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Fava Beans

Vegetable

Vicia faba

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Fava beans are a cool-season nitrogen-fixing legume that thrives in cold shoulder seasons when most crops cannot grow. One of the oldest cultivated plants in human history, they produce large, meaty beans with a rich, earthy flavor and excel as a cover crop that can also be eaten.

Fava Beans

Growing Conditions

Sunlight

Full Sun

Water Needs

Moderate

Soil

Well-draining loam or clay loam; pH 6.0 - 7.0

Spacing

6 - 8 inches

Days to Maturity

75 - 90 days from direct sow

Growing Zones

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

Thrives in USDA Zones 3 - 10

When to Plant

  • Direct Sow

    6 - 8 weeks before last frost; as soon as soil is workable; or in autumn for overwintering in zones 7+

  • Harvest

    75 - 90 days; harvest when pods are plump and beans are firm but not dried

Phenology (Natural Timing Cues)

Direct Sow

Fava beans are one of the first cool-season crops to go in the ground - they germinate and grow vigorously in cold soil, tolerate hard frost once established, and actively dislike summer heat. Sow 6-8 weeks before the last frost date as soon as soil can be worked. In mild-winter zones (7+), autumn sowing allows overwintering and an earlier spring harvest. Heat above 75°F causes blossoms to drop; in warm zones the spring window is short and timing is critical.

  • Soil can be forked and crumbles; late winter but not frozen.
  • Snowdrops or crocuses are beginning to flower.
  • Daytime temperatures are reaching 40 - 55°F.
  • Last frost date is 6 - 8 weeks away.

Start Dates (Your Location)

Average dates use your saved zone; readiness also checks your forecast when available.

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Average Last Frost

Set your growing zone to see personalized calendar dates.

Current ReadinessWeather data unavailable

Use the average timing, but check your local forecast before planting.

Organic Growing Tips

  • Pinch out growing tips as soon as the lowest flowers open - this concentrates energy into pod development and removes tender new growth that aphids prefer.

  • Sow borage nearby; it deters black bean aphids and attracts beneficial insects.

  • Allow a few plants to dry fully on the stem for dry beans and future planting seed.

  • After harvest, cut plants at the base and compost the tops; leave roots in the soil to release fixed nitrogen.

Care Guidance

Optional seasonal guidance for what you can do, even when nothing is urgent.
  • Watering

    If the top 2 inches of soil feel dry, a deep watering at the base may help more than frequent light watering. In healthy soil, rain may cover much of what it needs.

  • Feeding

    Extra feeding is rarely required if soil is healthy. If growth looks pale or slow, a light compost top-dressing is often enough before adding anything stronger.

  • Seasonal care

    During the main season, harvesting when the crop is ready and removing damaged growth can help keep the planting productive if it starts to look crowded or tired.

Known Varieties

Common cultivars worth knowing
  • Aguadulce

    Large-podded traditional Spanish variety; extremely cold-hardy and suitable for autumn sowing; very long pods with up to 8 beans.

    Best for

    autumn planting, overwintering, long pods

  • Windsor

    Classic English broad bean with large flat seeds and rich flavor; widely grown in home gardens for centuries.

    Best for

    fresh eating, British kitchen garden tradition

  • Crimson Flowered

    Heirloom variety with ornamental red flowers; seeds slightly smaller than Windsor but flavorful; historic cultivar rescued from near-extinction.

    Best for

    ornamental use, heritage gardens

  • The Sutton

    Compact dwarf variety reaching only 12 inches; no staking needed; ideal for small gardens and exposed sites.

    Best for

    small spaces, windy sites, containers

Companion Planting

Support & insectary plants

Nearby plants that attract pollinators, beneficial insects, or improve soil health.

  • Borage

    Attracts beneficial insects and produces nutrient-rich mulch

Avoid planting near

  • Garlic
  • Onion
  • Fennel

    Allelopathic - secretes volatile compounds that inhibit the growth of most vegetables and herbs

Common Pests

All pest management in Garden uses safe, organic, non-toxic methods only. No synthetic pesticides, ever.

Native Range

Origin
Domesticated in the Near East approximately 8,000 - 10,000 years ago.
Native Habitat
The wild ancestor is thought to be a species from the Mediterranean basin and Near East, growing in disturbed habitats and rocky ground.
Current Distribution
Cultivated worldwide in temperate and subtropical climates; major production in China, Ethiopia, Australia, and Europe.

Taxonomy

Kingdom
Plantae
Family
Legume family (Fabaceae)
Genus
Vicia
Species
faba

Morphology

  • Root System

    Deep taproot with fibrous lateral roots bearing nitrogen-fixing nodules; one of the most effective nitrogen fixers among annual legumes.

  • Stem

    Hollow, square-sectioned, upright stems 2 - 5 feet tall depending on variety; self-supporting when short, needing staking in tall forms.

  • Leaves

    Pinnate leaves with 2 - 6 large, waxy oval leaflets; blue-green in color; distinctive among legumes for their lack of tendrils.

  • Flowers

    White flowers with dark purple-black wing spots; highly attractive to bumblebees, which must force the flower open to access nectar.

  • Fruit

    Large, fleshy pods 4 - 8 inches long containing 2 - 8 large flat cream-colored beans with a pale scar; inner pod lining is spongy white.

Natural History

Vicia faba is one of the oldest cultivated plants in human history. Seeds have been recovered from Neolithic sites across the Near East and Mediterranean dating to 6,000 - 8,000 BCE, and archaeological finds from ancient Egypt, Greece, and Israel confirm their central role in early agriculture. They are one of the eight Neolithic founder crops that formed the nutritional basis of early Old World farming societies. In classical Greek culture, favas had a remarkable dual role: they were a staple food and simultaneously associated with death and the souls of the dead, which led the Pythagoreans to prohibit their consumption entirely. This prohibition was so serious that Pythagoras himself reportedly refused to flee an assassin across a fava field, choosing death over trampling the plants. Favas were the principal legume of Europe until Phaseolus species from the Americas arrived after 1492, when common beans rapidly displaced them in much of European gardening. In the 20th century, favism - a potentially serious hemolytic reaction in people with G6PD deficiency, a common inherited condition in Mediterranean and African populations - was connected to fava bean consumption.

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