A mix of red, yellow, pink, and black tomatoes grown from Johnny's tomato seeds.

Tomato Seeds

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Hybrid version of French heirloom Marmande; among the best in flavor.
Early high-yielding San Marzano type for greenhouse and hoophouse.
Early, striped snacking tomato.
Strong, balanced, high-yielding plant.
Unique look and exceptional flavor.
Early San Marzano type with great flavor for sauce.
A great match for Tomatoberry Garden.
Highly productive grape tomato with leaf mold resistance.
Delicious brown cocktail tomato.
Early bicolor to kick off the season.
Hybrid with black heirloom quality; dead ringer for Cherokee Purple.
Heirloom-type pink greenhouse tomato.
Bicolor for sustained harvest.
Vigorous, vegetative rootstock for large fruits and long-season crops.
Good flavor and mildew tolerance.
High-performance purple beefsteak.
Heirloom-like oxheart for the greenhouse.
Larger, more flavorful Juliet type.
Most vigorous, balanced rootstock.
Save money growing your own quality grafted seedlings.
Eye-catching beauty with dark-indigo shoulders for quart sales.
Fresh market greenhouse tomato with strong disease package.
Sale
Small deep red cherry that resists late blight.
Sale
Mid-size slicer bred for earliness, disease resistance, and flavor.
Sale
Wild tomato with great flavor, fantastic for salsa and fresh eating.
Sale
Appealing pale-yellow cherry fruits on compact, easy-to-pick plants.
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Sweet, fruity flavor has universal appeal.
Sale
Smooth late-season tomato with plenty of old-fashioned tomato flavor.
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Heirloom-quality pink slicer with more reliable, easier-to-grow plant.
Sale
Mahogany brown with distinctively rich and fruity tomato flavor.
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Tender and nearly seedless, intermediate resistance to late blight.
Sale
An entirely new texture.
Delicious, productive; fantastic-tasting fruits on nice, long trusses.
Out Of Stock


Choosing Among the Types

To compare days to maturity, fruit size, firmness, disease resistance, and more, use our tomato variety comparison charts:

For a primer on choosing tomato types plus some specific variety recommendations, we encourage you to visit our article 3 Ways to Choose the Best Tomato Varieties For Your Needs.



Tomato Terminology

It can be helpful to understand some of the following terminology as you shop tomato varieties.

  • Growth Habit
    • Indeterminate: vining-type tomatoes that continue to form new leaves, shoots, and flowers for an indefinite time period (until frost or some other factor causes them to die).
    • Determinate: bush-type tomatoes, which grow to a certain size then divert their major energy stores away from vegetative structures, toward flower and fruit development and ripening.
    • Semi-Determinate: tomatoes that continue growing like an indeterminate, but maintain a more compact, bush-like plant, like a determinate.
    • Dwarf or Semi-Dwarf (a.k.a. Patio Tomatoes): these plants have a tidy plant habit and short stature generally appropriate for container growing.
  • Greenhouse Performer: varieties demonstrating outstanding performance in protected agriculture including greenhouse or high tunnel/hoophouse. For more on our trial criteria and specific variety recommendations for the heated greenhouse and unheated tunnel, see Trial Criteria for Johnny’s Greenhouse Performers.


Growing Information

For guidance on growing tomatoes from seed, we offer the following: