Corn growth stages – “V-stage” vegetative system

Gardening

Corn growth stages based on leaf number are usually described using the “V-stage” vegetative system developed for agronomy and crop science. The system is widely used by universities such as Iowa State University and Purdue University.

The stages are written as:

  • VE = emergence
  • V1 = first leaf with visible collar
  • V2 = two leaves with visible collars
  • V3 = three leaves with visible collars
  • etc.

The “V” stands for vegetative growth.

The key point is that the stage is counted by leaf collars, not merely visible leaf tips.

A leaf collar is the light-colored band where the leaf blade joins the stalk.

Example:

  • If 6 leaves have visible collars, the plant is at V6
  • If 12 leaves have visible collars, it is at V12

After vegetative growth, corn enters reproductive stages:

StageMeaning
VTTasseling
R1Silking
R2Blister
R3Milk
R4Dough
R5Dent
R6Physiological maturity

A simplified progression looks like this:

StageWhat You See
VEPlant emerges from soil
V1–V5Early seedling stages
V6–V10Rapid vegetative growth
V12–VTEar and tassel development accelerates
VTTassel fully emerged
R1Silks visible
R6Kernel maturity

A few important agronomic details:

  • Around V6, the growing point moves above the soil surface.
  • Around V10–V12, ear size potential is being strongly determined.
  • Nitrogen side-dressing is often recommended near V4–V6.
  • Herbicide labels often specify maximum V-stages.

There is also an older method called the “leaf-tip method”, where every visible leaf tip is counted. That method often overestimates stage compared to the collar method and is less precise.

Example:

  • A plant may have 8 visible leaves but only 6 collars:
    • Leaf-tip method = 8-leaf corn
    • Collar method = V6

Modern agronomy usually prefers the collar method because it better correlates with plant physiology and management timing.


This Purdue University image gallery has a clear close-up image labeled “Leaf collar”:

Purdue University Corn Leaf Collar Image Gallery

This Purdue article also contains diagrams and photos explaining the collar method and identifying the light-colored band:

Determining Corn Leaf Stages (Purdue Extension)