Crop Rotation Made Simple: Why Your Garden Needs a 4-Year Plan

Why Crop Rotation Matters

Crop rotation—the practice of moving plant families to different locations each year—is one of the most effective techniques for maintaining soil health and preventing pest and disease problems. While the concept seems simple, implementing rotation in home gardens requires planning and understanding of plant families.

In the Pacific Northwest, where our wet conditions favor fungal diseases and mild winters allow many pests to survive year-round, rotation becomes even more important than in regions with harsher winters that kill overwintering problems.

Rows of vegetables in a garden
Well-planned garden rows make crop rotation easier to track and implement year after year.

The Science Behind Rotation

Breaking Disease Cycles

Many plant diseases overwinter in soil on infected plant debris. When you plant the same crop (or related crops) in the same spot year after year, disease organisms build up to damaging levels. A three to four-year rotation starves out most pathogens before susceptible crops return.

Disrupting Pest Life Cycles

Soil-dwelling pests like root maggots and nematodes survive winter in the soil, emerging to attack the same crops their parents fed on. Moving crops breaks this cycle, forcing pests to travel farther to find hosts—many won’t survive the journey.

Balancing Soil Nutrients

Different crops deplete different nutrients. Heavy feeders like tomatoes and corn exhaust nitrogen; root crops need phosphorus and potassium. Following heavy feeders with nitrogen-fixing legumes replenishes what was consumed.

Improving Soil Structure

Deep-rooted crops break up compacted subsoil. Shallow-rooted crops leave organic matter near the surface. Rotation varies root depth, improving soil structure throughout the profile.

Understanding Plant Families

Rotation works by family because related plants share pests and diseases. The major vegetable families:

Solanaceae (Nightshades)

Members: Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, potatoes

Shared problems: Early and late blight, fusarium and verticillium wilts, Colorado potato beetle

Rotation notes: Never plant nightshades where any family member grew the previous 3 years. This family needs the longest rotation interval.

Brassicaceae (Cabbage Family)

Members: Broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, kale, Brussels sprouts, kohlrabi, turnips, radishes, arugula, mustard

Shared problems: Clubroot, black rot, cabbage root maggot, cabbage worms, flea beetles

Rotation notes: Clubroot can persist in soil for 10+ years. If your garden has clubroot, grow brassicas in containers or raised beds with new soil.

Cucurbitaceae (Squash Family)

Members: Squash, pumpkins, cucumbers, melons, zucchini, gourds

Shared problems: Powdery mildew, bacterial wilt, squash vine borer, cucumber beetles

Rotation notes: Three-year rotation minimum. In small gardens, at least avoid planting squash family crops in the same bed two years running.

Fabaceae (Legumes)

Members: Beans, peas, lentils, fava beans

Shared benefits: All fix nitrogen through root nodules

Shared problems: Root rots, bean beetles, pea weevils

Rotation notes: Follow heavy feeders with legumes to replenish nitrogen. Despite nitrogen benefits, rotate to prevent disease buildup.

Apiaceae (Carrot Family)

Members: Carrots, parsnips, celery, parsley, dill, fennel, cilantro

Shared problems: Carrot rust fly, parsleyworm, root rots

Rotation notes: Carrot rust fly overwinters in soil. Rotate and interplant with alliums to reduce damage.

Alliaceae (Onion Family)

Members: Onions, garlic, leeks, shallots, scallions, chives

Shared problems: Onion maggot, white rot, fusarium

Rotation notes: White rot can persist in soil for 20+ years. If present, grow alliums in fresh soil only.

Chenopodiaceae (Beet Family)

Members: Beets, Swiss chard, spinach

Shared problems: Leaf miners, cercospora leaf spot

Rotation notes: Less disease-prone than other families but still benefit from rotation.

Asteraceae (Lettuce Family)

Members: Lettuce, endive, artichokes, sunflowers

Shared problems: Downy mildew, aphids, slugs

Rotation notes: Relatively few shared problems; can often be fit into rotation gaps.

The Classic Four-Year Rotation

A four-year rotation provides enough time to break most disease and pest cycles while being practical for home gardens. Divide your garden into four sections:

Fresh garden vegetables
Planning which vegetables go where each year is key to successful crop rotation.

Year 1: Legumes

Beans, peas, and fava beans fix nitrogen and add organic matter. After harvest, cut plants at soil level and leave roots to decompose, releasing nitrogen for the following crop.

Year 2: Brassicas

Heavy feeders that benefit from nitrogen left by legumes. This family includes many fall and winter crops perfect for Pacific Northwest year-round gardening.

Year 3: Nightshades and Squash

Tomatoes, peppers, and squash are moderate to heavy feeders. Add compost before planting to supplement nutrients.

Year 4: Root Crops and Alliums

Carrots, beets, onions, and garlic don’t need as much nitrogen. Fresh compost can cause forking in carrots, so this section follows heavier compost applications.

Then Return to Year 1

The cycle continues. Each section moves through all four phases over four years.

Adapting Rotation for Small Gardens

Traditional rotation assumed farm-scale plots. Small gardens require creative approaches:

Bed-Based Rotation

Even with just two or three beds, rotate families between them. A tomato bed this year becomes a bean bed next year. Not perfect four-year rotation, but better than none.

Priority Rotation

Focus rotation on the most disease-prone families:

  1. Highest priority: Nightshades (never repeat in same spot)
  2. High priority: Brassicas (clubroot and root maggots)
  3. Medium priority: Cucurbits (powdery mildew, bacterial wilt)
  4. Lower priority: Legumes, root crops, lettuce

Vertical Rotation

In very small spaces, consider container growing for rotation. Grow tomatoes in containers one year, then plant them in the ground (in a different spot) the next while containers host a different crop.

Soil Replacement

For truly small gardens or container growing, replacing or refreshing soil periodically provides the benefits of rotation without moving crops.

Pacific Northwest Rotation Considerations

Our Mild Winters Mean Problems Persist

In colder climates, freezing kills many overwintering pests and diseases. Our mild winters allow many problems to survive. Strict rotation becomes even more important.

Year-Round Growing Complicates Rotation

When you can grow brassicas fall, winter, and spring, fitting them into a single rotation slot is challenging. Consider them one family regardless of planting season—don’t plant fall kale where spring broccoli grew.

Cover Crops Fit into Rotation

Legume cover crops (crimson clover, Austrian winter peas) provide the same nitrogen benefits as food legumes. A bed planted to winter cover crop can count as the legume phase of rotation.

Perennials Need Permanent Homes

Asparagus, rhubarb, artichokes, and perennial herbs don’t rotate. Give them dedicated spaces outside the rotation scheme.

Keeping Track of Rotation

Garden Mapping

Draw a simple map of your garden each year, noting what grew where. Review previous years’ maps when planning new plantings. Even rough sketches are invaluable.

Bed Labeling

Label each bed with the year and crop family planted. Permanent markers on stakes or labels make reviewing rotation history easy.

Digital Records

Garden planning apps and spreadsheets track rotation over multiple years. Many gardeners find digital records easier to maintain than paper.

When Rotation Isn’t Possible

Sometimes space constraints prevent proper rotation. Mitigation strategies include:

  • Soil solarization: Clear plastic over wet soil during summer heats soil enough to kill many pathogens
  • Resistant varieties: Many tomatoes, cucumbers, and other crops have resistance to common diseases
  • Heavy composting: Diverse soil biology competes with pathogens
  • Container growing: Start fresh with new soil each season
  • Disease monitoring: Watch closely for problems and remove infected plants immediately

Sample Rotation Plans

Four-Bed Rotation

Year Bed 1 Bed 2 Bed 3 Bed 4
1 Legumes Brassicas Nightshades Roots/Alliums
2 Brassicas Nightshades Roots/Alliums Legumes
3 Nightshades Roots/Alliums Legumes Brassicas
4 Roots/Alliums Legumes Brassicas Nightshades

Three-Bed Simplified Rotation

Year Bed A Bed B Bed C
1 Tomatoes, Peppers Beans, Peas, Brassicas Everything Else
2 Beans, Peas, Brassicas Everything Else Tomatoes, Peppers
3 Everything Else Tomatoes, Peppers Beans, Peas, Brassicas

Getting Started

If you haven’t rotated crops before, don’t worry about past history—start now. Make a simple map of this year’s plantings, note which families are where, and plan next year to move each family to a different location.

Perfect rotation isn’t always possible in small home gardens, but even imperfect rotation helps. Moving tomatoes to a different bed, following heavy feeders with legumes, and never planting brassicas in the same spot two years running all improve garden health over time.

Combined with good soil building, crop rotation creates resilient gardens that produce abundantly year after year without relying on chemical interventions. It’s one of the oldest and most effective techniques in the gardener’s toolkit.

Jason Michael

Jason Michael

Author & Expert

Jason Michael is a Pacific Northwest gardening enthusiast and longtime homeowner in the Seattle area. He enjoys growing vegetables, cultivating native plants, and experimenting with sustainable gardening practices suited to the region's unique climate.

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