Best Berries & Fruits to Grow in Oklahoma

Oklahoma spans USDA Zones 6–8, typically Zone 7. We've broken out 37 berry varieties by zone — pick your zone below or find the right varieties for your specific part of the state.

Varieties

37

for Oklahoma

🌱

USDA

Zones 6–8

180–240 days season

🗺️

Beginner

10

easy to grow

👍

Heirloom

3

heritage varieties

🏛️
Oklahoma spans12345678910111213

Growing Berries & Fruits in Oklahoma

Zone 7's generous 210-day growing season from April through October makes it a berry paradise for home gardeners. The moderate climate provides enough winter chill hours for most temperate fruits while avoiding the extreme heat that stresses many berry plants. However, the key challenge lies in selecting varieties that can handle both the occasional late spring frost around April 1st and the humid summers that can invite fungal diseases. Your variety choices will make or break your berry harvest success.

When choosing berries for Zone 7, prioritize disease resistance, heat tolerance, and varieties with staggered ripening times to extend your harvest window. Cold-hardy options like Honeyberry can fruit early in the season, while heat-tolerant cultivars like Emerald Blueberry and Prime-Ark Freedom Blackberry thrive through summer heat. The varieties I've selected here have proven themselves in Zone 7's specific conditions, offering reliable yields and excellent fruit quality for gardeners who want consistent harvests year after year.

Zone 7 Berries & Fruits for Oklahoma★ Most of OK

36 varieties · Last frost April 1 · 210-day season

View all Zone 7 berries & fruits

+ 30 more Zone 7 berries & fruits

Zone 6 Berries & Fruits for Oklahoma

35 varieties · Last frost April 15 · 180-day season

View all Zone 6 berries & fruits

+ 29 more Zone 6 berries & fruits

Zone 8 Berries & Fruits for Oklahoma

35 varieties · Last frost March 15 · 240-day season

View all Zone 8 berries & fruits

+ 29 more Zone 8 berries & fruits

Zone 7 Growing Tips for Oklahoma

Plant bare-root berry bushes in late fall through early March, while containerized plants can go in anytime the soil isn't frozen. For strawberries, plant June-bearers like Earliglow in early spring after soil workability, but wait until after your last frost for everbearing varieties like Albion and Seascape. Most berry plants benefit from afternoon shade during Zone 7's hot summers, so avoid full western exposure if possible.

Mulching becomes critical in Zone 7 to manage both moisture and temperature fluctuations. Apply 2-3 inches of organic mulch around plants, keeping it away from stems to prevent rodent damage over winter. The humidity that comes with Zone 7's climate means excellent air circulation is essential – space plants generously and prune for open centers. During establishment years, consider shade cloth during heat waves above 90°F, especially for newly planted blueberries and currants.