Guide

Companion planting: the honest version

Companion planting is the idea that some plants grow better next to certain others. The honest truth: most of the famous “carrots love tomatoes” pairing charts are folklore, not science — fun, but no more tested than a horoscope. Yet a handful of the real mechanisms behind them genuinely work: physical support, living mulch, nitrogen from legumes, flowers that pull in helpful insects, and one specific marigold trick. Here’s what to trust, what to skip, and how to use the good parts in your own space.

Where the pairing charts came from

Most companion-planting lists trace back to gardening folklore popularised by books like Louise Riotte’s Carrots Love Tomatoes (1975) — traditions and anecdotes handed down, not controlled trials. Washington State University horticulturist Linda Chalker-Scott puts it bluntly: popular companion-plant lists “may be fun to use, but they should not be perceived or promoted as scientifically valid any more than astrology” (WSU). The important part of her point is the flip side: the real science of growing plants together is substantial — it just goes by different names.

What the evidence actually supports

These effects are real and reasonably well documented:

Want proof that designed intercropping can be powerful? The most rigorously studied example is the “push–pull” system for African maize, where intercropping with desmodium and surrounding grass controls stemborer pests and striga weed and lifts yields (push-pull.net). Tellingly, scientists are still revising why it works — recent work suggests desmodium intercepts and kills pests rather than simply repelling them (eLife, 2024). Good science stays humble; folklore charts never do.

What to skip

You can safely ignore the detailed “friends and enemies” pairing tables, the long lists of crops that supposedly “hate” each other, and any claim that a specific neighbour will improve a vegetable’s flavour. There’s little to no controlled evidence for these, and chasing them makes planning harder without making your harvest better (WSU Extension).

How to use the good parts in your space

You don’t need a chart. Borrow the mechanisms that actually work:

See what actually thrives where you are →

Sources

Educational guidance, not a guarantee, and not agricultural advice. Last reviewed 2026-07-15. Growmanac makes no edibility or health claims.