Best bushes for shady areas
Best shrubs for shade: 13 options for full or partial shade
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
There are many choices of shrubs for shade that thrive in full or part shade so you don't need to ignore darker borders and corners of the garden and relegate them to storage areas, but instead you can make the most of them by adding interest and color through considered planting.
The best shade plants can offer changeable interest throughout the year, and working with shifting levels of light and shade is something that every gardener needs to learn and understand.
Instead of seeing shady backyards as a challenge, discover the potential you have to create wonderful contrasts as part of your backyard ideas. White or pale flowers and golden or silvered variegated leaves juxtaposed with darker green foliage and shade, create the effect of light among the shadows, one of the dramatic planting possibilities for white garden ideas.
Best shrubs for shade
(Image credit: Getty Images)
The deciduous or evergreen shrubs you choose for shady spots will differ depending on the type of shade you have in your backyard – so study its patterns at different times of day through the seasons. Smaller spaces might be in shade throughout the day; other backyards might only be in shade for part of the day, so the shrubs might have to be sun-tolerant, too. Decide whether areas are in light, semi, dappled or deep shade. For woodland areas, there are many woodland plants that are suited to the specific conditions under trees.
'The main thing about planting shrubs for shade is whether the specific plant is a full shade or partial shade loving plant,' explains Fiona Martin of Burncoose Nurseries .
‘Some shade-loving shrubs, such as the evergreen silk tassel bush, don’t like to be in deep shade, whereas others like Fatsia japonica can cope with full shade,’ explains award-winning garden designer Jonathan Snow .
Then assess the soil. 'Does the area have dry soil or wet soil and compare this to the soil requirements for the chosen shrub,' adds Fiona.
Below, we bring you the best shrubs for shade, and explain which type of shade they will enjoy.
1.
Best shrubs for shade for small gardens(Image credit: Getty Images)
With a wide range of species, both deciduous and evergreen, which flower at different times, daphne offer lots of variety and the blooms have a powerful fragrance.
They grow well in partial shade and are not large shrubs so are also well suited to shady spots in small gardens.
There are many varieties of daphne that flower in winter, adding much needed color as a winter garden idea, while others flower in spring or summer.
2. Best shrubs for shade for winter interest
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
Witch hazel, or hamamelis, is a tall flowering shrub that will add some welcome color to your backyard in winter in areas of partial shade.
A early bloomer, the fragrant flowers on this shrub for shade appear from December through to early spring depending on the hardiness zone where you live.
'It has distinctive spider-like flowers in shades of yellow, red and orange,' explain the experts at Hillier garden centers.
Witch hazel needs to be pruned regularly to keep it in check otherwise it can grow a little unruly. For the most economic option, plant them bare root in fall.
3. Best shrub for shade for hedging
(Image credit: Future / Rowan Isaac)
Great to plant in a shady spot for a privacy hedge, yew, or Taxus baccata, is an enduringly popular choice and it is easy to see why. It will grow happily in many locations – from full shade to full sun – is a dense and quick grower, and can live for many, many years.
This shrub for shade works brilliantly as a backdrop to white flowers in a shady corner, and can be clipped into beautiful shapes and lines.
4. Best shrubs for shade for late summer blooms
(Image credit: Future)
Hydrangeas are well known and loved and there are many varieties to choose from that will cope well in a shady position. They are also one of the best flowering shrubs.
'Hydrangea aspera ‘Villosa Group’ is my favorite hydrangea with its large pointed velvet leaves and late summer blue flowers. It can also be grown on chalk,’ explains Jonathan.
The deciduous shrub does well in partial shade, but learn how to prune hydrangeas to keep them flowering well and stop them becoming scruffy and unkempt.
5. Best shrubs for shade with fragrant flowers
(Image credit: RHS/ Anna Brockman)
Shade loving plants often have the most fragrant blooms, as if the plants are trying to compensate for their lack of sunshine and color, so are ideal for sensory garden ideas.
'Sarcococca hookeriana ‘winter gem’, also known as sweet box, has attractive, evergreen glossy leaves and highly fragrant white late winter flowers and berries,' explains Fiona Martin.
The dwarf shrub will tolerate full shade and brighten up dull corners where little else will grow.
'It is tough and tolerant of most conditions,' advise the experts at RHS Plants .
6. Best shrub for shade with bright flowers
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Mahonia repens is a frost hardy dwarf evergreen shrub that tolerates full to part shade.
‘It’s main attraction, though, is its dark yellow racemes of upright flowers in mid to late spring, followed by blue-black berries. Shrubs with lighter color flowers can really brighten up a shady area, especially white and yellow flowers,' says Fiona Martin.
Fully frost hardy, these low growing mahonias, which typically only grow to one or two feet in height, can be used for ground cover.
7. Best low maintenance shrub for shade
(Image credit: Getty Images)
'Fatsia japonica can cope with full shade as well as a bit of sun, and a fair amount of general neglect, too,' explains Jonathan, so it is a good choice if you're looking for low maintenance shrubs or fast growing shrubs for shade.
'It has architectural, evergreen leaves, and striking panicles of spherical, creamy white flowers in fall, which are often followed by round, black fruit in winter,’ adds Jonathan.
Both the flowers and berries are a valuable food source for beneficial insects, especially as they are produced in the middle of winter when not much else is on offer, so are also great for adding to planting plans for wildlife garden ideas.
8. Best shrubs for shade with variegated leaves
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Aucuba japonica ‘crotonifolia’, also known as Japanese or spotted laurel, can grow in partial or full shade.
‘The rounded shrub has spotted, variegated leaves and produces bright red berries in fall,’ explains Fiona. They like moist, well-drained soil.
Partial shade is best for more pronounced variegation of this pretty evergreen plant, which can provide a lovely backdrop in a shady corner of a backyard.
'Aucubas may not be the most standout plants, but they make a very effective and dense windbreak and can tolerate high, salt-laden winds,' explains Fiona, so are a good option for exposed and coastal gardens.
Growing up to 15 feet tall, they are also good for use as fast growing hedges.
9. Best long living shrubs for shade
(Image credit: Crocus)
For some classic, traditional blooms, you can't get much better than long lasting and low maintenance camellias as shrubs for shade – which we think are among the best shrubs for the front of the house.
'One of my favorites is Camellia sasanqua. I find this fall flowering camellia so much more delicate, in leaf and flower, than its blousy spring cousins,’ says Jonathan.
If you are growing camellias they prefer moist, rich, acidic soil and thrive in full to partial shade. To maximize their flowering potential, learn how to prune camellias and you will be rewarded with their beautiful blooms for many years.
'This camellia makes a handsome stand-alone specimen, but it can also be used to make a dense, informal screen,' advise the experts at Crocus .
10. Best easy to grow shrub for shade
(Image credit: Getty Images)
The Silk tassel bush or Garrya elliptica is known for its showy cascading flowers or catkins in winter or early spring.
A native to the coastal ranges in California and Oregon, 'this easy to grow evergreen shrub will grow in most soil types, but prefers to be out of the wind, and not in deep shade,' advises Jonathan.
It makes a striking backdrop to many other plants and grows well in partial shade.
11. Best large shrubs for shade
(Image credit: Gina Kelly / Alamy Stock Photo)
Woodland plants, rhododendrons grow well in dappled shade.
Suited to USDA hardiness zones 4 to 8, these large growing evergreens flower from spring through to summer filling shady spots in the garden with colors ranging from deep red through to white.
It is easy to learn how to grow rhododendrons. 'Rhododendron ‘Cunninghams White’, is a reliable, free flowering rhododendron with mauve buds that open to white flowers with a pale yellow center in spring,' explains Jonathan
'It can tolerate a wide range of soil conditions, unlike most rhododendrons that prefer acidic soil,' he adds.
Pruning rhododendrons will keep them well shaped and blooming well.
12. Best shrub for shade with changing leaf color
(Image credit: Alamy)
A great choice for privacy and screening in a backyard, photinia grows well in partial shade and is a low maintenance shrub.
Some varieties have lovely changing foliage color in spring and fall, such as Photinia x fraseri 'Red Robin', which produces bright red new leaves.
They tolerate most soil types, although will cope best with moist, fertile soil with plenty of organic matter added in.
13. Best climbing shrubs for shade
(Image credit: Getty Images)
If you are looking to cover walls or other vertical structures in a shady corner then Euonymous fortunei is an excellent choice and a good courtyard garden idea for making the most of space available by growing vertically.
Some varieties of these evergreen climbers also have lovely variegated leaves, to bring light and golden accents into a dark space, such as ‘Emerald n Gold’ with its golden variegated leaves.
It copes well in dappled and partial shade.
What evergreen is best for shade?
There are many evergreens that are best for shade, advises Fiona Martin of Burncoose.
These range from Aucuba japonica and some camellias, to common laurel and English yew, to name but a few.
The key is to always do your research before buying a shrub for shade and 'check that the specific plant is a full shade loving shrub,' adds Fiona.
(Image credit: Annaick Guitteny)
Do hydrangeas like sun or shade?
Hydrangeas do tolerate some shade, but to flourish they should also enjoy a bit of – ideally morning – sun.
They will not do well in full shade, however, so get to grips with how to grow them and what to plant with hydrangeas so that you get the best from these stunning shrubs for shade.
Can azaleas grow in shade?
If you are growing azaleas, they will cope well with dappled shade, such as along a woodland border, but will struggle in full shade.
Evergreen varieties in particular prefer a shady spot as full sun can scorch their flowers.
Rachel is senior content editor, and writes and commissions gardening content for homesandgardens. com, Homes & Gardens magazine, and its sister titles Period Living Magazine and Country Homes & Interiors. She has written for lifestyle magazines for many years, with a particular focus on gardening, historic houses and arts and crafts, but started out her journalism career in BBC radio, where she enjoyed reporting on and writing programme scripts for all manner of stories. Rachel then moved into regional lifestyle magazines, where the topics she wrote about, and people she interviewed, were as varied and eclectic as they were on radio. Always harboring a passion for homes and gardens, she jumped at the opportunity to work on The English Home and The English Garden magazines for a number of years, before joining the Period Living team, then the wider Homes & Gardens team, specializing in gardens.
30 Low-Maintenance Shrubs for Shade
By
David Beaulieu
David Beaulieu
David Beaulieu is a landscaping expert and plant photographer, with 20 years of experience. He was in the nursery business for over a decade, working with a large variety of plants. David has been interviewed by numerous newspapers and national U.S. magazines, such as Woman's World and American Way.
Learn more about The Spruce's Editorial Process
Updated on 09/09/22
Reviewed by
Kathleen Miller
Reviewed by Kathleen Miller
Kathleen Miller is a highly-regarded Master Gardener and Horticulturist who shares her knowledge of sustainable living, organic gardening, farming, and landscape design. She founded Gaia's Farm and Gardens, a working sustainable permaculture farm, and writes for Gaia Grows, a local newspaper column. She has over 30 years of experience in gardening and sustainable farming.
Learn more about The Spruce's Review Board
Fact checked by
Sarah Scott
Fact checked by Sarah Scott
Sarah Scott is a fact-checker and researcher who has worked in the custom home building industry in sales, marketing, and design.
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The Spruce / Catherine Song
Shrubs that grow in shade can add color and cheer to drab nooks as well as canopy-covered areas of your property. Ranging from short bushes to tall hedges, shade-loving shrubbery includes both evergreen and deciduous plants.
Some shade-tolerant shrubs produce beautiful blossoms, while others are famous for their attractive foliage. Many offer year-round appeal, making them perfect for shady yards where sun-loving plants simply cannot thrive.
Learn about 30 low-maintenance shrubs that will spruce up shaded areas of your lawn and garden without a lot of effort.
Low-Maintenance Shrubs for Shade
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01 of 30
The Spruce / K. Dave
Mountain laurel is a native plant in eastern North America. Its natural habitat is in woodland areas, where it is shaded by trees. This shrub sports glossy evergreen leaves and produces showy clusters of flowers in late spring.
Cultivars have been developed just for use in the landscape, including the dwarf Minuet laurel, which has more vibrant flowers than those on wild mountain laurels.
Where soil is not sufficiently acidic, fertilizing with an acid-enhanced fertilizer, like that used for azaleas and rhododendrons, will help mountain laurel thrive.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 9
- Color Varieties: Rose, pink, white; blooms may have purple markings
- Sun Exposure: Prefers part shade, but can tolerate full sun
- Soil Needs: Thrives in cool, rich, acidic soil that is moist but well-drained; does not do well in clay
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The Spruce / Evgeniya Vlasova
Among deciduous shrubs, Japanese rose is one of the most shade-tolerant shrubs available and will do better than survive in shade. This bush flowers in spring and may bloom multiple times in partial shade. The bark is kelly green to greenish-yellow throughout the winter.
Seriously overgrown shrubs can be revived by cutting them all the way back to the ground in the fall.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 9
- Color Varieties: Yellow
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade
- Soil Needs: Loamy soil
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The Spruce / Loren Probish
As their name suggests, climbing hydrangeas are vines, but they can be trimmed and maintained as if they were shrubs. They tolerate shaded areas, but they tend to yield better flowering displays when exposed to a reasonable amount of sunlight.
Naturally peeling bark on their stems provides winter interest.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 8
- Color Varieties: White, blue, pink, purple
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade
- Soil Needs: Acidic, well-draining
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kongxinzhu / Getty ImagesAs with climbing hydrangeas, the blooming of Carol Mackie daphne shrubs may be enhanced if the plants receive sufficient sunlight. But this fact is hardly problematic, as these plants are worth growing for their variegated leaves alone. Their flowers are also noteworthy especially because they are wonderfully aromatic.
Daphnes do not like acidic soil; adding lime can help neutralize soil that is too acidic.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 8
- Color Varieties: White to light pink
- Sun Exposure: Partial sun to partial shade
- Soil Needs: Well-draining and moist soil
Warning
Both the berries and leaves are toxic and should not be eaten. They may also irritate the skin. Do not plant Daphne shrubs if you have children or pets that live or frequent your garden.
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05 of 30
The Spruce / Autumn Wood
Emerald and Gold euonymus is a bush with bi-colored leaves; in this case, the name tells you exactly what those two colors are. The gold color gets brighter with sun exposure, but this plant is plenty attractive in shade.
There are many kinds of euonymus. One is quite notorious as an invasive plant, the winged spindle tree.
While this is a shrub that grows in shade, lack of sufficient sunlight may rob it of its primary selling point: its fall color.
Euonymus can be a very fast-growing plant; you can control it with hard pruning in the spring.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 8
- Sun Exposure: Partial sun to full sun
- Soil Needs: Moist and well-drained
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06 of 30
The Spruce / David Beaulieu
One of two popular shade-tolerant Japanese hollies, the Hetz holly has smaller leaves than the American and English hollies, giving it the nickname "box-leaved." The berries of this plant are black, unlike the familiar red berries on other hollies.
Like boxwood shrubs Hetz's Japanese holly can be closely sheared to form shaped hedges.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 8
- Color Varieties: White insignificant flowers
- Sun Exposure: Prefers full sun but tolerates shade
- Soil Needs: Well-draining soil; will tolerate clay
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07 of 30
The Spruce / David Beaulieu
Sky Pencil holly is a variety of Japanese holly with a distinctive tall, columnar shape. You can't miss this "architectural plant," and once you have identified it, you will never forget it. Sky pencil, with its smooth-edged leaves, works well in corners and tight spaces. Its black berries attract a wide range of birds.
Unlike some hollies, this one does not require much pruning, but if you do choose to trim it, do so in winter, when the shrub is dormant.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 8
- Color Varieties: Greenish white and small
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to partial shade
- Soil Needs: Well-drained acidic soil
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The Spruce / Adrienne Legault
A type of needled evergreen (as opposed to a broadleaf plant), hemlocks can be trimmed so as to promote the development of dense foliage, making them great for privacy screens. The shrub cultivars of this plant make terrific hedges.
In the northern end of the hardiness range, hemlocks appreciate a thick layer of much over their roots in winter.
- USDA Growing Zones: 3 to 7
- Color Varieties: Small, non-ornamental, yellow to light green
- Sun Exposure: Partial sun to partial shade
- Soil Needs: Rich, acidic, and moist
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The Spruce / Adrienne Legault
Yews are one of the plants used in Christmas traditions. These needled evergreen bushes are valued for their showy, red, berry-like cones and as shrubs that grow in shade. Some people find them boring or overused, but the versatility of these tough plants makes their case for them.
Yews should be trimmed in early summer to keep the shape attractive.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 8
- Sun Exposure: Sun, partial shade, or full shade
- Soil Needs: Well-draining soil
Warning
Yews are toxic plants. Do not plant if you have children or pets that live or frequent your garden.
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The Spruce / Evgeniya Vlasova
This shade-tolerant bush offers the best of both worlds; it is not only a flowering shrub but also an evergreen shrub. Andromeda shrubs may offer something else, too: fragrant flowers. Some people find their smell offensive, while others find it pleasing.
Feeding is best done with an acid fertilizer, such as that used for azaleas.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 8
- Color Varieties: White
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade; flowering is reduced in shady conditions
- Soil Needs: Moist, well-drained soil; prefers slightly acidic soil
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African Scurf Pea (Psoralea pinnata)
Rebecca Johnson/Getty ImagesAfrican scurf pea is a medium-size shrub (you can also train it into a small tree) that produces lilac-blue flowers that may remind you of sweet pea. It is nicknamed "Kool-Aid bush" because the fragrance can be reminiscent of grape Kool-Aid. The foliage, which looks something like rosemary, has a fine texture.
The plant can become straggly unless pruned to maintain an attractive shape.
- USDA Growing Zones: 9 to 11
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
- Soil Needs: Moist, well-drained
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The Spruce / Evgeniya Vlasova
Serviceberry trees and shrubs are members of the Rosaceae family, which includes roses and many flowering, fruiting trees and shrubs. Deciduous serviceberries are found throughout the Northern Hemisphere.
Alder-leaved serviceberry has clusters of flowers in spring and produces edible purple-blue fruit. They offer four-season interest with their beautiful blossoms, pome fruits, autumn leaf colors, and bark color in winter.
Alder-leaved serviceberry can be prone to rust and powdery mildew fungus; maintain good air circulation to minimize these problems.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 9
- Color Varieties: White
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
- Soil Needs: Moist, but well-drained, soil
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Liisa-Maija Harju / Flickr / CC By 2. 0
Alpine currant is a European native that features bright green foliage. It is often used to create a border or hedge. You will need both male and female plants for this small, dioecious shrub to produce its berries, which are ornamental rather than edible.
These shrubs are easy to maintain for shape, as they can be pruned at any time.
- USDA Growing Zones: 2 to 7
- Color Varieties: Greenish yellow flowers and red berries
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
- Soil Needs: Prefers moist well-draining soil but is tolerant of drier conditions
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Spotted Laurel (Aucuba japonica)
PAVEL IARUNICHEV / Getty Images
Aucuba also called spotted laurel, is a rounded evergreen shrub with colorful leaves. If you have both male and female plants it will produce red berries in the fall. Aucuba can grow up to 15 feet tall with glossy elliptical leaves. Tiny spring flowers usually bloom in early spring.
These shrubs should be fertilized once a year as new growth appears, using an acid-based fertilizer.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 9
- Color Varieties: Reddish-purple
- Sun Exposure: Part shade to full shade
- Soil Needs: Moist, organically rich, well-drained soil
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The Spruce / Leticia Almeida
Several different species of Rhododendron produce beautiful spring blooms in various brilliant shades. They include both evergreen and deciduous varieties and can grow in many different climates. Rhododendrons are often used as foundation plantings but can grow quite large unless regularly pruned.
Unless your soil is already heavily acidic, fertilize yearly with an acid-enhanced fertilizer in late winter or early spring.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 9 depending on the variety
- Color Varieties: White, pink, yellow, purple, red
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade
- Soil Needs: Acidic soil
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Andrei Stanescu / Getty Images
California Sweetshrub is a low maintenance shrub that produces a pleasant fragrance that some say resembles that of red wine. This plant is often used to control erosion along creeks and riverbanks. It's also a good choice for areas frequented by deer, as they avoid it.
Pruning is best done by removing old, overgrown stems all the way to ground level, rather than by pruning the tips of branches.
- USDA Growing Zones: 6 to 9
- Color Varieties: Deep red
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
- Soil Needs: Moist soil; won't tolerate drought
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The Spruce / Kara Riley
Camellia is also known as tea plant because its leaves and twigs can be used to make a fragrant tea. But if you are growing it for ornamental purposes, you will be more interested in its glossy foliage, fragrant fall flowers, easy maintenance, and long life.
A slow-growing plant, it needs little if any pruning and only light fertilizing.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 9
- Color Varieties: White or pink
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade
- Soil Needs: Rich, acidic, well drained loam
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The Spruce / David Beaulieu
Canadian Bunchberry is a subshrub that you can use as a ground cover for damp, shady areas. Bunchberry is a relative of the dogwood, and produces blossoms that give it nicknames such as "creeping dogwood" and "bunchberry dogwood."
Bunchberry is an ideal choice for cold, damp areas where other shrubs may struggle to survive. Mulching with peat moss will help provide the acidity this plant craves.
- USDA Growing Zones: 2 to 6
- Color Varieties: White with red berries
- Sun Exposure: Shade
- Soil Needs: Moist, acidic soil
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The Spruce / Evgeniya Vlasova
Checkerberry is also known as American wintergreen. Its leaves can produce a minty scent, and its edible, red berries taste like wintergreen gum. A tiny shrub (often just three inches tall), it can be used as a ground cover in acidic soil.
Prune in winter or early spring, before new growth begins.
- USDA Growing Zones: 3 to 8
- Color Varieties: White or pale pink
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade
- Soil Needs: Low nutrient and good drainage
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20 of 30
The Spruce / K. Dave
Chinese fringe-flower is an evergreen shrub also known as Chinese witch hazel. Like witch hazel, it has fringe-like flowers that bloom very early in the spring. Chinese fringe-flower has a spreading form and can grow up to 12 feet in height. Its foliage is usually green, though some varieties feature purple leaves.
Mulch the soil heavily to keep it moist.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 9
- Color Varieties: White, yellow, or red flowers
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to partial shade
- Soil Needs: Rich, acidic, well-drained loam
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KENPEI/Wikimedia Commons/CC By 2.0
Coast Leucothoe produces urn-shaped bunches of small flowers that are similar to those on Pieris japonica; in fact, the two bushes belong to the same family (Ericaceae). This weeping evergreen shrub is native to the U.S. and is often used in place of boxwood for hedges and boundaries.
Before planting, dig in a good amount of peat moss to a depth of 18 inches, which will provide acidity and improve moisture retention.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 9
- Color Varieties: White flowers
- Sun Exposure: Partial to full shade
- Soil Needs: Acidic soil
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The Spruce / Cara Cormack
You'll recognize Common Boxwood as the evergreen shrub often used for hedges and topiaries. A classic plant for formal landscape design, it boasts dense light-green leaves and a compact shape. English boxwood shrubs grow to about three feet, but their slow growth makes it easy to keep them pruned and looking pristine.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 8
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to partial shade
- Soil Needs: Well-drained soil
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23 of 30
The Spruce / David Beaulieu
Witch hazel is a tall shrub that will add fall color to your garden. It's a very early-blooming plant, with fragrant flowers appearing as early as mid-March in most locations. A vase-shaped plant, it grows to tree height if not kept pruned.
You can make extracts from the witch hazel shrub to harness the plant's astringent properties.
- USDA Growing Zones: 3 to 8
- Color Varieties: Yellow
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to partial shade
- Soil Needs: Well-drained, acidic soil amended with compost
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24 of 30
The Spruce / K. Dave
Dwarf fothergilla is a deciduous flowering shrub known for its fluffy flowers in spring and its fall leaf colors. In spring, this shrub is tipped with 1- to 3-inch-long flowers that look like bottlebrushes and smell a bit like licorice. The leaves are dark green on top, and bluish-gray on the bottom.
In the colder hardiness zones, this plant may need to be wrapped with burlap in the winter to prevent windburn.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 8
- Color Varieties: White
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to full shade
- Soil Needs: Moderately moist, well-drained, slightly acidic soil
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The Spruce / Evgeniya Vlasova
You can attract hummingbirds with buckeye, also known as the firecracker plant. It will grow in all textures of soil and can be maintained as a shrub or a tree. Red buckeye is especially desirable because of its bright flowers, textured bark, open structure, and appeal to all kinds of wildlife.
Red buckeye can be grown with multiple or single trunks.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 8
- Color Varieties: Orange, Red/Burgundy
- Sun Exposure: Full sun or partial shade (stays more shrub-like in shade)
- Soil Needs: moist, well-drained, rich soil that is slightly alkaline
Warning
Buckeyes produce a toxic nut that can cause kidney failure in children and pets. It also produces abundant fruit, twigs, and leaves which can produce a great deal of garden litter.
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26 of 30
The Spruce / Leticia Almeida
The red tip photinia is an evergreen shrub that produces young red leaves, while its older leaves are green. If you prefer red leaves, you can simply trim new growth on a regular basis, and the plant will continue to produce new leaves all year long. While red tip photinia typically grows to about 10 feet tall, some cultivars can grow to 20 feet.
It is an excellent low-maintenance shrub for hedges and privacy screens, and can also be shaped as a small specimen tree.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 11
- Color Varieties: White (grown for foliage)
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to partial shade
- Soil Needs: Well-drained, sandy, or loamy
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The Spruce / Evgeniya Vlasova
Japanese skimmia will produce white flowers and red fruit if you have both a male and a female. It is a broadleaf evergreen with greenish bark, leathery green leaves, bright flowers and berries, and a pleasant fragrance. It grows slowly, topping out at about four feet tall and expanding to about five feet wide.
While pruning isn't essential, a light pruning during the dormant season can keep the plant neat.
- USDA Growing Zones: 6 to 8
- Color Varieties: White flowers, red fruits
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade
- Soil Needs: Moist and rich with a slightly acidic pH
Warning
All parts of the skimmia plant are toxic.
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California Holly (Heteromeles arbutifolia)
Andrei Stanescu / Getty Images
California holly, also called toyon or Christmas berry, is the shrub that some suppose gave Hollywood its name. It's indigenous to California, is drought-resistant, and has small flowers that produce red berries. All these qualities make it a favorite plant for California xeriscaping.
- USDA Growing Zones: 9 to 11
- Color Varieties: White
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to light shade
- Soil Needs: Well-draining soil
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The Spruce / Evgeniya Vlasova
The tree peony is a deciduous sub-shrub that blooms in mid to late spring. It produces big, beautiful peony flowers in many different shades. Tree peonies are good borders or hedge plants, particularly because their foliage is nearly as attractive as their blooms. This is a different plant from Chinese peony (Paeonia lactiflora), a perennial, although the two share certain traits.
Tree peonies have modest water needs and react badly if they are overwatered.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 8
- Color Varieties: White to pink, red, or purple flowers
- Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
- Soil Needs: Fertile, well draining loam
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The Spruce / K. Dave
Different species of viburnum can give your garden color in multiple seasons, not only because of their multi-colored flowers but also with their leaves and fruit. The arrowwood type is an excellent choice for shade.
These flowering shrubs bloom with clusters of flowers in spring, and they produce both red fall foliage and blue berries in fall. They can grow up to 10 feet and are equally as wide.
Viburnum shrubs will spread by suckers unless you remove them.
- USDA Growing Zones: 2 to 8
- Color Varieties: White
- Sun Exposure: Full to partial sun
- Soil Needs: Tolerant of many soil types including wet soil
Article Sources
The Spruce uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
A Dangerous Garden Thug Exposed: Daphne Laureola. Master Gardeners Association of British Columbia.
Labossiere Alexander W., Thompson Dennis F. Clinical Toxicology of Yew Poisoning. Annals of Pharmacotherapy, vol. 52, no. 6, pp. 591-599, 2018. doi:10.1177/1060028017754225
Amelanchier alnifolia. Missouri Botanical Garden.
Hamamelis virginiana. Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, University of Texas.
Red Buckeye. University of Kentucky, Department of Horticulture.
Japanese Skimmia. Washington State University Extension PNW Plants.
Shade-loving and shade-tolerant plants for the garden: perennial flowers and shrubs
Already in early spring, we begin to think about the layout of our garden, distributing the plants that we will plant in different corners of the summer cottage. As a rule, most are faced with the problem of choosing a plant for planting in shady places that you really want to decorate with beautiful flowers or shrubs, because such areas often remain empty and neglected.
Let's talk about those shade-tolerant plants that can grow normally in the most shady areas of the garden. nine0003
Content
- 1 What to plant in a shady place or what plants belong to the shade -tolerant
- 2 Popular trellis shrubs
- 3 Popular trendy flowers
- 4 Brief descriptions flowers
- 4.1 Khosta
- 4.2 Astilba
- 4.3 Astilboides
- 4.4 Buzulnik
- 4.5 Badan
Every garden has shaded areas, such as northern slopes, places near the fence or between large trees.
In fact, the most shady places in the garden are the best places, because, as a rule, there is a favorite bench for relaxing on a hot summer day. However, not every plant will be able to withstand the shade, grow successfully and delight the eye with its flowering.
Shade-loving plants are those plants that, no matter how strange it sounds, do not tolerate sunlight at all or suffer from its excess. nine0003
However! Nevertheless, it is more correct to speak of “shade-tolerant plants” , since not a single plant can grow without light.
As a rule, they have bright juicy and green foliage.
All shade-loving and shade-tolerant plants can be divided into 2 varieties: decorative leafy and flowering.
- Shade-loving flowers and flowering shrubs include the following: weigela, matthiola bicorne, daisy, forget-me-not, rudbeckia, fragrant tobacco, astilbe, brunner, lungwort, hydrangea (large-leaved, tree-like, serrate), geuchera, honeysuckle, bergenia, rogersia , arizema, cornflower, volzhanka, aquilegia, dicentra, aconite, tenacious (ayuga), May lily of the valley, cuff, astrantia, kupena, black cohosh, buzulnik. nine0012
- Shade-loving decorative deciduous shrubs include hosta, fern, astilboides, euonymus, Thunberg barberry, privet.
Tip! When planting a shady area, don't just plant monocultures, shade-loving perennials and annuals look great in close proximity.
From shrubs for shady places, Thunberg barberry is ideal. In deep shade you will hardly get bright yellows and reds, and most likely it will just be a uniform green, but nevertheless, it is still a very conspicuous shade-tolerant plant.
By the way! For planting and growing barberry read here.
Another small and shade-tolerant shrub is euonymus . Its variegated and low form looks very good in the garden.
A low shrub Privet will be quite noticeable under the shade of trees. Its lemon-colored leaves seem to illuminate a shady spot.
However, different varieties relate differently to the shade - there are more shade-tolerant, there are less. nine0003
By the way! You can read more about planting and growing weigela here .
Cotoneaster will look very decorative in a shady corner. It has beautiful dark green leathery and shiny leaves. Again, varieties differ markedly in shade tolerance.
Imagine how pleasant it will be to sit in a gazebo that is entwined with ornamental honeysuckle (Honeysuckle or Tatar honeysuckle) with its magnificent flowers.
By the way, decorative viburnum Buldenezh (Snowball) is also shade-tolerant.
By the way! The site already has detailed material about planting and growing viburnum Buldenezh .
Favorite flowers for a shady garden will be mattiola bicorne, daisy , forget-me-not , fragrant tobacco, evening primrose.
Fragrant tobaccoIf we talk about seasonal and annual shade-loving plants, then under the trees, where there is a lot of shade, in spring you can safely plant daffodils , crocuses , tulips and hyacinths0, because they will bloom in all their beauty long before the leaves appear on the trees. nine0003
Please note! The site already has article about planting and growing Hosta . nine0003
It is very appropriate to combine hosta with a wide variety of ferns, planting them in the shade of a house where everything is in order with humidity (it is high).
Video: Care and Growing Shade Hosta
This is a quirky plant that does well in shade and grows well in moist soil.
Important! Read more about planting and growing astilba outdoors .
Video: Growing and caring for Shade Astilba
The most striking feature of this plant is its original large leaves. Its leaf can reach from 80 to 100 centimeters in diameter.
Another distinguishing feature of astilboides is that the stalk is not usually attached to it: it grows directly from the middle of the leaf. In other words, it turns out such an umbrella on the leg. nine0003
This luxurious and showy plant likes to grow near swampy rivers, it is best suited for decorating artificial ponds.
There are a lot of varieties of buzulnik. Those that grow naturally have dark green leaves and irresistible yellow buds.
Buzulniks, bred artificially, often have dark brown, even actually burgundy foliage and unusual, similar to daisies, yellow peduncles that can last for a whole month. nine0003
This is a completely unique plant, perfect for shade planting. In winter it leaves in a green state and after winter it again appears green to the eye. The fact is that under the snow the bergenia does not shed its leaves and does not die, but remains green all the time.
The flowers of this plant are unpretentious and modest, but very cute.
Another interesting property of bergenia is that its old leaves, which turn dark or brown, have special healing properties. In Tibet, they are brewed as a rejuvenating tea. nine0003
Video: unpretentious and shade-tolerant bergenia
Indispensable for decorating a small shady area.
In addition to the beautiful leaves of impressive coloring (variegated and green with a silvery cobweb), it also blooms angelically charming - small blue forget-me-nots.
You can look at her for hours, she is so airy and beautiful. It's just impossible to look away! nine0003
Video: planting and caring for the shade-loving plant Brunnera large-leaved
It remarkably withstands partial shade, but blooms a little less abundantly in deep shade. And still, the unpretentious Volzhanka blooms its inflorescences again and again!
Video: unpretentious Volzhanka for planting and flowering in the shade0225
Heuchera looks absolutely wonderful, which won the hearts of many gardeners. The number of leaf colors is surprisingly rich: from lilac-steel to bright red and green.
The sizes are also quite diverse: from miniature forms to quite tall specimens.
This is an absolutely unpretentious plant that does not require special attention, grows beautifully and does not lose its decorative effect from May to October.
Important! Read more about planting and growing Heuchera outdoors .
In addition, geykhera is very winter-hardy and tolerates the first autumn frosts well, leaving under the snow with leaves covered with hoarfrost.
And in the month of May, geyhers start very quickly and gain their color due to amazingly beautiful foliage.
It blooms amazingly beautifully, flower stalks rise high enough above the plant and last quite a long time. nine0003
In the recent past, botanists crossed geuchera and tiarella and got a new variety of geucherella. The plant has become even more resistant to the preservation of colorfulness, and the color range is much wider.
Video: everything about growing shade-loving geyhera
It can grow both in open and sunny areas and in shaded areas. However, in the sun, the buds open and bloom early, and the peduncles do not differ in particular size and splendor. In shady places, the color picks up more slowly, but the flowers are brighter, larger and give pleasure with their wonderful appearance until July-August. Therefore, it will be good to plant a dicenter, for example, closer to the gazebo or house, the shadow of which will fall on the plant for most of the day. nine0003
It will also look good near the fence.
Please note! Read more about planting and growing dicentra from rhizomes and seeds in the open field .
Video: how to grow a dicentra or a broken heart in a shady garden If you see him, then most likely you will just fall in love. nine0003
At the end of the summer, it usually throws out a peduncle - a long panicle with silvery flowers. The spectacle is impressive! It is simply impossible to pass by without stopping.
Another important advantage of this shade-tolerant perennial is the fact that it can grow in the same place for quite a long time.
This flower is not widely used in our summer cottages, but nevertheless it is a very friendly plant, which, like no other, is suitable for the shady side of the summer cottage. nine0003
Its coloration can vary from dark green to variegated, when the green leaf is bordered by white stripes along the edge.
Delicate white and pink flowers all over the stem, resembling something like a lily of the valley - this is a very pleasant sight.
The plant grows quite quickly, so if you need to fill the shady space under fruit trees or plant in the shade next to conifers, then kupena deserves your attention. nine0003
Another shadow king is the fern. Of course, he does not give flowers, no matter how much we want and do not expect, but he has amazing foliage, which comes in various colors, different sizes and shapes. He lives best in a damp shady corner.
We are accustomed to the fact that the fern is always dark green, but now we have developed varieties with a dark brown color, lilac centers and silver leaf edges.
If you plant a fern in the shade of your garden house or in another shady place, it will take all your attention and the attention of your garden guests.
Video: fern care and cultivation in the shade under the crown of trees
Many flower growers call her the queen of the shady garden, which grows to a height of 1.5 meters.
Thanks to its magnificent large leaves, Rogersia is very picturesque throughout the season. nine0003
Fluffy and fragrant white, pink or cream-colored panicle inflorescences bloom in early July and can last for more than a month.
Shaded area design idea! Plant such tall and shade-loving plants as buzulniks, black cohosh and ferns in the background, make the second tier from the host, and on the lower plan - geyhera and geyherella.
Only shady places are left unplanted in your summer cottage, and is it difficult for you to find suitable plant specimens to revive them? Use our tips and recommendations for landscaping, and then the whole mosaic of your garden will come together. nine0003
Video: what plants to plant in a shady area
Shade-loving perennial shrubs for the garden, photos and names
It happens that on the territory of a summer cottage or garden plot there are shaded places. And yet there are not so many well-lit places. The reasons for the fact that there are many shaded places on the site can be very different. So, for example, shrubs and trees grow on it in large numbers. They, of course, give delicious fruits and berries, but they take up a lot of space and cast a rather voluminous shadow. Therefore, the plants growing under them are almost completely devoid of sunlight. However, few summer residents do not want the entire summer cottage to be beautiful and originally designed. The way out of this situation is very simple. So, in shady places, you only need to plant shade-loving perennial shrubs for the garden. nine0045
How to choose shade-tolerant shrubs for the garden
Shade-tolerant perennial shrubs are conditionally divided into 3 different groups, namely: berry, flowering, and decorative foliage. Each of these plants has both certain pluses and minuses. And there are also such types of shrubs that not only look very impressive, but also give useful, fragrant and incredibly tasty fruits. Experienced gardeners and summer residents categorically do not recommend buying planting material in spontaneous markets, as there is a high probability that it will be of very poor quality. It is best to purchase seedlings in special stores that have a good reputation. Among the various types of shrubs, the most popular and common can be distinguished. nine0003
Shade-tolerant flowering shrubs
Rhododendron
Such a shrub has a very spectacular appearance, especially during the flowering period, when it is almost completely covered with inflorescences consisting of flowers of a rich color. Its leaf blades are fleshy. Rhododendron thrives in the shading created by tall trees and shrubs, in which many other plants can simply die.
Garden jasmine
This shrub is very popular with gardeners and summer residents. Such a very beautiful plant will be an excellent decoration for almost any site. Jasmine looks especially impressive in the process of flowering. At this time, its branches are covered with snow-white lush inflorescences, from which a very pleasant and rather strong smell emanates. An important advantage of such a shrub is its undemanding to the place of growth, as well as to the quality of the soil. Garden jasmine can adapt to absolutely any growing conditions. So, he perfectly withstands dry periods, and he is also not afraid of quite frosty winters. However, in order for your site to be decorated with a compact and neat bush, it will need to be cut systematically and often enough. nine0003
Shade-tolerant berry bushes
Such perennial plants are suitable for those gardeners and summer residents who want the plants grown by them to be not only very beautiful, but also bring certain benefits.
Barberry
This shrub is quite popular in Eastern countries. It is fast growing and frost resistant. It is quite easy to care for him, and he also tolerates a dry period perfectly. Such a shrub has small, very beautiful leaf plates, which in the fall change their green color to rich burgundy. The barberry grows berries with high palatability. They are used in cooking to prepare a variety of dishes. nine0003
Gooseberry
It can grow in both sunny and shaded places.
Learn more