Best Fruit Trees for Zone 5
-20°F to -10°F (-29°C to -23°C)Zone 5 is the sweet spot for fruit growing — cold enough for high-chill varieties like Honeycrisp and Elberta, warm enough for a decent growing season. Most temperate fruit trees thrive here.
Common regions: Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, southern New England, parts of the Pacific Northwest
Hardiness Zone ≠ Fruiting Success
Your hardiness zone tells you if a tree will survive winter, but not if it will produce fruit. Most fruit trees need a specific number of "chill hours" (hours between 32°F and 45°F) to break dormancy and fruit properly.
Check your exact chill hours →Apple (17)
Honeycrisp
Gala
Fuji
Granny Smith
Pink Lady (Cripps)
Golden Delicious
Red Delicious
McIntosh
Cosmic Crisp
Jonagold
Braeburn
Empire
Cortland
Gravenstein
Liberty
Winesap
Arkansas Black
Apricot (2)
Asian Pear (2)
Cherry (Sweet) (4)
Bing
Rainier
Stella
Lapins
Cherry (Tart) (1)
Montmorency
Nectarine (2)
Pawpaw (2)
Pawpaw (Shenandoah)
Pawpaw (Sunflower)
Peach (6)
Elberta
Redhaven
Reliance
Contender
Belle of Georgia
O'Henry
Pear (4)
Bartlett
D'Anjou
Bosc
Kieffer
Persimmon (Native) (1)
American Persimmon
Plum (2)
Santa Rosa
Methley
Plum (European) (1)
Stanley
Quince (1)
Pineapple Quince
Chill Hours in Zone 5
Zone 5 typically receives 1,000–1,200 chill hours per year. Chill hours are the cumulative hours between 32°F and 45°F during winter dormancy.
Fruit trees evolved to need this cold period to break dormancy and flower properly. If a tree doesn't get enough chill hours, it may:
- Flower sporadically or not at all
- Produce small, misshapen fruit
- Have delayed leaf-out and poor growth
- Decline in health over several years
The varieties listed above are matched to zone 5's typical chill hour range. However, microclimates vary — a sheltered valley might get fewer chill hours than an exposed hillside.
Calculate Your Exact Chill Hours →Explore Other Zones
Looking for a specific variety? Check the complete zone 5 variety directory.
Plan Your Orchard
Track your fruit trees, get personalized care reminders, and plan your harvest with Leaftide's orchard management tools.
Start Tracking Free →Chill hour data from Open-Meteo Historical Weather API. Variety information compiled from university extension services.