🏗️ Complete Beginner's Guide

How to Set Up
Your Greenhouse:
Step by Step

Ten steps from choosing your spot to your first harvest. This is the guide I wish I had before I spent two seasons figuring it out the hard way.

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1
Step 1 of 10

Choose Your Location

This is the decision you can't undo cheaply. Before you buy a greenhouse, spend a few days watching how sunlight moves across your yard at different times of day — and at different times of year if you can.

Your greenhouse needs at least 6 hours of direct sunlight daily. South-facing orientation (in the Northern Hemisphere) maximizes winter sun and minimizes shading. Avoid low spots where cold air pools at night — frost settles in hollows and can wipe out seedlings even on a mild night.

Practical checklist for a good site: close to a water source, access to power if you need heating or lighting, good drainage so rainwater doesn't pool around the base, and enough clearance from trees that shade and root intrusion aren't a problem in 5 years.

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Kristian's rule: If you're between two spots, always choose more sun over more convenience. I put my first greenhouse close to the house for easy access. It was shaded by noon. Three years later I moved it and started over.
2
Step 2 of 10

Pick the Right Greenhouse Type

The four main options for home growers are: lean-to (attached to a wall, smaller footprint, cheaper), freestanding (standalone structure, most versatile), hoop house (arched tunnel with poly cover, lowest cost), and cold frame (low unheated box, limited growing height).

Most beginners do best with a freestanding polycarbonate greenhouse in the 6×8 to 8×12 foot range. It's manageable to set up, has room to actually grow in, and won't break the budget. Hoop houses are great if budget is the primary constraint. Lean-tos work if you have a suitable south-facing wall.

Don't buy a greenhouse that's "right for now" if you'll want to expand in a year. It's cheaper to buy one step up than to replace it.

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Full type comparison, climate matching, and budget tiers in the Buying Guide →
3
Step 3 of 10

Prepare the Foundation or Base

A level, stable base is the most critical and most skipped step. Most kit greenhouses come with base rails that need to sit on something solid — ground anchors in soft soil, a timber perimeter, paving slabs, or poured concrete.

For a starter 6×8 greenhouse: a gravel pad with timber edging works well and allows drainage. Lay weed fabric first, then 4 inches of compacted gravel, then your base rails or timber frame. Check level in both directions before securing anything.

Bigger greenhouses (10×12+) or permanent installations benefit from poured concrete footings or a continuous concrete perimeter. This isn't optional in areas with strong winds — an unanchored greenhouse becomes a projectile.

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Don't skip this: The single most common reason kit greenhouses fail structurally is an unlevel base. A half-inch difference across 8 feet causes the frame to rack and the panels to crack or fall out.
4
Step 4 of 10

Assemble the Frame

Read the instructions from start to finish before you pick up a single part. Lay out all components and verify counts against the parts list before assembly. This sounds obvious and most people skip it — and then spend an afternoon searching for a missing bolt.

Assembly sequence for most kit greenhouses: base rails → corner uprights → intermediate uprights → ridge beam → purlins or cross-bracing → door frame. Get someone to help. Most components are manageable alone but align and tighten much faster with two people.

Tighten bolts to "firm" during assembly, not full torque — you'll need adjustment as later components go on. Final tighten everything once the frame is square and plumb.

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Pro tip: Check square by measuring diagonals before you tighten anything. Both diagonals should be equal. If they're not, the frame will rack and glazing won't fit cleanly.
5
Step 5 of 10

Install Glazing or Covering

Most modern kit greenhouses use twin-wall polycarbonate panels — lightweight, shatter-resistant, and better insulating than single-pane glass. 6mm panels are standard; 8mm or 10mm panels are worth the upgrade for cold climates.

Install panels from the bottom up. Slide panels into the frame channels — don't force them. Polycarbonate expands with heat, so leave the manufacturer-specified gap at joints. Seal top edges with aluminum tape (closed-cell foam tape for the sides) to prevent moisture and insects from entering the flutes.

For hoop houses with poly sheeting: attach at one end first, pull taut to the other end before securing, and bury or anchor the base edges to prevent wind from lifting the cover.

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UV side matters: Polycarbonate panels have a UV-protected face (usually marked). Install with the UV side facing out. Installing it backwards leads to yellowing and brittleness within a few years.
6
Step 6 of 10

Set Up Ventilation

Ventilation is not optional. On a clear day, a closed greenhouse can reach 120°F (49°C) within an hour of sunrise. That will kill everything inside. Most beginners underestimate this and lose their first crops to heat, not cold.

The rule of thumb: roof vent area should equal at least 20% of your floor area. A 6×8 greenhouse (48 sq ft) needs about 10 sq ft of vent opening. Most kit greenhouses include one roof vent — add more if you can, or add a second vent on the opposite side of the ridge to create a thermal chimney effect.

In warm climates or summer growing, add a small circulation fan low in the greenhouse to move air even when vents are open. A $25 clip fan makes a real difference in disease prevention and temperature control.

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Auto vent openers are worth every penny. They use a wax piston that expands with heat to open vents automatically — no electricity, no timers, no forgetting. A $20–30 opener on each vent handles most ventilation without thinking about it.
7
Step 7 of 10

Install Heating (If Your Zone Needs It)

Whether you need heat depends entirely on what you want to grow and when. Check your USDA hardiness zone — zones 7+ can often grow cold-hardy greens (kale, spinach, chard) through winter with no added heat. Zones 6 and below need supplemental heat to grow anything other than the most frost-tolerant crops.

Options by budget: electric fan heater (easiest, most controllable, expensive to run on electricity), propane heater (cheaper fuel cost, requires venting), natural gas (cheapest ongoing cost, needs permanent installation). For small greenhouses, a 1,500-watt electric heater with a thermostat is the simplest starting point.

Size for your coldest expected night, not your average. A heater that runs at 100% capacity during a cold snap will struggle and fail. Get one that's rated for 20–30% more BTUs than your calculated need.

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Find your hardiness zone: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map →
8
Step 8 of 10

Set Up Irrigation and Watering

Run your water supply into the greenhouse before you fill growing beds — it's much harder to route a hose under raised beds afterward. A single hose bib inside the greenhouse works. If you have more than 3–4 beds, drip irrigation saves significant time.

Greenhouse watering differs from outdoor: there's no rain to supplement your watering, and the enclosed environment means disease pressure from overwatering is higher. Water soil, not leaves. Morning watering is better than evening — leaves should be dry by nightfall.

A simple drip system with a timer (around $30–60) is one of the highest-ROI investments you can make in a greenhouse. It eliminates the #2 cause of beginner crop failure: inconsistent watering.

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Before you invest in complex irrigation: spend your first season hand-watering so you understand what your plants actually need. Then automate when you know your patterns.
9
Step 9 of 10

Prepare Soil and Growing Beds

Do not use garden soil inside a greenhouse. Outdoor soil compacts under repeated watering, drains poorly in containers, and carries weed seeds and pathogens that thrive in the warm, humid greenhouse environment.

Use a quality growing mix: a 60/30/10 blend of high-quality compost, perlite or coarse grit, and coir or peat moss works well for most crops. Pre-blended "greenhouse growing media" or quality potting mix from a garden center is a reasonable starting point.

Raised beds (6–10 inches deep) work well for most vegetables. Grow bags are a flexible alternative — easy to move, easy to replace the media between crops, and no risk of soil-borne disease buildup over time.

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Bed layout matters: Leave at least 24 inches between rows so you can actually work in the space without stepping on beds. I built beds that were too close together in my first greenhouse and spent a season working in a crouch.
10
Step 10 of 10

First Planting — What to Grow First

Run your greenhouse empty for a week before planting. Monitor temperature swings morning and evening. You'll discover things: a vent that doesn't seal, a heater that cycles more than expected, a cold spot in one corner. Learn the space before you trust it with plants.

Start with forgiving, fast-maturing crops: lettuce, radishes, herbs (basil, cilantro, parsley), and spinach. These are quick to feedback — if something is wrong, you'll know within days, not weeks. They're also cheap to replace if you make mistakes.

Save tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers for your second season when you understand your greenhouse's temperature patterns. These crops need consistent warmth that beginners often can't provide until they've spent a season learning their setup.

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Month-by-month planting guide for every season: Greenhouse Growing Calendar →
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Common Setup Mistakes Worth Knowing

Even with a good guide, there are a few things that trip up nearly every beginner. The most expensive mistakes to fix after the fact:

  • Underestimating ventilation needs (closed greenhouse → 120°F by 9am)
  • Skipping the level check on the foundation
  • Buying the smallest greenhouse possible and needing to upgrade in a year
  • Using garden soil in raised beds (compacts, drains poorly, carries disease)
  • Overwatering in the first season (no rain to bail you out)
Read the full 5 Biggest Mistakes guide →
📋 Free Printable Checklist

Get the printable
setup checklist

All 10 steps condensed into a one-page checklist you can take to the build site. Plus a first-season planting schedule for your climate zone.

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What Does Greenhouse Setup Cost?

Budget ranges for each greenhouse type at a typical beginner scale (6×8 to 8×12 feet). These include the structure and basic infrastructure — foundation, ventilation, irrigation — but not heating or grow media.

Type 01
Cold Frame
$50–$300
Low-growing season extender only. No standing room. Best for hardening off seedlings.
Type 02
Hoop House
$200–$800
Budget-friendly arched tunnel. Good for row crops; limited in cold climates.
Type 03
Lean-To
$500–$2,500
Attaches to a wall. Shares heat with the house. Smaller footprint than freestanding.
Type 04
Freestanding
$600–$5,000+
Most versatile. Best for year-round growing. Widest range of sizes and quality levels.
Get your accurate cost estimate →
📋
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One-page printable with all 10 setup steps, a foundation prep checklist, and a first-season planting calendar matched to your climate zone.

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