Growing Degree Days in Ohio
Ohio has accumulated about 1214 GDD so far this year (base 50°F, since January 1), averaged across 1 NOAA USCRN station. Through July 1, 2026.
How to Read This Number
Growing degree days count accumulated heat: each day adds the amount its average temperature runs above 50°F, the point where cool-season growth and most pests get going. Turf managers use the running total to time crabgrass pre-emergent, annual bluegrass seedhead suppression, plant growth regulator reapplication, and grub control. Treat it as a timing signal read against a model, not a fixed date. The total here is measured air temperature from NOAA USCRN stations, base 50°F, accumulated from January 1 — state the model whenever you compare totals, because a different base or start date is not interchangeable.
USCRN Stations in Ohio (1)
| Station | GDD (base 50°F) | Through |
|---|---|---|
| Wooster 3 SSE | 1,214 | 2026-07-01 |
Cities in Ohio (53)
Each city page pairs its local growing-degree-day total with the current soil temperature from the nearest monitoring station.
- Akron
- Ashtabula
- Bowling Green
- Canton
- Chagrin Falls
- Cincinnati
- Cleveland
- Columbus
- Cuyahoga Falls
- Dayton
- Dublin
- Eastlake
- Elyria
- Euclid
- Fairfield
- Findlay
- Groveport
- Hamilton
- Hebron
- Hudson
- Kent
- Lima
- Lockbourne
- Lorain
- Lucasville
- Mansfield
- Marion
- Marysville
- Massillon
- Medina
- Mentor
- Miamisburg
- Middletown
- Newark
- Novelty
- Oregon
- Perrysburg
- Reynoldsburg
- Sandusky
- Sidney
- Springfield
- Steubenville
- Strongsville
- Toledo
- Troy
- Wadsworth
- Warren
- West Chester
- Westerville
- Willard
- Willoughby
- Youngstown
- Zanesville
Growing Degree Days FAQ for Ohio
How many growing degree days has Ohio accumulated this year?
Ohio has accumulated about 1214 growing degree days (base 50°F, since January 1), averaged across 1 NOAA USCRN station. The total climbs through summer and levels off as temperatures fall.
What base temperature and start date are these totals?
These are base 50°F growing degree days accumulated from January 1, the turf-industry convention. Each day adds the amount its average air temperature runs above 50°F, floored at zero. Totals from a different base or start date are not interchangeable, so the model is stated explicitly wherever a number appears.
What are growing degree days used for in lawn care?
Turf managers track the running total to time temperature-driven tasks: crabgrass pre-emergent before germination, annual bluegrass seedhead suppression, plant growth regulator reapplication, and grub control. Growing degree days are a timing signal read against a model, not a fixed calendar date.
See growing degree days for every state, read the growing degree days lawn-care guide, or browse the full Ohio soil temperature directory.
