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Not all vegetables are created equal when it comes to garden ROI. A row of potatoes might feel productive, but at $0.80/lb in stores, the savings are modest. A few basil plants, on the other hand, produce harvests worth $100+ from $0.30 in seeds.
This guide ranks the 10 best vegetables to grow for maximum savings β with real numbers on seed cost, yield, store price, and days to harvest.
How We Ranked These Vegetables
We scored each vegetable on four criteria:
- Price differential: Store price vs cost to grow
- Yield per plant or per square foot
- Ease of growing (beginners can succeed)
- Growing season length (longer = more savings)
#1: Fresh Herbs β Best ROI of Any Garden Plant
Fresh herbs are the undisputed ROI champion of the vegetable garden. A supermarket bunch of basil costs $2.99β$4.99 and wilts within days. A single basil plant grown from $0.25 in seeds produces fresh leaves all summer.
- Best herbs to grow: Basil, cilantro, parsley, dill, chives, mint
- Seed cost: $0.02β$0.25 per plant
- Store equivalent value per season: $50β$200
- Growing difficulty: Easy (most herbs thrive in pots)
- Days to first harvest: 21β45 days
Pro tip: Grow basil next to your tomatoes β they’re companion plants that repel pests and improve each other’s flavour.
#2: Tomatoes β The Classic High-Value Crop
Tomatoes are the most popular home garden vegetable for good reason. Heirloom and cherry varieties cost $4β$6/lb organic in stores. Homegrown cost: $0.02β$0.05/lb including seeds and soil amendments.
- Seed cost: $0.10β$0.30 per plant
- Yield per plant: 10β20 lbs over the season
- Store price: $2.00β$6.00/lb (higher for organic/heirloom)
- Value per plant: $20β$120
- Growing difficulty: Easyβmoderate (needs staking)
- Days to harvest: 60β80 days from transplant
Plant 4β6 tomato plants to supply a family of four through summer and into fall. Preserve surplus as sauce or freeze whole for winter use.
#3: Salad Greens and Lettuce β Fastest Payback
Pre-washed salad mixes cost $4β$6 per small bag β one of the most expensive grocery items per pound. Growing your own cuts this cost by 95%.
- Seed cost: $0.02β$0.05 per plant
- Yield: Multiple harvests per plant (cut-and-come-again)
- Store price: $4β$6 per 5 oz bag ($12β$20/lb)
- Value per 4-foot row: $30β$60 per season
- Growing difficulty: Very easy
- Days to harvest: 30β45 days
Plant successive sowings every 2β3 weeks for continuous harvest. Lettuce bolts in summer heat β choose heat-tolerant varieties for summer planting.
#4: Zucchini and Summer Squash β Highest Yield Per Plant
One zucchini plant can produce 15β25 lbs of squash over the season β often more than a family can eat. The problem isn’t growing enough; it’s finding enough ways to use it all.
- Seed cost: $0.10β$0.20 per plant
- Yield per plant: 15β25 lbs
- Store price: $1.50β$2.50/lb
- Value per plant: $22β$62
- Growing difficulty: Very easy
- Days to harvest: 50β60 days
Grow 2β3 plants maximum β more than that and you’ll be giving zucchini to everyone you know.
#5: Peppers β Best for Warm Climates
Bell peppers cost $1.50β$3.00 each in stores. Specialty and heirloom peppers run $5β$8/lb organic. Each pepper plant produces 10β15 fruits over the season.
- Seed cost: $0.10β$0.30 per plant
- Yield per plant: 5β10 lbs
- Store price: $1.50β$6.00/lb
- Value per plant: $8β$60 (highest for specialty varieties)
- Growing difficulty: Easyβmoderate (needs warm soil)
- Days to harvest: 70β90 days
#6: Green Beans β Easy and Prolific
Bush beans are beginner-friendly, require no staking, and produce heavily. Pole beans take up vertical space but produce continuously all season.
- Seed cost: $0.05β$0.10 per seed
- Yield: 2β3 lbs per foot of row
- Store price: $2.00β$3.50/lb fresh
- Value per 10-foot row: $40β$70
- Growing difficulty: Very easy
- Days to harvest: 50β65 days
#7: Cucumbers β High Volume, Easy Growing
Cucumbers are one of the most productive plants for their garden footprint when grown vertically on a trellis. Each plant produces 10β20 cucumbers over the season.
- Seed cost: $0.05β$0.15 per seed
- Yield per plant: 10β20 cucumbers (8β15 lbs)
- Store price: $0.75β$1.50 per cucumber
- Value per plant: $7.50β$30
- Growing difficulty: Easy
- Days to harvest: 50β70 days
#8: Kale and Swiss Chard β Extended Harvest Season
Kale and Swiss chard can be harvested continuously from spring through first frost β and kale actually improves in flavour after a frost. Organic kale costs $3β$5/lb in stores.
- Seed cost: $0.05β$0.10 per plant
- Yield per plant: 5β10 lbs over full season
- Store price: $2.50β$5.00/lb organic
- Value per plant: $12β$50
- Growing difficulty: Very easy
- Days to harvest: 55β70 days (earlier for baby kale)
#9: Peas β Best for Spring
Sugar snap peas from the garden are so good they rarely make it inside. Store prices for fresh peas run $3β$5/lb. Grow them as a spring crop before summer heat arrives.
- Seed cost: $0.05β$0.10 per seed
- Yield per 10-foot row: 4β8 lbs
- Store price: $3β$5/lb
- Value per row: $12β$40
- Growing difficulty: Easy (needs trellis)
- Days to harvest: 60β70 days
#10: Winter Squash and Pumpkins β Best for Storage
Butternut squash, acorn squash, and pumpkins store for 3β6 months in a cool, dry place β meaning summer garden work feeds you through winter. Butternut squash costs $1.50β$2.50/lb in stores.
- Seed cost: $0.10β$0.25 per seed
- Yield per plant: 3β6 squash (8β20 lbs)
- Store price: $1.50β$2.50/lb
- Value per plant: $12β$50
- Growing difficulty: Easy (needs space)
- Days to harvest: 80β110 days
Quick-Start Recommendation: Best First Garden Mix
For a beginner 4Γ8 raised bed aiming for maximum savings:
- 2 tomato plants
- 1 zucchini plant
- 4 basil plants
- 2 rows of salad greens
- 1 row of beans
- 2 pepper plants
Estimated annual value: $350β$600. Estimated Year 1 net savings: $200β$400. Estimated Year 2+ net savings: $300β$550.
To get started, a variety seed pack gives you multiple crops to experiment with. See heirloom vegetable seed variety packs on Amazon.