Companion Planting Dill

A List of Dill Companion Plants and Bad Companions for Dill

Floral

Read this guide for companion planting dill to boost your harvest. Find out exactly what plants to avoid planting with your dill (bad companion plants) and companion plants will work best for you in your vegetable garden, herb garden, or flower bed!

A Note About Dill

Dill grows best when seeded directly into the ground and should have 6-8 hours of full sun. Consider planting dill next to plants that will provide shelter from strong winds as it’s stocks will grow from 2-4 feet tall.

Thick Brush Stroke

When should I plant Dill?

Sow dill seeds late in the fall and leave them over the winter in your garden plot. The cold stratification will help you to get a high yield of dill with earlier harvest times!

Plants to Avoid Growing By Dill

Eggplant

3

Plants to Avoid Growing By Dill

Cilantro

Carrots

Best Dill Companion Plants

Asparagus

Corn

3

Best Dill Companion Plants

Parsley

Tomatoes

Best Dill Companion Plants

Onion

Garlic

PRO TIP #1

Sow dill seeds late in the fall and leave them over the winter in your garden plot. The cold stratification will help you to get a high yield of dill with earlier harvest times!.

Dill Pests

Dill Pests

Dill is plagued by several different pests but companion planting will help. Aphids multiply and devastate dill, weakening the plant and lowering harvest potential. Many people plant dill as a trap-crop for aphids, steering the aphids away from their peppers or other plants.