Cucumber Soil pH Target (6–7)
Cucumber grows best in soil with a pH between 6 and 7, with the upper end usually the safer working target in a home garden. Use this page to set the pH plan before you spread lime or sulfur, and to recognize the symptoms that show up when the bed has drifted outside the target range.
Quick answer
Cucumbers tolerate a slightly wider pH range than tomatoes or peppers and can perform well almost up to neutral. The crop is more sensitive to water management and disease pressure than to small pH differences within the normal vegetable range. The right pH plan is a mix of choosing the correct range and confirming it with a real soil test before any large lime or sulfur pass.
| Field | Recommendation | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Target pH range | 6–7 | Sets the working range before lime or sulfur decisions. |
| Category | Vegetable | Crop family hints at related rotation and amendment guidance. |
| Low-pH symptom | See section below | Recognize a drift below range before yield drops. |
| High-pH symptom | See section below | Catch alkaline drift before micronutrient lockout becomes chronic. |
What soil pH does cucumber actually need?
Cucumber grows best in soil with a pH between 6 and 7.
Cucumbers tolerate a slightly wider pH range than tomatoes or peppers and can perform well almost up to neutral. The crop is more sensitive to water management and disease pressure than to small pH differences within the normal vegetable range.
The target range is a working window rather than a fixed point. Most home gardeners do better aiming for the middle of the range than trying to land on a single decimal place. Soil pH naturally fluctuates with rainfall, irrigation, fertilizer, and organic matter inputs across the season, so a window-based plan is more robust than a single-number target.
If you have not run a soil test in the past one to two seasons, do that before adjusting anything. A real lab test from your state extension service or a private agronomy lab is far more reliable than a quick probe meter, especially when the proposed correction involves several pounds of lime or sulfur.
Symptoms of acidic soil for cucumber
Below about pH 5.6, cucumbers can show slow seedling growth and uneven germination, especially in cool spring soil. The early stand looks weak more than it looks chlorotic.
Acid stress symptoms can look like fertilizer deficiency in early stages, which is why gardeners often add more nitrogen, potassium, or magnesium before testing pH. If feeding the bed does not resolve the issue within a few weeks, an acid pH reading on a soil test usually explains the persistence.
The correct response is rarely panic-liming. Confirm the reading on a second test, then plan a measured lime application using a calculator that accounts for soil texture and the size of the pH gap. Our soil pH calculator gives a starting estimate of pounds of lime or sulfur per 100 square feet for your bed.
Symptoms of alkaline soil for cucumber
Above pH 7.5, micronutrient availability falls and new leaves may show interveinal yellowing while older foliage looks fine. Adding fertilizer rarely fixes this; correcting pH does.
Alkaline drift in a home garden bed is often slow and quiet. It builds up over several seasons of compost passes, wood ash, or carry-over from lime applied to nearby beds. By the time symptoms are obvious in the crop, the pH may already be a full unit above the target range.
Bringing pH back down uses elemental sulfur rather than lime, and the reaction depends on soil microbes that work slowly in cool soil. Plan corrections at least six months before the next planting if possible, and never apply more than about 2 lb of sulfur per 100 square feet in a single pass.
Amendment guidance for cucumber
Most cucumber beds do not need aggressive pH correction. A modest lime pass when soil tests acidic is usually enough. Heavy sulfur applications late in the season offer little benefit because the crop matures quickly.
The general rule across most home garden crops is to cap a single lime pass at 10 lb per 100 sq ft and a single sulfur pass at 2 lb per 100 sq ft. Larger corrections should be split across two seasons with a retest in between, because the reaction is slower than gardeners expect and overshooting in either direction creates a new problem.
If you are still planning the bed layout, the same rules apply: prepare the bed, run a soil test, apply the first amendment pass, then come back to work out row and plant spacing once the chemistry plan is in place.
When to retest the cucumber bed
Retest the cucumber bed every two seasons. Heavy compost users can drift the pH slightly each year, but the crop tolerates that drift better than many other vegetables.
Retesting too soon is a common waste of time. Lime can take six months to fully react in cool soil, and sulfur reacts even more slowly. A three-month retest of a recent lime application usually shows a reading that does not yet reflect the eventual change, which can lead to over-correction.
Keep records of every amendment pass: date, rate, source, and a follow-up reading. Two or three seasons of notes turn pH management from guessing into a real plan that fits your specific bed.
Common pH mistakes when growing cucumber
A common mistake is over-amending cucumber beds with wood ash hoping to boost potassium. Wood ash raises pH unpredictably and can push the bed into the high seven range, which causes more problems than it solves.
Rotate cucurbits out of the same bed for at least a year to break disease cycles. The pH plan is easier to maintain when the same bed is not used for cucumbers two years running.
The other mistake worth flagging is using cheap probe meters as the only data source for a big amendment decision. Probe meters are useful for quick comparisons between beds, but they are not reliable enough to set a lime or sulfur rate by themselves. Pair them with a lab test before any large pass.
Frequently asked questions
Should I lower soil pH for cucumbers if my reading is 7.2?
Usually not in a meaningful way. Cucumbers handle the upper end of the neutral range well, and a modest reading of 7.2 is not a reason to aggressively add sulfur. Confirm with another soil test from a different spot in the bed before changing anything; small sampling differences often look like real pH drift.
Source: https://extension.umn.edu/vegetables/growing-cucumbers
What soil pH does cucumber prefer?
Cucumber grows best in soil with a pH range of 6 to 7. Cucumbers tolerate a slightly wider pH range than tomatoes or peppers and can perform well almost up to neutral. The crop is more sensitive to water management and disease pressure than to small pH differences within the normal vegetable range.
Source: https://extension.umd.edu/sites/extension.umd.edu/files/2021-03/B-1.pdf
What happens to cucumber when the soil is too acidic?
Below about pH 5.6, cucumbers can show slow seedling growth and uneven germination, especially in cool spring soil. The early stand looks weak more than it looks chlorotic.
Source: https://extension.umn.edu/vegetables/growing-cucumbers
What happens to cucumber when the soil is too alkaline?
Above pH 7.5, micronutrient availability falls and new leaves may show interveinal yellowing while older foliage looks fine. Adding fertilizer rarely fixes this; correcting pH does.
Source: https://extension.msstate.edu/lawn-and-garden/vegetable-gardens/test-soil-find-its-ph-value
Sources
- Primary source (crop pH range): University of Maryland Extension — vegetable pH chart
- Secondary source (cucumber management cross-check): University of Minnesota Extension — Growing Cucumbers
- Tertiary source (home garden pH testing context): Mississippi State Extension — Test Soil to Find Its pH Value