FreshNestly
  • Lawn Care
  • Garden Plants
  • Backyard
  • Pests
  • Seasonal
  • Subscribe
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Lawn Care
  • Garden Plants
  • Backyard
  • Pests
  • Seasonal
  • Subscribe

FreshNestly

menu icon
go to homepage
  • Lawn Care
  • Garden Plants
  • Backyard
  • Pests
  • Seasonal
  • Subscribe
subscribe
search icon
Homepage link
  • Lawn Care
  • Garden Plants
  • Backyard
  • Pests
  • Seasonal
  • Subscribe
×
Home - Pests & Disease

Latest Updated: Mar 16, 2026 by Fresh Admin

Tomato Blight Treatment: Early vs Late and How to Fix

Tomato blight can double its damage in 48 hours when temperatures hover between 60-80°F and leaves stay wet. Catching it early and acting in the right order is what separates a salvaged crop from a total loss.

Tomato Blight Treatment: Early vs Late and How to Fix

This guide walks through a step-by-step diagnosis and treatment plan for both early blight and late blight, so you know exactly what you're dealing with before reaching for any product.

We cover copper fungicide timing, sanitation steps, and cultural controls that work alongside chemistry. If you're also managing other fungal and pest problems in the garden, the principles here apply broadly.

Quick Summary

Tomato blight comes in two forms: early blight (Alternaria solani) and late blight (Phytophthora infestans). Both require immediate removal of infected tissue, adjusted watering practices, and timely fungicide application.

Acting within the first signs of infection gives you the best chance of protecting the rest of your crop.

Pathogen (Early)Alternaria solani
Pathogen (Late)Phytophthora infestans
Primary TreatmentCopper fungicide + sanitation
Bottom LineDiagnose first, prune infected tissue immediately, then apply protective copper fungicide before the next rain.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Step 1: Diagnose, Isolate, and Start a Practical Treatment Plan
  • Early Blight vs Late Blight: Symptoms, Timing, and Management
  • Treatment Options and Prevention: Copper Fungicide, Cultural Controls, and Rotation
  • Frequently Asked Questions

Step 1: Diagnose, Isolate, and Start a Practical Treatment Plan

Before you touch a single leaf, confirm what you're dealing with. Misidentifying blight type leads to mistimed treatments and wasted product.

Remember it later

Planning to try this recipe soon? Save it for a quick find later!

A careful look at where lesions appear and what they look like takes under two minutes and changes everything that follows.

Early blight starts on older, lower leaves as small brown spots with concentric rings - like a target or bullseye.

Late blight spreads fast from anywhere on the plant, producing water-soaked, irregularly shaped lesions that turn dark brown or purple, often with white fuzzy growth on the underside in humid conditions.

Confirm the blight type
Examine lower leaves first for target-ring spots (early blight) or check all leaf surfaces for fast-spreading water-soaked lesions with potential white fuzz underneath (late blight). Accurate identification determines your spray timing and product choice.
Remove and bag infected material
Cut off all visibly infected leaves, stems, and fruit using clean pruners. Seal them in a plastic bag and discard in the trash — never compost blight-infected tissue, as both pathogens can survive composting conditions.
Sanitize your tools between plants
Wipe pruner blades with a 10% bleach solution or 70% isopropyl alcohol after each cut and between plants. Skipping this step carries spores directly to healthy tissue.
Adjust your watering immediately
Switch to drip irrigation or base watering only, and water in the morning so foliage dries before evening. Both blight pathogens spread rapidly when leaves stay wet overnight.
Mulch to reduce soil splash
Apply a 2–3 inch layer of straw or wood chip mulch around each plant. Rain and irrigation water splashing bare soil carries Alternaria solani spores from infected debris up onto lower leaves.
Improve plant spacing and airflow
If plants are crowded, remove the most infected one rather than leaving it as a source. Adequate spacing — typically 18–24 inches between plants — allows foliage to dry faster after rain or dew.
Decide on fungicide application
Copper fungicide works protectively, not curatively — it stops the pathogen from spreading to healthy tissue but cannot reverse existing damage. Apply before the next forecasted rain event for best coverage. Per UMD extension guidance, consistent tissue removal combined with timely fungicide application is the backbone of blight management.
Plan rotation and bed sanitation for next season
Remove all plant debris at season end and rotate tomatoes to a different bed for at least 2–3 years. This interrupts the inoculum cycle for both blight pathogens in the soil and on plant debris.

Watch Out

Late blight spreads faster than early blight — under cool, wet conditions it can destroy a plant in 3–5 days. If you see water-soaked lesions expanding daily, treat the entire garden row immediately, not just the affected plant.

Knowing your tomato type also matters when planning pruning and spacing. Indeterminate varieties keep growing all season and may need repeated pruning to maintain airflow, while determinate types reach a set size and are easier to manage.

Early Blight vs Late Blight: Symptoms, Timing, and Management

Both diseases attack tomatoes but behave differently enough that treating one like the other wastes time and resources. Alternaria solani causes early blight; Phytophthora infestans - the same organism responsible for the Irish potato famine - causes late blight.

Early blight is a slow-burn disease. Symptoms begin on the oldest, lowest leaves and work their way up gradually through the growing season.

Late blight is an emergency: lesions can appear on any part of the plant, spread within 48 hours, and become a regional problem since airborne spores travel far. According to Cornell Vegetable Program, late blight inoculum can arrive from neighboring gardens or farms, making regional monitoring important.

Early Blight vs Late Blight: Key Differences
FeatureEarly BlightLate Blight
PathogenAlternaria solaniPhytophthora infestans
Symptom locationOlder, lower leaves firstAny leaf, stem, or fruit
Lesion appearanceBrown target-ring spots, yellow haloWater-soaked, dark brown, irregular
Fuzzy growth?RarelyWhite fuzz on leaf underside (humid)
Spread speedGradual over weeksRapid — days under cool, wet conditions
Ideal conditionsWarm, humid (75–85°F)Cool, wet (60–70°F), fog or rain
Primary fungicideCopper or chlorothalonilCopper + FRAC Group 40 or 45
Rotation needed?Yes, 2–3 yearsYes, plus regional vigilance

For early blight, a preventive copper spray program starting at first fruit set - combined with mulching and lower-leaf removal - keeps most infections manageable. Resistant varieties like 'Juliet' or 'Mountain Magic' offer additional protection in high-pressure seasons.

Late blight requires more aggressive action. Remove infected plants or heavily infected sections immediately.

If late blight is confirmed in your county, apply copper fungicide on a 5-7 day spray interval, adjusting after each rain. Powdery mildew on other crops follows different rules - our guide on rose powdery mildew shows how fungal timing differs between species.

Neither blight type is curable once established on a leaf. All fungicide applications protect healthy, uninfected tissue - so timing before infection events (rain, heavy dew) is what makes the difference.

Neem Oil vs Insecticidal Soap: Speed and Safety
Pests & Disease · See AlsoNeem Oil vs Insecticidal Soap: Speed and SafetyWhen aphids show up on your pepper plants in early May, the last thing you want is a...

Treatment Options and Prevention: Copper Fungicide, Cultural Controls, and Rotation

Copper fungicide is the most accessible organic-approved option for home gardeners facing either blight type. It works by releasing copper ions that disrupt fungal and oomycete cell function on contact.

It does not move inside the plant, so thorough coverage of all leaf surfaces - including undersides - is essential at every application.

Follow label rates carefully. Overuse leads to copper accumulation in soil, which can become toxic to earthworms and reduce soil health over time.

UC ANR's tomato late blight IPM guide recommends applying copper on a weather-based schedule, especially before expected rain or extended wet periods, rather than on a fixed calendar.

Tomato Blight Treatment Toolbox
MethodWhen to UseKey Caution
Copper fungicidePreventively, before rain eventsLimit applications; rotate with other modes of action
ChlorothalonilEarly blight in non-organic systemsNot OMRI-listed; check label pre-harvest interval
Bacillus subtilis (e.g., Serenade)Organic alternative when copper restrictedShorter residual; reapply every 5–7 days
Drip irrigationAll season, preventivelyKeeps foliage dry; reduces splash dispersal
Straw mulchAt transplant timeRefresh if it breaks down mid-season
Crop rotationEach new seasonAvoid tomato family (Solanaceae) in same bed for 2–3 years
Resistant varietiesAt planting, high-risk sitesCheck variety resistance rating — no variety is fully immune

Pro Tip

Rotate your fungicide mode of action each season — don't use copper every year if alternatives are available. Resistance builds in pathogen populations when a single product is used repeatedly. Alternating Bacillus subtilis with copper reduces selection pressure.

Crop rotation is the single most effective long-term prevention step. Avoid planting tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, or eggplant in the same bed for 2-3 years after a blight outbreak.

All belong to the Solanaceae family and share susceptibility to the same pathogens. When you plan next year's layout, consider also moving away from growing tomatoes in low-lying spots where moisture and cold air pool overnight.

At season end, pull all tomato plants - roots and all - and discard or burn them. Do not till infected debris into the soil.

Clear beds allow you to reclaim the growing space fully before the next planting cycle.

Non-chemical controls work best as a package: drip irrigation + mulch + proper spacing + rotation together reduce blight pressure more than any single tactic alone. Gardens that combine all four rarely need heavy fungicide programs even in wet seasons.

Frequently Asked Questions

Early blight (Alternaria solani) starts on older lower leaves with target-ring spots and spreads slowly. Late blight (Phytophthora infestans) spreads rapidly from any plant part, producing water-soaked dark lesions and white fuzz in humid conditions.

Copper fungicide protects healthy tissue but cannot cure infected leaves. Apply it before rain events on a 5–7 day interval, and rotate with other modes of action to avoid soil copper buildup.

Remove heavily infected plants immediately, especially with late blight. Bag and trash all infected material — never compost it. Partial pruning works for early blight when fewer than 30% of leaves are affected.

Rotate tomatoes to a new bed for 2–3 years, remove all plant debris at season end, switch to drip irrigation, and apply straw mulch at transplant time to stop soil-splash spore dispersal.

Yes — 'Juliet', 'Mountain Magic', and 'Defiant PhR' carry partial resistance to late blight. No variety is fully immune, but resistant types significantly reduce infection rates in high-pressure, wet seasons.


Save This Guide

Pin it for your next how to treat tomato blight project.

Gas vs Electric Lawn Mower: Power, Cost, and Noise
Tools & Equipment · See AlsoGas vs Electric Lawn Mower: Power, Cost, and NoiseMowing season arrives fast, and the choice between a gas or electric lawn mower shapes every session from...
Related Guides
Pests & Disease
How to Get Rid of Slugs: Traps, Bait, and Barriers
Read guide ->
Seasonal Guides
What to Plant in October: Garlic, Cover Crops, and Bulbs
Read guide ->
Garden Plants
Annual Flowers: Best Varieties for Season-Long Color
Read guide ->

More Pests & Disease

  • Japanese Knotweed Removal: Options and What to Know
    Japanese Knotweed Removal: Options and What to Know
  • Squash Vine Borer Treatment: Prevention and Control
    Squash Vine Borer Treatment: Prevention and Control
  • Powdery Mildew on Roses: Treatment and Prevention
    Powdery Mildew on Roses: Treatment and Prevention
  • How to Get Rid of Grubs: Signs, Treatment, and Prevention
    How to Get Rid of Grubs: Signs, Treatment, and Prevention
FreshNestly

Practical guides for your garden, yard, and backyard. Clear answers, not jargon.

Guides
  • Lawn Care
  • Garden Plants
  • Backyard Design
  • Soil & Composting
  • Pests & Disease
More
  • Outdoor Living
  • Tools & Equipment
  • Wildlife & Birds
  • Seasonal Guides
About
  • About
  • Editorial Standards
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact
© 2026 FreshNestly. All rights reserved.Some articles may include affiliate links. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Footer

↑ Back to Top

Forklift Kitchen

We do the heavy lifting so you can enjoy the cooking. Tested recipes, smart substitutes, and perfect pairings—built for real home cooks.

Content

  • Recipes
  • Substitutes
  • What to Serve With
  • Blog

Company

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Subscribe

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

© 2026 Forklift Kitchen.