrated tomato growers isn't talent. It's spacing, water, and pruning.

Read About Tomato Diseases


#tomatoes#mistakes#beginner-gardening#plant-care#spacing#watering