The Essential Herb to Plant Alongside Your Garden Tomatoes



The idea of companion planting is quite charming. It evokes an image of various plants coexisting harmoniously, sharing stories, laughter, and perhaps even a few book recommendations. When executed properly, this gardening approach can significantly benefit your garden. Tomatoes and parsley are a pair that thrive well together as companion plants.

Tomatoes are a summer favorite for home gardeners, but they often fall victim to a variety of common pests. Fortunately, parsley possesses several attributes that can help ensure your tomatoes remain healthy throughout the growing season. This herb attracts beneficial insects that prey on the pests targeting your tomatoes.



Parsley lures in predatory insects such as hoverflies, parasitic wasps, and tachinid flies, which feed on aphids, caterpillars, thrips, and whiteflies. Since parsley is affordable and readily available at grocery stores, it serves as a useful sacrificial plant for protecting your tomato crop, especially if you’re cultivating rare tomato varieties. If aphids are a frequent problem for your tomatoes, parsley can act as a trap crop, drawing these pests away and allowing your tomatoes to thrive in peace.

Planting Your Pairs

Tomato plants require ample space, but by growing them vertically with support structures, you can utilize the soil between them for planting parsley. It’s important to ensure adequate spacing between your tomato plants if you plan to intersperse them with parsley. Generally, leaving about 2 feet between tomato plants works well for most varieties.

Training tomatoes to climb vertical supports instead of sprawling on the ground will create room for their herbal companions, making this a great strategy for smaller gardens. Even if space isn’t an issue, planting parsley up to 5 feet away from tomatoes can still offer benefits. For optimal growth, maintain a distance of 6 to 8 inches between parsley plants.

You might also consider creating a companion container garden with a tomato plant and a few parsley plants. Opt for a compact tomato variety and plant it in a large container with a diameter of at least 24 inches. A whiskey barrel is a good option, but you might also have suitable garden containers at home. Surround the tomato plant with three parsley plants, and watch them flourish together.

Reg Miller Award
Reg Miller Award

Reg Miller Award recipient, Lewis Lydon with OA Chairman, Pete Shadbolt and CEO, Lechelle Earl.