Honeycrisp Apple
Minnesota's Own World-Famous Apple, Grown in Your Backyard
The Honeycrisp Apple (Malus × domestica 'Honeycrisp') is the University of Minnesota's most celebrated creation — the apple that set the world standard for explosive, juicy crispness and the official Minnesota State Fruit. Bred right here for our climate, it's zone 3 hardy and disease-resistant, and while it's now grown commercially around the globe, nothing beats a Honeycrisp picked fresh from your own tree in the Upper Midwest where it belongs. Pretty white-pink blossoms in spring give way to large, sweet-tart, sensationally crunchy apples that ripen in mid-to-late September. Whether you're starting a backyard orchard in Lakeville, an edible landscape in Woodbury, or just want true homegrown Honeycrisp in Maple Grove, this is the apple Minnesotans are proudest of.
Honeycrisp Apple Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
| Scientific Name | Malus × domestica 'Honeycrisp' |
| Common Names | Honeycrisp Apple, Honeycrisp |
| Mature Height | 15–20 feet (standard); smaller on dwarfing rootstock |
| Mature Width | 12–18 feet |
| Growth Rate | Moderate |
| Sun | Full sun (6+ hours) — essential for good fruiting and flavor |
| Water | Moderate. Needs consistent moisture, especially while fruit is sizing up in summer. |
| USDA Zones | 3–7 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a) — bred for cold-climate hardiness |
| Soil | Adaptable. Tolerates Minnesota clay-loam; prefers deep, well-drained, fertile soil. |
| Bloom | White-pink flowers in mid-spring |
| Harvest | Large sweet-tart, ultra-crisp apples ripening mid-to-late September |
| Pollination | Not self-fertile — needs a different apple or flowering crabapple nearby that blooms at the same time |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to about -40°F — a true zone 3 apple |
| Deer Resistance | Low — deer love apple trees; protect the trunk and lower branches |
Honeycrisp Apple Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Backyard Orchard and Edible Landscape
Honeycrisp is the centerpiece of any Minnesota home orchard. A single tree on dwarfing rootstock fits easily into a Lakeville or Woodbury yard and can produce bushels of the state's favorite apple. Plant two different varieties for reliable cross-pollination and even bigger harvests.
Spring Flowers and Pollinator Forage
Before the fruit comes the show: clouds of white-pink blossoms in mid-spring that draw bees and other pollinators. An apple tree pulls double duty as an ornamental flowering tree and a productive food source.
A Taste of Minnesota Heritage
Developed at the University of Minnesota and named the State Fruit, Honeycrisp is a point of local pride. Growing your own connects your yard to Minnesota's celebrated apple-breeding legacy — and gives you fruit fresher than anything in a store.
Best Time to Plant Honeycrisp Apple in Minnesota
Apple trees are deciduous, so you have two good planting windows in the Twin Cities:
Spring (late April–May), once the ground has thawed, is ideal — the tree gets the full growing season to establish before its first winter.
Fall (September–mid-October) also works. Plant at least six weeks before the ground freezes so roots can settle in. Avoid mid-summer planting, and never plant into frozen ground.
How to Plant Honeycrisp Apple
- Choose a full-sun site with good air circulation, and plant a compatible pollination partner (another apple variety or a flowering crabapple) within about 50 feet.
- Dig wide, not deep — 2–3 times the root ball width, only as deep as the ball. Keep any graft union 2–3 inches above the soil line.
- Check drainage — if water pools in the hole, break through clay hardpan or mound-plant slightly; apples dislike wet feet.
- Backfill with the native soil mixed with 20–30% compost for fertile, well-drained footing.
- Build a 3–4 inch water basin around the root zone to direct water to the roots; flatten it before winter.
- Mulch with 2–3 inches of shredded bark or wood chips kept 2 inches from the trunk, and wrap the trunk to protect against rabbits, deer, and winter sunscald.
Watering Honeycrisp Apple in Minnesota
First Year Watering Schedule
Weeks 1–2: water every 1–2 days, deep and slow. Month 1–2: every 3–4 days. Month 3 through fall: every 5–7 days during active growth, less when rainfall is adequate. Consistent moisture is especially important while fruit is developing. Stop watering 2–3 weeks before the ground freezes in late October so the tree can harden off.
After Year One
Established Honeycrisp benefits from steady moisture during the growing season — especially mid-summer as the apples size up — for the best fruit quality. Water deeply during dry spells (2+ weeks with no rain), soaking to 6–8 inches, and keep a mulch layer to hold moisture.
Do I need a second apple tree? Yes — Honeycrisp is not self-fertile, so it needs a different apple variety or a flowering crabapple blooming at the same time nearby for good fruit set. Haralson is an excellent Minnesota-hardy partner.
When are the apples ready? Honeycrisp ripens mid-to-late September in the Twin Cities. The apples store unusually well, keeping their crunch for months in cold storage.
Will it survive a Minnesota winter? Yes — it was bred at the U of M specifically for our climate and is hardy to about -40°F (zone 3).
Does it need spraying or special care? Honeycrisp has good disease resistance, but like all apples it benefits from annual late-winter pruning for airflow and an eye out for pests. A simple home-orchard care routine keeps it productive.
You May Also Like
- Haralson Apple — a tart, ultra-hardy Minnesota apple and an ideal pollination partner for Honeycrisp.
- Prairiefire Crabapple — a disease-resistant flowering crabapple that doubles as an apple pollinator.
- Spring Snow Crabapple — a fruitless flowering crabapple that still provides pollen for nearby apples.
- Spring Flurry Serviceberry — a native tree with edible June berries for the edible landscape.
How Many Honeycrisp Apple Trees Do I Need?
Plan on two trees — Honeycrisp is not self-fertile, so it needs a different apple variety or a flowering crabapple blooming nearby (within about 50 feet) to set fruit at all. Space standard trees 15–18 feet apart; dwarfing-rootstock trees can go 8–10 feet apart in a backyard orchard row. One Honeycrisp plus one Haralson is the classic Minnesota two-tree setup: they pollinate each other and stagger your harvest.
Honeycrisp Apple Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: White-pink blossoms blanket the tree in mid-spring, buzzing with bees — pollination season for the fall crop.
- Summer: The canopy fills out while apples size up through July and August; steady water now means bigger, crisper fruit.
- Fall: The payoff — large, explosively crisp sweet-tart apples ripen mid-to-late September, with soft yellow leaf color after harvest.
- Winter: Hardy to −40°F with sturdy bare branching; your stored Honeycrisps keep their crunch in the fridge for months.
At a Glance
✔ Pollinator-Friendly ✔ Edible
Plant It With
- Haralson Apple — the ideal Minnesota pollination partner; tart baking apple to Honeycrisp's sweet eater.
- Prairiefire Crabapple — disease-resistant pink bloomer that doubles as an apple pollinator.
- Spring Snow Crabapple — fruitless white crabapple that supplies pollen with no fruit cleanup.
- Spring Flurry Serviceberry — native companion with edible June berries to round out the edible landscape.
Is Honeycrisp Apple Right for Your Yard?
Plant Honeycrisp if you have full sun (6+ hours), well-drained soil, room for two apple trees (or a crabapple partner), and the willingness to do simple annual pruning — in return you get the state's most famous apple, fresher than any store can sell it. It's not a fit for shady or soggy yards, single-tree spots with no pollinator nearby, or unfenced yards with heavy deer pressure — deer love apple trees as much as Minnesotans do.