Zucchini care

Zucchini Blossoms Dropping Without Fruit: Causes and Fixes

It's the classic zucchini puzzle: loads of flowers, but the little squash behind them yellow, shrivel, and fall off — or never form at all. Most of the time it's a pollination story, and most of the time it sorts itself out. Here are the real causes, ranked, with how to tell them apart and what to do.

Early male-only flowers (the usual, harmless start)

What's happening

Young zucchini plants almost always open a flush of male flowers first, sometimes for a week or more, before female flowers appear. Males have a plain thin stem; females have a tiny embryonic squash at the base. With no females open yet, there's simply nothing to set fruit.

How to confirm

Look at the flower bases: if they're all slim stems with no miniature fruit behind them, they're male. The plant is young and otherwise growing well.

How to fix it

Nothing to fix — wait. Female flowers follow within a week or two, and the plant will set fruit normally once both sexes are open at the same time.

Prevent it

Be patient with new plants; this is the plant working exactly as it should.

Poor pollination

What's happening

Even with both flowers open, bees may not transfer enough pollen — common in cool, wet, or windy weather, in shaded gardens, or where pesticide use has thinned the bee population. The unpollinated baby fruit starts to grow, then yellows from the tip and rots off.

How to confirm

Female flowers open and the tiny fruit begins to swell, but it soon turns yellow or mushy at the blossom end and drops. You see few bees working the flowers in the morning.

How to fix it

Hand-pollinate in the morning when flowers are open: pick a male flower, peel back its petals, and dab the pollen-laden center directly onto the center of each female flower. A small soft brush works too.

Prevent it

Plant bee-friendly flowers like borage and nasturtium nearby, avoid spraying insecticides while plants bloom, and give the patch full sun and good airflow.

Heat stress

What's happening

When daytime temperatures climb above about 90–95°F, or nights stay very warm, pollen viability drops and flowers may open, fail to set, and fall. The plant pauses fruiting until conditions ease.

How to confirm

Blossom drop coincides with a heat wave; the plant otherwise looks healthy and resumes setting fruit once temperatures moderate.

How to fix it

Keep the soil evenly moist and mulched to reduce stress, hand-pollinate early in the morning when pollen is most viable, and wait out the heat — fruit set returns as temperatures fall.

Prevent it

In hot regions, time main plantings for spring and fall and offer a little afternoon shade during extreme heat.

Too much nitrogen or crowding

What's happening

Heavy nitrogen feeding pushes lush leaves and a glut of male flowers while delaying females and fruit. Overcrowded plants compete for light and stay leaf-heavy and unproductive.

How to confirm

Plants are large, dark green, and leafy with abundant male flowers but few females and little fruit, and they've been fed a high-nitrogen fertilizer.

How to fix it

Stop high-nitrogen feeding and switch to a balanced or slightly potassium-forward fertilizer to encourage flowering and fruit. Thin overcrowded plants so each has 2–3 feet of room.

Prevent it

Feed with a balanced vegetable fertilizer and space plants generously from the start.

When to worry (and when not to)

A wave of dropped blossoms on a young plant, or a brief pause during a heat spell, is completely normal — don't panic. Worry only if weeks pass with female flowers opening but never setting fruit despite good weather and visible bees; that points to a persistent pollination gap worth correcting by hand. Once both flower types are open together and a pollinator (or you) does the work, a healthy zucchini almost always switches into its famously heavy production.