National Cherry Day: Thursday, July 16, 2026. Peak Texas buying window: now through late July. Best prices and flavor of the entire year — don’t miss it.
Well neighbor, if you’ve ever wandered past the cherry display at the grocery store, done a little math, and put the bag back down because $8 a pound felt steep — this is your week. National Cherry Day rolls around on Thursday, July 16, and here’s the fun little coincidence: it lands right in the middle of the best two weeks all year to buy cherries in Texas. Peak flavor, peak supply, peak value. If you were ever going to fill a bowl with cherries, host a pie night, or teach the kids what a real ripe cherry tastes like — this is the week.
Here’s why the timing works out so well. Almost every fresh cherry that lands on a Texas grocery shelf comes from Washington, California, Oregon, or Michigan. Those states run their harvests roughly late April through early August, and by the time we hit early July, Washington’s Bing and Rainier crops are pouring into stores at full volume. That’s why cherry prices, which can hit $6 to $8 a pound when the first California cherries show up in May, drop into the much friendlier $3 to $5 a pound range by mid-June and stay there through peak season. In other words, waiting a few weeks past the first appearance saves you real money, and the fruit actually tastes better too.
So what are we celebrating exactly? Cherries have earned their place at the top of the summer fruit list for a reason. They’re bright, they’re versatile, and they hit that perfect balance of sweet and tart that few other fruits can pull off. There’s a reason your grandmother probably had a cherry pie recipe she was proud of, and a reason cherry season shows up in songs, movies, and childhood memories. Bing cherries — dark red, glossy, firm — are the ones you’ll see most often in stores. Rainiers, the golden-yellow ones blushed with pink, are the sweeter, more delicate cousin and worth grabbing whenever you spot them. Both peak right now.
How to pick the good ones at the store
A little know-how at the produce aisle makes all the difference. Look for cherries with deep, uniform color — the darker the cherry, the more intense the flavor. You want glossy skin, firm fruit that gives just a little when you gently press it, and bright green stems still attached. Skip anything bruised, wrinkled, or brown around the stem. And here’s a small tip that catches a lot of people: cherries are sold by the pound, not by the bag. Toss your bag on the produce scale before you head to checkout — a “$4.99 bag” of cherries has a way of ringing up as $10 if you’re not paying attention.
How to celebrate the day
You don’t need to make a whole production of Cherry Day, but a little effort goes a long way. Wash a bowl and set it out on the kitchen counter for the family to pick at all afternoon. Toss cherries into a summer salad with goat cheese, arugula, and toasted pecans. Blend them into smoothies with a little vanilla yogurt for breakfast. Simmer them down into a quick compote and spoon it over vanilla ice cream after dinner. Or take the classic route and bake a pie or a cobbler — nothing beats that first bite of warm cherry filling with a scoop of ice cream melting on top. For something a little different, cherries pair beautifully with Texas favorites like grilled pork chops, brisket sandwiches, or even a batch of cherry-jalapeño salsa if you’re feeling adventurous.
Buy extra and freeze the rest
Here’s the smart move for cherry lovers. Peak prices and peak availability last only a few weeks, so if you truly love cherries, this is the moment to stock up. Buy a couple of extra pounds, wash and pit them at the kitchen sink, spread them in a single layer on a baking sheet, and slide them into the freezer for a few hours. Once they’re frozen solid, transfer them to zip-top freezer bags. Done right, frozen cherries hold their quality for 10 to 12 months. That means your February smoothies, your Thanksgiving cranberry-cherry sauce, and your Christmas cocktails are all sorted with fruit picked at its absolute peak. Your future self will thank you.
A word for the West Texas readers
If you’re anywhere near El Paso and you’ve ever wanted the full u-pick experience — the ladders, the buckets, the fresh-off-the-tree bite — Texas itself doesn’t really have commercial cherry orchards. The state’s climate doesn’t hand out enough winter chill hours for cherry trees to thrive. But southern New Mexico does. The mountains between Alamogordo and Cloudcroft grow lovely sweet and sour cherries every summer, and a couple of family-run orchards up there open their gates for u-pick right around this time of year. If a weekend drive across the border sounds like the right kind of adventure, it’s worth a look.
So mark your calendar for Thursday, July 16, but don’t wait until then to shop. The best cherries of the year are on the shelves right now. Grab a bag, weigh it first, and take it home. Wash them, pile them in a bowl, and share them with the people you love. That’s how you celebrate a fruit as good as this one.
Happy National Cherry Day, neighbor. Eat well.




