Jalapeño

Capsicum annuum var. annuum

Also known as: Hot pepper, Jalapeño, Cuaresmeño (large variant), Mexican chili pepper

Use in garden planner Calculate nutrients

Quick facts

Category
fruiting
Difficulty
intermediate
Days to harvest
70 to 100 days
Harvest type
continuous production over weeks or months
Spacing
45 cm between plants

Environment

Temperature
2030°C
pH
5.5 to 6.5
EC (hydroponic)
1.8 to 2.8 mS/cm
Daily light
22 to 30 mol/m²/day (strict, will fail outside this range)

Climate and zones

USDA zones
10 to 13 (winter low around -1°C or warmer)
Frost tolerance
frost sensitive (dies at first frost)
Season
warm (summer crops, frost-sensitive)

Viable growing environments:

  • outdoor year-round (in zone)
  • outdoor in growing season (annual)
  • unheated greenhouse / hoop house
  • heated greenhouse
  • indoor (heated home)
  • indoor hydroponics under grow lights

USDA zone bounds reflect outdoor year-round survival. Anywhere outside the bounded zone range, this crop still grows as an annual in the warm months (outdoor_seasonal), under cover (greenhouse), or indoors under lights.

Growing systems

Jalapeño works in:

  • drip / Dutch buckets
  • media bed (ebb and flow)
  • soil bed

Root mass is heavy - thin-channel systems (NFT, vertical towers) can't hold this crop mechanically, hence the system list above.

Growing media

The substrate the roots sit in. Choice depends on the system (clay pebbles don't fit NFT channels; rockwool isn't used in media beds) and the crop (jalapeño works in the media listed below).

Medium pH effect Water retention Bacterial surface
Expanded clay pebbles (LECA) neutral / inert low high
Coco coir (Coconut coir) slightly acidic high moderate
Perlite (Expanded volcanic glass) neutral / inert very low low
Rockwool (Mineral wool) alkaline until pre-soaked very high low
Soil-based mix (Potting soil) varies by source high high

Bacterial surface area matters for aquaponics: clay pebbles, lava rock, and pumice double as biofilter substrate. Low-surface media (rockwool, perlite, pea gravel) work in hydroponics but need a separate biofilter in aquaponics.

Nutrient demand by stage

NPK ratios are relative weights at each growth stage; the nutrient mix calculator scales them to absolute grams or ml. EC targets shift through the plant's life: seedlings need a much lighter solution than fruiting adults.

Stage NPK EC target (mS/cm)
seedling 1 1 1 1
vegetative 3 1 2 2
flowering 2 2 3 2.3
fruiting 1 2 4 2.6

Companion-growing notes

  • Heavy uptake of potassium, calcium. Co-grown crops with the same demand will end up deficient even at "correct" EC. Plan around this in shared reservoirs.
  • High transpiration. Reservoir level will need regular top-ups during fruiting or flowering.

Aquaponics suitability

Compatible with typical aquaponics nutrient profiles. Fish waste provides enough nitrogen for healthy growth; supplemental potassium, calcium, and iron may still be needed depending on fish stocking density.

Care notes

One of the most productive and reliable hydroponic peppers. EC 2.0-3.0 mS/cm. pH 5.8-6.5. Temperature: 2030°C. Moderate to high light (DLI 18-25 mol/m2/day). Plants are compact (4060 cm) and bushy. DWC, Dutch bucket, NFT (for smaller plants), or drip systems all work. From transplant to first harvest: 65-80 days. Each plant produces 25-40 peppers over a season under good conditions. Harvest at the green stage (the standard for fresh use) or let them ripen to red for a sweeter, slightly hotter flavor. For chipotle: smoke red-ripe jalapenos over hardwood (pecan, hickory, or mesquite) at 90100°C for 6-12 hours until dried and deeply smoky. Homemade chipotle is a transformative kitchen product. Calcium supplementation prevents blossom end rot on the thick-walled fruits. Jalapenos are beginner-friendly, productive, and culinarily versatile. Arguably the single best pepper variety for a first-time hydroponic pepper grower.

Notable varieties

A starting shortlist of cultivars worth knowing about. Not exhaustive: the seed catalogs list hundreds of named varieties. These are the ones home growers commonly choose between.

Cultivar Type Breeder / origin Days Size Notes
Early Jalapeño open-pollinated 65 25 g Standard 6-7cm green-to-red pods, 3500-8000 Scoville. Compact plants suit container growing. Earliest to bear, useful in short-season zones.
Mucho Nacho hybrid 75 45 g F1 with fruit nearly twice the size of standard jalapeño. Heat similar to Early Jalapeño but the larger pods are easier to stuff. Vigorous plants, higher yield per square foot.
TAM Mild Jalapeño open-pollinated Texas A&M 70 30 g Bred by Texas A&M for low heat (1000-1500 Scoville) while keeping jalapeño flavor. Useful for fresh eating where standard jalapeños are too hot, or for canning where heat would intensify.
Jalapeño M open-pollinated 75 30 g Mexican landrace selection, the parent of most modern jalapeños. Hotter than Early Jalapeño (5000-12000 Scoville). The classic flavor before commercial breeding mellowed the variety.

Plan a setup with Jalapeño

Verified against: cornell-controlled-environment-ag, rhs-uk. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.

Further reading