Early Golden Apricot, Golden Apricot, Apricot, Common Apricot, Armenian Plum, Armeniaca vulgaris, Armeniaca armeniaca
Summary: ‘Early Golden’ is a time-tested apricot prized for its dependable crops and rich, classic flavor. Fruit is medium to large, glowing golden orange with a light blush, firm yet juicy, and typically freestone at full maturity. It ripens early compared with many cultivars, which makes it a favorite for fresh eating, canning, jam, and drying in regions with moderate winters.
| Botanical Name | Prunus armeniaca ‘Early Golden’ |
|---|---|
| Family | Rosaceae (Rose family) |
| Common Names | Early Golden apricot |
| Fruit & Flavor | Medium to large, round to slightly oval, deep golden skin with occasional red blush. Firm, juicy flesh with balanced sweetness and lively tang. Usually freestone when fully ripe. Can behave semi-cling if picked early. Excellent fresh, for canning halves, jam, and drying. |
| Ripening (typical) | Early season to midseason. Often late June in warm zones and early to mid July in cooler areas, depending on site and spring weather. |
| Season and Availability | Short harvest window at the start of apricot season. Check trees daily once color and aroma rise. |
| Chill Requirement | Roughly 400–500 hours below 45°F, sometimes higher in colder districts.. |
| Hardiness (USDA) | 5 to 8, depending on rootstock and site. Flowering is early to midseason, so protect blooms from late frost. |
| Tree Size | About 15 to 20 ft tall and wide on standard vigor. Easy to keep smaller with summer pruning and open vase training. |
| Pollination | Self-fruitful. A second apricot that overlaps bloom can boost set and fruit size. |
| Sun & Exposure | Full sun 6 to 8 hours or more. Favor a site with good air drainage and shelter from cold spring winds. |
| Soil | Fertile, well-drained loam or sandy loam. pH about 6.0 to 7.5. Avoid waterlogging. Use a mound or raised bed if the clay is heavy. |
| Status | Widely grown, reliable early harvester with classic flavor and versatile kitchen uses. |
| Toxicity | Pits, kernels, and foliage contain amygdalin. Keep pits and prunings away from kids, pets, and livestock. |
If you like your apricot season to start early, ‘Early Golden’ is the friendly nudge that gets the jam pot and dessert plates going first. It flowers on an early to mid schedule, then moves fast toward that deep golden color and perfume that make the whole garden smell like summer. The fruit has the classic apricot balance of honeyed sweetness and bright tang, which is why it lands in so many family canning recipes. Give the tree sunlight, drainage, and steady moisture through spring, then enjoy a reliable wave of fruit just as summer hits its stride.
The Prunus family anchors many home orchards. You know the cast. Plums, cherries, peaches, nectarines, apricots, and almonds. ‘Early Golden’ sits in that group as the early ripening, versatile apricot that keeps flavor high and schedules happy.

Choosing an apricot is a little like choosing a vacation. You match your climate, timing, and taste. ‘Early Golden’ shines where you want an early crop with classic flavor and you get a moderate amount of winter chill. If your site gets frequent late frosts, you may prefer a later blooming cultivar. If your climate is very warm with low chill, choose a low chill type like ‘Katy’. If you love deep, perfumed flavor in warm summer districts, ‘Blenheim (Royal)’ has a devoted following. In many backyard orchards, ‘Early Golden’ earns a spot because it does almost everything well.
| Cultivar | Chill (approx.) | USDA Zones* | Highlights & Uses |
|---|---|---|---|
| ‘Moorpark’ | 600-700 | 5-8 | Classic flavor; large fruit; very early bloom – protect blossoms. |
| ‘Blenheim (Royal)’ | 400-500 | 7-9 | Beloved heirloom for warm districts; perfumed and versatile. |
| ‘Goldcot’ | 800+ | 5-8 | Cold hardy and later blooming; firm fruit for freezing and pies. |
| ‘Harcot’ | 700-800 | 5-9 | Canadian bred for colder springs; aromatic with good crack resistance. |
| ‘Tomcot’ | 500-600 | 5-8 | Large, early, heavy crops; excellent fresh and dehydrated. |
| ‘Tilton’ | 600-700 | 5-8 | Canning classic with bright, tangy halves and superb jam. |
| ‘Katy’ | 250-400 | 7-9 | Low chill, very early, generous crops. |
| ‘Chinese (Mormon)’ | 500-600 | 5-9 | Later bloom helps in frost prone regions. |
| ‘Early Golden’ | 400-500 | 5-8 | Early, richly flavored, reliable in moderate winters. Great fresh and for preserves. |
USDA zones and chill hours vary by rootstock and microclimate. Confirm with local extension or a trusted nursery.
As with other apricots, pits, kernels, leaves, and young stems contain amygdalin. Fruit flesh is safe. Always pit fruit before blending or grinding, and never crush kernels. Keep prunings and pits away from children, dogs, cats, and livestock.
Yes. Choose a dwarf or semidwarf tree on a compact rootstock and plant in a 20 to 30-gallon container with excellent drainage. Remember that pots warm early in spring, which speeds bloom and can raise frost risk. Water attentively in summer. Roll under cover or throw on a frost cloth during cold snaps while flowering.
Home growers usually buy grafted trees on apricot, peach, or plum rootstocks. Your choice influences vigor, soil tolerance, and ultimate size. Grafted ‘Early Golden’ stays true to type. Seedlings vary and take longer to bear, so they are not recommended if you want predictable fruit.
Underplant with shallow-rooted allies that support pollinators and soil life without hogging water. Chives, thyme, and borage lure bees and hoverflies. A light living mulch of white clover can improve soil biology. Keep a clean ring near the trunk so bark stays dry and visible. Marigolds and garlic are classic orchard floor companions.
| Season | Tasks |
|---|---|
| Late winter to early spring | Plant bareroot, establish open vase framework, prep frost cloths, check irrigation, start aphid scouting as buds swell. |
| Spring | Keep moisture even. Light feeding only if growth is weak. Thin at marble size. Watch for shot hole and blossom blight. |
| Early to mid summer | Harvest by color and fragrance with slight give. Net against birds. Do a light summer prune to keep sun in the canopy. |
| Late summer | Taper irrigation. Remove mummified fruit. Watch for twig borer flagging and prune out promptly. |
| Fall | Refresh mulch, clean up drops, whitewash trunks where sunscald is likely. |
| Winter | Light structural pruning during a dry window. Protect young bark from rodents. |
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy bloom, little fruit | Frost at bloom, cold wet pollination window, chill mismatch | Cover blossoms, add a compatible apricot nearby, confirm chill hours fit your site |
| Cracking or rot | Uneven watering, tight clusters, brown rot pressure | Keep moisture steady, thin early, prune for airflow, remove mummies |
| Gumming and dieback | Canker, sunscald, borers | Prune to healthy wood, paint trunks white where sun is intense, lower stress with mulch and even water |
| Curled sticky leaves | Aphids and sooty mold | Hose undersides, invite beneficials, use dormant oil in winter |
| Small fruit and broken limbs | Overcropping and no thinning | Thin to 4 to 6 inch spacing and prop heavy branches |

Fresh apricots offer vitamin C, carotenoids with vitamin A activity, vitamin E, fiber, and potassium at roughly 40 to 50 kcal per 100 g. Drying concentrates nutrients and sugars to about 240 kcal per 100 g. Dried apricots are excellent trail fuel. For everyday snacks, a modest handful is plenty.
| Nutrient (typical) | Fresh per 100 g | Dried per 100 g |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | about 48 kcal | about 240 kcal |
| Carbohydrate | about 11 g | about 63 g |
| Dietary fiber | about 2 g | about 7 g |
| Potassium | about 260 mg | about 1100 mg |
| Vitamin A activity | present via carotenoids | higher than fresh |

The hard pit holds a single kernel. In some cuisines, sweet kernels are used in small amounts and can be pressed for a delicate oil. Always check product grades. Cosmetic grade is for skin and hair. Culinary grade is for food. Use only food-grade oil in recipes and keep raw kernels away from pets and children.
Yes. ‘Early Golden’ will set a crop on its own. A second apricot that overlaps bloom can increase yields and size.
Typically late June in warm summer regions and early to mid July in cooler areas, depending on winter chill and spring weather.
Grafted trees commonly bear in 3 to 4 years. Expect larger crops by year 5 and beyond.
About 400 to 500 hours under 45°F. If your site regularly runs below that, consider a lower chill cultivar.
Bloom is early to midseason, so protect flowers with covers during late cold snaps and avoid planting in frost pockets.
Yes. Choose a dwarf or semidwarf rootstock and use a 20 to 30 gallon container with excellent drainage. Protect the bloom from frost.
Color and perfume come first. Then look for a slight springiness near the stem. Apricots ripen from the inside out, so do not wait for full softness everywhere.
Updated: October 2025 • Reviewed by Gardenia Editors
| Hardiness |
5 - 8 |
|---|---|
| Heat Zones |
2 - 8 |
| Plant Type | Fruits, Trees |
| Plant Family | Rosaceae |
| Genus | Apricots, Prunus - Fruit Tree |
| Common names | Apricot |
| Exposure | Full Sun |
| Season of Interest | Spring (Early, Mid), Summer (Mid) |
| Height | 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m) |
| Spread | 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m) |
| Maintenance | High |
| Water Needs | Average |
| Soil Type | Chalk, Loam, Sand |
| Soil pH | Acid, Alkaline, Neutral |
| Soil Drainage | Moist but Well-Drained |
| Characteristics | Showy, Fruit & Berries |
| Attracts | Bees, Birds |
| Hardiness |
5 - 8 |
|---|---|
| Heat Zones |
2 - 8 |
| Plant Type | Fruits, Trees |
| Plant Family | Rosaceae |
| Genus | Apricots, Prunus - Fruit Tree |
| Common names | Apricot |
| Exposure | Full Sun |
| Season of Interest | Spring (Early, Mid), Summer (Mid) |
| Height | 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m) |
| Spread | 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m) |
| Maintenance | High |
| Water Needs | Average |
| Soil Type | Chalk, Loam, Sand |
| Soil pH | Acid, Alkaline, Neutral |
| Soil Drainage | Moist but Well-Drained |
| Characteristics | Showy, Fruit & Berries |
| Attracts | Bees, Birds |
How many Prunus armeniaca ‘Early Golden’ (Apricot) do I need for my garden?
| Plant | Quantity | |
|---|---|---|
| Prunus armeniaca ‘Early Golden’ (Apricot) | N/A | Buy Plants |
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Becoming a contributing member of Gardenia is easy and can be done in just a few minutes. If you provide us with your name, email address and the payment of a modest $25 annual membership fee, you will become a full member, enabling you to design and save up to 25 of your garden design ideas.
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