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Plantory vs From Seed to Spoon: Which Fits Europe?

Compare Plantory and From Seed to Spoon as garden planners. See which app fits European gardens, Köppen climate, layout design, and beginner needs.

app comparison
garden planner
From Seed to Spoon alternative
AI garden planner
vegetable garden planner
June 14, 2026Plantory Team11 min read

If you are weighing Plantory against From Seed to Spoon, you are really comparing two different ideas of what a garden planner is for. Plantory designs your garden — the actual layout, in your actual space, with your actual climate. From Seed to Spoon answers a simpler, earlier question: what should a beginner even try to grow? Both are useful, but the right pick depends almost entirely on where you live and what you are stuck on.

This comparison looks at both apps from a European gardener's point of view in 2026, because that is where the two products diverge the most.

Quick Comparison

FeaturePlantoryFrom Seed to Spoon
Primary focusWhole-garden design + seasonal careVegetable picks + beginner recommendations
Planning methodAI-generated layout from your spacePick crops, get growing tips and reminders
Garden typesVeg, herbs, ornamentals, shrubs, treesPrimarily vegetables and herbs
Design time30-60 seconds for a full layoutNo spatial design (list / tile view)
Climate modelKöppen climate zones (European-first)USDA hardiness zones, US ZIP anchored
Plant database3,000+ species curated for EuropeStrong vegetable / herb list, US-anchored varieties
Companion plantingBuilt into the AI layoutCompanion / combative pairings in plant picker
Disease and pest helpAI photo diagnosis + treatment planPest and disease reference inside the app
Seasonal calendarLocal frost dates + per-locale tasksFrost-date based reminders
Mobile experienceResponsive web (native mobile coming)Native mobile app + web
Languages8 European languagesEnglish only
Free tier3 free AI designs + plant libraryFree tier with optional premium subscription
Best forEuropean gardeners who want a layout, not just suggestionsEnglish-speaking beginners deciding what to grow

The Core Difference: A Layout vs a List of Recommendations

The fastest way to see these two apps clearly is to ask: what does day one look like?

From Seed to Spoon: A Recommendation Engine for Beginners

From Seed to Spoon was built around a sympathetic question — "I want to grow food but I have no idea where to start." You enter your location and a few preferences, and the app suggests what to plant, when to plant it, and what tends to do well in your area. The plant pages include companion planting tips, basic pest and disease information, and timing guidance pegged to your frost dates.

For a brand-new gardener in the US, that is genuinely good onboarding. It removes the "blank-page" problem of staring at a packet of seeds with no plan. The community angle (notes, photos, comments) reinforces that beginner-friendly tone.

The catch is what it does not really do. From Seed to Spoon does not draw your garden. There is no plot, no spatial layout, no "this bed goes here, that path goes there". It also leans on US horticultural conventions: the climate model is USDA hardiness zones tied to US ZIP codes, the variety database is built around what is widely sold in North American seed catalogues, and the language is English. None of that is wrong for the audience it was built for. It just stops being a clean fit the moment you garden somewhere outside that audience.

Plantory: A Garden That Fits Your Actual Space

Plantory starts somewhere different. You describe your plot, or upload a photo, or sketch it out. You set the sun, soil, climate. Within a minute the AI returns a full layout: where the beds go, what goes in each bed, where the paths run, which plants will support each other, where the shade-tolerant herbs sit, where the tall crops will not shadow the low ones. After the layout exists, Plantory then gives you the calendar and care piece — sowing windows, transplant timing, watering, and AI photo diagnosis of pests and diseases.

The trade-off is that Plantory invests heavily in the layout part. If you genuinely just want a short list of "what should I plant first" suggestions, with no interest in the spatial side, From Seed to Spoon is the lighter tool. If you want the layout solved for you in a way that uses your actual European climate zone, Plantory does it.

Planning Approach: Spatial Design vs Pick-and-Plant

This is the single most useful frame for choosing between them.

QuestionFrom Seed to SpoonPlantory
What should I plant first?Strong — main featureYes, after layout
Where should this bed go in my space?Not answeredAnswered (AI layout)
What goes next to what?Companion tags in plant pickerBuilt into the layout
When should I sow this?Yes (frost-date based)Yes
What if I have an odd-shaped plot?You decide; the app does not model spacePhoto or shape upload; AI fits it
What if I want ornamentals, shrubs, trees, not only veg?Out of scopeNative
What if my climate is Cfb, Dfb or Csa, not USDA 6b?ApproximatedFirst-class

If you already know roughly what to plant and you just need help with the layout, Plantory does the layout in under a minute. If you are at the earlier "I don't even know what to grow" stage and you live in the US or read English comfortably, From Seed to Spoon is a friendly first step.

Climate Intelligence: Where European Gardeners Get Burned

From Seed to Spoon's climate model is anchored to USDA hardiness zones, with a US ZIP-code-driven setup that approximates other regions. USDA zones describe winter cold — the lowest temperature a perennial will survive — which is genuinely useful in continental North America. They tell you almost nothing about whether a tomato will ripen in Manchester, Hamburg, Kraków, Bordeaux or Valencia.

European gardening uses a different model: Köppen climate zones. They capture rainfall pattern, summer continentality, and growing season length, not just winter minimum temperature. The same USDA "8a" maps to coastal Atlantic Britain (cool wet summers, mild winters) and to parts of southern Spain (hot dry summers, mild winters). A planting calendar that treats those two as the same gives opposite advice — sometimes literally.

Plantory uses Köppen zones natively and maps your location into the right one (Cfb for the British Isles and western continental Europe, Dfb for continental central Europe, Csa for the Mediterranean, and so on). The plant database is filtered against the actual European species and varieties that will thrive in your zone, including the locally common cultivars rather than only North American ones.

For a gardener anywhere outside the US, this is the single biggest practical difference.

Why Köppen, not USDA

USDA zones answer "will this perennial survive my winter?" Köppen zones also answer "will summer be warm and dry, warm and humid, or cool and wet?" — and that is what decides whether a tomato, courgette or basil actually produces. European gardens almost always care more about summer than about winter.

Plant Database and Variety Coverage

From Seed to Spoon's plant list is solid on vegetables and herbs, with the variety names you would expect in a North American seed catalogue. If you live there, that maps directly to what your local garden centre stocks. If you live in Europe, you will find a fair number of US-bred varieties listed that are not the best performers in your conditions, and you will often miss the local cultivar names that European seed houses use.

Plantory's database is curated around European species and cultivars and covers around 3,000 plants across vegetables, herbs, ornamentals, shrubs and trees. It includes the varieties you actually find in European garden centres, with locale-specific naming. That broader coverage is also why Plantory can design an entire garden, not only a vegetable patch.

Database angleFrom Seed to SpoonPlantory
VegetablesStrongStrong
HerbsStrongStrong
OrnamentalsLimitedStrong
Shrubs and treesOut of scopeYes
European cultivar namingLimitedNative
Locale-specific namesEnglish only8 European languages

If you have ever ordered a tomato variety from a glossy US blog post and then discovered your European seed merchant does not stock it, you know the practical edge of a regionally curated database.

Languages and Localisation

From Seed to Spoon is English only. That is workable for the UK, Ireland and for English-fluent gardeners across northern Europe, but it is a real barrier elsewhere. Plant names, growing terms and seasonal references read very differently to a Polish, Czech, Spanish, Italian, French or German gardener planning in their own language.

Plantory ships natively in eight European languages: English, Czech, Slovak, German, Polish, Spanish, Italian and French. Each language is written by native speakers using local gardening vocabulary, local variety names and the cultural anchors that actually describe how people garden there — allotment, Schrebergarten, działka, huerto, potager, orto, záhrada, zahrádka. The seasonal calendar shifts per locale to that region's frost calendar and growing season.

If your gardening household does not garden in English, this alone often decides the choice.

Disease and Pest Help

From Seed to Spoon includes pest and disease information attached to plant pages and in browseable references. If you already know roughly what is wrong with your plant, you can find treatment guidance.

Plantory adds a different layer on top: photo-based AI diagnosis. You take a picture of the chewed leaf, the brown spot, the wilting stem, and the app suggests the most likely cause and an action plan. It is not perfect — no photo diagnosis is — but it converts the hardest part of fixing a problem (correctly identifying it in the first place) into a 30-second task instead of an evening of searching forums.

For a beginner, the AI diagnosis is the bigger time-saver. For an experienced gardener who already recognises the usual culprits, From Seed to Spoon's reference notes may be enough.

Pricing and Value

Both apps offer a free tier and an optional paid upgrade. From Seed to Spoon historically uses a freemium model with a paid premium subscription that unlocks deeper features and an ad-free experience; pricing is in USD and has shifted over the years. Check the current rate on their site before committing.

Plantory offers a permanent free tier that lets you generate three AI garden designs and use the plant library without paying. Paid plans start at around 9.99 EUR per month for the Starter tier with more designs, advanced care features and disease diagnosis. EUR pricing matters for European households who would otherwise be billed in USD with exchange-rate noise.

Pricing angleFrom Seed to SpoonPlantory
Free tierYes (freemium)Permanent free tier (3 designs + library)
Paid currencyUSDEUR
Trial without cardYes (free tier)Yes (free tier needs no card)
Cancel any timeYesYes

Who Should Use From Seed to Spoon?

From Seed to Spoon is a sensible choice if:

  • You are a brand-new vegetable gardener and you want a tool to suggest what to plant first.
  • You live in the US, or your reference climate looks broadly USDA-shaped.
  • You read and garden in English.
  • You like a mobile-app workflow with community notes and reminders.
  • You only want a vegetable / herb planner, not a whole-garden designer.

It is friendly, beginner-oriented, and good at its core promise.

Who Should Use Plantory?

Plantory is the better fit if:

  • You garden somewhere in Europe and want a tool that understands Köppen climate, not USDA.
  • You want a complete garden, not only a vegetable patch — including flowers, herbs, shrubs and trees.
  • You want the layout solved for you, fast, before you commit to a season.
  • You would rather not garden in English: Czech, Slovak, German, Polish, Spanish, Italian or French.
  • You want AI photo diagnosis of pest and disease problems, not only a reference library.
  • You want a permanent free tier so you can try the planning workflow before paying anything.

Plantory's European climate zones guide and the companion planting guide explain exactly how the layout decisions are made, if you want to look under the hood before signing up.

The Verdict

From Seed to Spoon is a thoughtful beginner tool for English-speaking vegetable gardeners who want a friendly hand picking what to plant. If that describes you and your climate maps cleanly onto USDA zones, it will do its job.

Plantory is the broader tool: a layout-first, climate-aware, multilingual garden planner that covers the whole European garden, not only the veg bed. For most European gardeners, the deciding factors are the Köppen climate model, the native language support, and the AI layout — three areas where From Seed to Spoon is not designed to compete because they sit outside its target audience.

If you are honestly on the fence, the easiest test is to try the free tier. Generate one design for your actual space, look at the layout, then ask whether a list of recommendations alone would have given you that result.

Ready to plan your garden the European way?

Plantory understands European climates, local plants, and regional growing calendars. Try it free.