Best Fruit Trees for Zone 8

10°F to 20°F (-12°C to -7°C)

Zone 8 is the transition zone where chill hours become a real concern. Many popular varieties like Honeycrisp (800h) and Elberta (800h) won't fruit reliably here. Focus on medium and low-chill varieties.

Common regions: Deep South, West Coast, Gulf Coast, parts of Texas and Arizona

⚠️

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 (16)

Honeycrisp

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Gala, Fuji, or Golden Delicious)
Pollination

Gala

✓ 500h
Chill hours required
🍎 Late August to September
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Fuji, Granny Smith, or Red Delicious)
Pollination

Fuji

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 October to November
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Gala, Granny Smith, or Golden Delicious)
Pollination

Granny Smith

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 October to November
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Fuji, Gala, or Pink Lady)
Pollination

Pink Lady (Cripps)

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 Late October to November
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Granny Smith, Fuji, or Gala)
Pollination

Golden Delicious

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile (but produces better with a partner)
Pollination

Red Delicious

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Golden Delicious, Gala, or Fuji)
Pollination

Cosmic Crisp

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Granny Smith, Fuji, or Gala)
Pollination

Jonagold

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 Late September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Triploid (needs two other varieties as pollinators)
Pollination

Braeburn

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 October to November
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Fuji, Gala, or Granny Smith)
Pollination

Anna

✓ 200h
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Needs Dorsett Golden (the only compatible low-chill pollinator)
Pollination

Dorsett Golden

✓ 100h
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Needs Anna (they are the classic low-chill pair)
Pollination

Gravenstein

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 August
Harvest season
🌸 Triploid (needs two other varieties as pollinators)
Pollination

Liberty

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 Late September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator
Pollination

Winesap

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 October
Harvest season
🌸 Triploid (needs two other varieties as pollinators)
Pollination

Arkansas Black

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 Late October to November
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator
Pollination

Apricot (3)

Moorpark

✓ 600h
Chill hours required
🍎 July to August
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Blenheim (Royal)

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Harcot

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 Late July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Asian Pear (2)

Hosui

✓ 450h
Chill hours required
🍎 August to September
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Shinseiki, Chojuro, or Bartlett)
Pollination

Shinseiki

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 August
Harvest season
🌸 Partially self-fertile (better with Hosui or Chojuro)
Pollination

Cherry (Sweet) (4)

Bing

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Lapins, Stella, or Van — NOT Rainier)
Pollination

Rainier

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Bing, Lapins, or Van)
Pollination

Stella

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile (also pollinates other cherries)
Pollination

Lapins

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 Late June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile (also pollinates other cherries)
Pollination

Cherry (Tart) (1)

Montmorency

⚠ 700h — borderline
Chill hours required
🍎 Late June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Fig (2)

Chicago Hardy

✓ 100h
Chill hours required
🍎 August to October
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Brown Turkey

✓ 100h
Chill hours required
🍎 July to October (two crops)
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Jujube (2)

Li

✓ 100h
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile (better with Lang)
Pollination

Lang

✓ 100h
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Li or other jujube)
Pollination

Nectarine (3)

Fantasia

✓ 600h
Chill hours required
🍎 August
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Arctic Star

✓ 500h
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Mericrest

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 August
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Pawpaw (2)

Pawpaw (Shenandoah)

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs different pawpaw variety (Sunflower, Susquehanna, or seedling)
Pollination

Pawpaw (Sunflower)

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Partially self-fertile (better with Shenandoah)
Pollination

Peach (7)

Elberta

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 Late July to August
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Redhaven

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 Mid-July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Reliance

⚠ 1000h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 Early August
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Contender

⚠ 1050h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 Mid-August
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Belle of Georgia

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 Late July to August
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

O'Henry

⚠ 750h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 August to September
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Florida King

✓ 400h
Chill hours required
🍎 May to June
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Pear (4)

Bartlett

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 August to September
Harvest season
🌸 Partially self-fertile (better with Anjou or Bosc)
Pollination

D'Anjou

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Bartlett or Bosc)
Pollination

Bosc

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Needs pollinator (Bartlett or Anjou)
Pollination

Kieffer

✓ 350h
Chill hours required
🍎 October
Harvest season
🌸 Partially self-fertile (better with Orient or Bartlett)
Pollination

Persimmon (Asian) (2)

Fuyu

✓ 200h
Chill hours required
🍎 October to November
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile (no seeds without pollinator)
Pollination

Hachiya

✓ 200h
Chill hours required
🍎 November to December
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Persimmon (Native) (1)

American Persimmon

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 October to November (after frost)
Harvest season
🌸 Usually needs male tree nearby (some cultivars are self-fertile)
Pollination

Plum (2)

Santa Rosa

✓ 300h
Chill hours required
🍎 June to July
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile (but better with Beauty or Burgundy)
Pollination

Methley

✓ 150h
Chill hours required
🍎 May to June
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Plum (European) (1)

Stanley

⚠ 800h — may not fruit
Chill hours required
🍎 September
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Pomegranate (2)

Wonderful

✓ 150h
Chill hours required
🍎 September to October
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Eversweet

✓ 150h
Chill hours required
🍎 August to October
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Quince (1)

Pineapple Quince

✓ 300h
Chill hours required
🍎 October to November
Harvest season
🌸 Self-fertile
Pollination

Chill Hours in Zone 8

Zone 8 typically receives 400–600 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 8'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 8 variety directory.

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Chill hour data from Open-Meteo Historical Weather API. Variety information compiled from university extension services.