Vegetable Yield Calculator — Estimated Harvest per Area | LazyTools

Vegetable Yield Calculator

Estimate how much food your vegetable garden will produce. Enter garden area and select vegetables to get expected yield in pounds, number of servings, and approximate number of canning jars or meals.

Lbs per sq ftServings and meals20+ vegetablesGarden planning

Vegetable Yield Calculator Tool

Garden area and crops
Reset
Estimates based on typical home garden yields under good conditions. Actual yield varies by variety, climate, and care.
Enter values and click Calculate
Expected harvest
-
-
Servings (est.)
-
at typical serving size
Meals (2 servings)
-
family of 2
Yield per sq ft
-
at entered crop yield
Area
-
sq ft
🥦
Explore all gardening and crop calculators
LazyTools has free calculators for every gardening and crop need — all free, all browser-based.
Explore more →
⭐ Ratings

Rate this tool

4.8
Based on 87 ratings
5
64
4
14
3
5
2
2
1
2
Was this vegetable yield calculator helpful?
Thank you for your rating!
★ Key features

Why use this free vegetable yield calculator?

Built with the features most competitors miss — deeper inputs, benchmark data, and actionable guidance alongside the core calculation.

🥦
22 vegetable yield estimates
Pre-loaded lbs per sq ft estimates for 22 common vegetables based on typical home garden performance.
📈
Servings and meals from harvest
Translates pounds of harvest into estimated servings and family meals.
🌐
Lbs and kg output
Select pounds, kilograms, or both for international users.
📈
Yield per sq ft shown
Shows yield per sq ft alongside total, for comparing crop efficiency.
🌿
Works for beds, rows, and large gardens
Enter dimensions or area directly for any garden size.
🔒
Free, browser-based
No registration, no download. Works on any device.
📄 How to use

How to use this vegetable yield calculator

1
Enter garden area
Enter length and width, or total sq ft for the area planted with this crop.
2
Select vegetable
Choose from 22 vegetables. The typical yield per sq ft is applied automatically.
3
Select output unit
Choose lbs, kg, or both.
4
Read yield and servings
Estimated total harvest, servings, and meals are shown alongside yield per sq ft.
📚 Reference

Vegetable yield benchmarks per sq ft

VegetableYield per sq ftServings per lbNotes
Tomato1.5 lbs4Indeterminate; season-long harvest
Zucchini1.0 lbs3Harvest small for best production
Kale0.75 lbs5Cut-and-come-again harvest
Cucumber0.75 lbs3Frequent picking needed
Beans (bush)0.25 lbs4Multiple harvests in season
Broccoli0.3 lbs4One main head per plant
📈 vs the competition

How this calculator compares

LazyTools fills the gaps most competing tools leave open — deeper analysis, benchmark context, and actionable guidance alongside the core calculation.

FeatureLazyToolsOmniCalculatorNC State ExtensionGardeners Supply
22 vegetable species✓ Yes
Servings and meals output✓ Yes
Lbs and kg✓ Yes
Area from dimensions✓ Yes
Yield per sq ft shown✓ Yes
Free, no registration✓ Yes
📖 Complete guide

Vegetable Yield Calculator: Complete Guide

Knowing how much food your vegetable garden will produce helps you plan what to grow, how much to preserve, and whether your garden will meet your household needs. These yield estimates are based on typical home garden productivity under good growing conditions.

Yield per square foot: why it varies

Yield per sq ft is not fixed — it depends on variety selection, soil fertility, watering consistency, pest and disease pressure, and how frequently fruits are harvested. High-performing varieties with consistent fertility and water can produce 50 to 100% above these averages. Poor soil or inconsistent management may yield 50% below these estimates. Use the estimates for initial planning, then track actual yields to calibrate future seasons.

High-yield vs low-yield crops per area

Best yields per sq ft: tomatoes, zucchini, kale, chard, cucumber, and lettuce are the highest-yielding crops for a small-space garden. They produce over a long continuous harvest window. Low-yield per area: sweet corn, broccoli, cauliflower, and winter squash take up large amounts of space relative to food produced. For small gardens, prioritise high-value, high-yield crops first.

Calculating food production for a family

The USDA recommends 2.5 to 3 cups of vegetables per day per person = approximately 300 to 400 lbs per person per year including all vegetables. A 1,000 sq ft vegetable garden (approximately 20x50 ft) with mixed crops at average yields produces 500 to 750 lbs of food — enough to supply 2 people for a full year with a diverse crop mix and succession planting.

Preserving surplus: canning and freezing

Peak-season surpluses from high-yield crops (tomatoes, beans, zucchini, cucumbers) can be preserved to extend value through the year. Tomato sauce: 12 to 15 lbs fresh per quart canned. Green beans: 1.5 to 2 lbs fresh per quart canned. Cucumbers: approximately 1.5 lbs per pint of pickles. Freezing vegetables: blanch and freeze in season at essentially any quantity without the equipment investment of pressure canning.

Frequently asked questions

Tomatoes yield approximately 1.0 to 2.5 lbs per sq ft of garden space per season in a well-managed garden. An indeterminate variety staked and caged in a 4 sq ft space can produce 15 to 25 lbs over a long season.
A 100 sq ft vegetable garden can produce 100 to 200 lbs of food per season depending on what you plant. High-yield crops like tomatoes, zucchini, and beans produce more; broccoli and cauliflower produce less per area.
One zucchini plant can produce 5 to 25 lbs of fruit over a season depending on growing conditions and how frequently it is harvested. Frequent picking encourages more production.
Highest-yield per sq ft: Tomatoes (1.5 lbs/sq ft), Kale (0.75 lbs/sq ft continuous harvest), Zucchini (1.0 lbs/sq ft), Swiss Chard (0.75 lbs/sq ft), Cucumbers (0.75 lbs/sq ft). Lowest-yield per area: Corn (0.5 lbs/sq ft), Broccoli (0.3 lbs/sq ft).
For fresh salsa or sauce canning: 12 to 15 lbs of tomatoes per quart jar. A 100 sq ft tomato bed yielding 150 lbs produces approximately 10 to 12 quarts of sauce plus fresh eating. For serious canning, plan 20 to 40 lbs per person per year.
A 4x8 ft (32 sq ft) raised bed of tomatoes can yield 45 to 80 lbs per season. Mixed vegetables at an average of 0.5 to 0.75 lbs/sq ft: 16 to 24 lbs total.
Multiply the area of each crop (sq ft) by the yield per sq ft for that crop. Add all crops to get total seasonal production. This helps plan whether you will have surplus for preserving or need to adjust crop mix for desired quantities.
A standard serving of vegetables is approximately 3 oz (85g) raw or 4 oz (113g) cooked, equivalent to about 1/2 cup. The USDA recommends 2.5 to 3 cups of vegetables per day per adult.
Commercial vegetable yields per acre: tomatoes 10,000 to 30,000 lbs; green beans 4,000 to 8,000 lbs; sweet corn 6,000 to 12,000 lbs; cucumbers 10,000 to 20,000 lbs; broccoli 5,000 to 12,000 lbs.
🔗 Related tools

More free gardening & crops calculators