Best hedging plants – 10 choices for beautiful, leafy boundaries (2024)

Planting hedging plants is a long-term plan that will reward you with green garden walls that can become a stunning feature in their own right. Hedges are also the most practical solution if you want to create a windbreak – you can say goodbye to blown-down fences as they are very effective at filtering wind. They can be good for added security, too, particularly if you choose thorny specimens.

There are plenty of options to choose from, including fast-growing shrubs ideal for quick privacy hedges. You could plant a classic evergreen, such as yew, as a formal backdrop for a colorful perennial border. Traditional hornbeam hedging can divide a garden space into rooms. And don’t just think of hedges as growing from the ground up – a tall hedge of pleached or standard trees is a great way to screen unsightly buildings or views.

There are evergreen hedges that also have summer flowers, too, like elaeagnus with tiny, scented blooms, or cherry laurel. What's more, many flowering shrubs and trees can be grown as hedges, such as camellias, Prunus cerasifera ‘Nigra’ or lavender for a lower-growing option. There's a hedging plant for every type of backyard scheme and situation – and this guide will help you find the perfect solution for you.

10 hedging plants to grow in your garden

This list of favorite planting picks will help you decide on the best option for your backyard hedge.

Best hedging plants – 10 choices for beautiful, leafy boundaries (1)

(Image credit: Botanic World / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 12-20ft
  • Spread: 8-12ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 4-7

This compact, dense variety of yew has the same dark glossy looks as Taxus baccata, but with a natural upright, narrow habit, it has become a popular choice for a smaller yew hedge. As an evergreen shrub, it'll maintain its structure all year round. You can buy it from Nature Hills.

Ultimately slow-growing, young plants will put on 6-12in a year and can be pruned to create a medium-sized hedge that is good for creative topiary.

2. Forsythia spectabilis

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(Image credit: Steffen Hauser / botanikfoto / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 8-10ft
  • Spread: 10-12ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 6-9

This yellow-flowering beauty is more often than not grown as a solo shrub, but when planted as a hedge, forsythia makes a stunning spring display.

It's a good choice for a busy urban boundary as it's easy to grow in tough locations and suits most soil types and aspects.

When planting a forsythia hedge, use three young plants per 3.3ft of hedge required. Once established, it needs little more than an annual trim after flowering to keep it to the desired height.

3. Prunus lusitanica

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(Image credit: Martin Hughes-Jones / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 50ft
  • Spread: 33ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 4-9

The Portuguese laurel, available at Nature Hills, is a great choice for tall, evergreen hedging, with glossy leaves and stems tinged with red.

A holder of an RHS award of Garden Merit, this is a great, reliable choice that's good for all situations, including poor and chalky soils. It’s a tough, hardy hedging plant, with a mix of wildlife benefits – the white early summer flowers are followed by berries much loved by birds, but the leaves will keep the deer away.

4. Rosa rugosa ‘Blanc Double de Coubert’

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(Image credit: joan gravell / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 4-7ft
  • Spread: 3-5ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 4-9

Plant dog roses as an informal and ornamental flowering hedge or include them in a mixed wildlife hedgerow. This one will give you a thorny boundary, with the added bonus of wonderfully scented white flowers right through the summer, followed by ruby red rosehips in winter.

The benefits are multi-faceted for a wildlife garden – you might find birds nesting as well as plenty of pollinators drawn to the open blooms. It’s a tough rose, requiring little pampering. Available to buy from Nature Hills.

5. Tilia x europaea ‘Pallida’

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(Image credit: Botanic World / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 50ft
  • Spread: 50ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 3-7

With leaves unfurling slightly earlier in the season, this variety of lime offers longer interest as a hedging plant. It’s popular for pleaching as it does not produce suckers, and is quick to establish in most settings, other than very damp soils.

Pleached hedging is a great solution for garden screening and creates a strong visual focal point. Pleached trees are usually supplied part trained and will take a few years to knit together, so it’s a long-term investment.

6. Corylus avellana

Best hedging plants – 10 choices for beautiful, leafy boundaries (6)

(Image credit: Joe Blossom / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 12-20ft
  • Spread: 12-15ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 4-8

Plant a classic hazel hedge and you can grow your own supply of hazelnuts. Good as part of a mixed native hedgerow, or as a single species, it's also a great choice to encourage and support wildlife. The attractive foliage is another plus point of this hedging plant.

It can be planted as a single or double row for a fast-growing hedge. It’s low-maintenance and only needs pruning once a year in early spring.

7. Photinia x fraseri ‘Red Robin’

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(Image credit: JOY WALKER / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 13ft
  • Spread: 13ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 7-9

A popular hedging plant, this is a great choice as a pleached specimen, where its ornamental qualities can be appreciated in a different context.

The glossy evergreen foliage with bright red spring growth gives year-round interest and by using it in pleached form, this provides a striking high hedge. Photinia suits most soils and is fast to establish.

8. Quercus ilex

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(Image credit: David Chapman / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 40ft
  • Spread: 40ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 7-10

The evergreen oak, also known as Holm oak, is a huge tree unpruned, but can make a good evergreen hedge. In particular, it’s good for coastal gardens.

With dense glossy foliage, it can be used as a formal feature and it works well for topiary pruning, too. It's best in full sun and suits most soils, except heavy clay.

9. fa*gus sylvatica ‘Purpurea’

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(Image credit: Nic Murray / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 60ft
  • Spread: 40ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 5-7

If you’re looking for a highly ornamental pleached hedge, the rich purple foliage of purple beech is a winner, both in spring as the new leaves unfurl and through summer and fall as they mature.

It's a great choice for a pleached hedge. Although deciduous, like hornbeam, the spent foliage stays on the trees, so you can maintain your privacy through the winter months.

Plant in well-drained soil in full sun, where the leaves will really glow in the light. Prune in summer.

10. Elaeagnus x submacrophylla‘Gilt Edge’

Best hedging plants – 10 choices for beautiful, leafy boundaries (10)

(Image credit: Wiert Nieuman / Alamy Stock Photo)

  • Height: 5-6ft
  • Spread: 5-6ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 7-10

Oleasters make attractive hedging plants, and this variegated version adds a dimension of light and movement with the bright golden trim to its dark, evergreen leaves.

Blessed with tiny summer flowers that smell wonderful, it’s tough and reliable, and suitable for sunny or part shady areas. It makes a good coastal plant.

Best hedging plants – 10 choices for beautiful, leafy boundaries (2024)

FAQs

What is the prettiest hedge? ›

For a luxurious and lush hedge, the best choice is Yew Hedge (Taxus baccata) as it has very dark green foliage and is slow growing and easy to maintain. Privet (Ligustrum ovalifolium) is also a good option and grows quickly, although it may lose some leaves in cold winters.

Which plant is best for boundary? ›

Fountain Grass. Ornamental grasses such as fountain grass are ideal for planting along borders, paths, or driveways that receive full sun. Dwarf varieties grow to two to three feet tall and three feet wide and feature fine green foliage in the summer that produces pinkish "foxtail" blooms in late summer to early fall.

What is the fastest growing plant for a privacy hedge? ›

English laurel (or Cherry Laurel) can make an enormous fast-growing hedge. Under the right conditions, it can grow up to 3 feet per year! It does very well in heat. It has glossy evergreen foliage and makes a very attractive large hedge with regular pruning 1-2 times per year.

What is the best plant to block neighbors' views? ›

The most popular trees for living fences are American arborvitae (Thuja occidentalis), Arborvitae 'Emerald Green' (Thuja occidentalis 'Smaragd'), and the baby giant arborvitae tree (Thuja plicata x standishii 'Virginian').

What is the best hedge for all year round? ›

  • Euonymus (Euonymus fortunei 'Dart's Blanket') Green Screens. Euonymus fortunei 'Dart's Blanket' ...
  • Cherry Laurel hedge plants. Prunus laurocerasus 'Rotundifolia' hedging. ...
  • Privet hedge plants. ...
  • Berberis x stenophylla hedge plants. ...
  • Photinia x fraseri 'Red Robin' hedge plants. ...
  • Black Bamboo. ...
  • Yew hedge plants. ...
  • Leylandii hedge plants.

What bushes are best for borders? ›

Evergreen topiary adds year-round interest to any border and has been gracing European gardens since Roman times. Choose shrubs with dense, compact growth and small leaves, such as box or yew and clip into formal cones or balls, or even animals and birds.

What are the best low maintenance border plants? ›

Creeping plants like euphorbia, low-spreading sedums, dianthus (especially spreading varieties like 'Firewitch'), thread-leaf coreopsis, or short asters (like 'Wood's Blue') can spill over the border edge in a fetching way, creating an organic looking design.

What makes a good border plant? ›

When shopping for perennials and shrubs to use as border plants, make sure you choose those that are suited to survive winters in your USDA Hardiness Zone. Also, pay attention to the area's sun exposure. Plants that prefer full sun need at least six or more hours of direct sunlight, while part sun is about half that.

What is the easiest evergreen hedge to grow? ›

Arborvitae. You will almost always find arborvitae on popular hedge plant lists. This upright evergreen has flat sprays of scalelike, aromatic, yellow-green to green foliage.

How do I block neighbors view of my yard? ›

Although fences and brick walls can do the trick, adding an extra divider, screen or plant barrier can block your neighbor's two-story view for good. To create your secret retreat, freestanding privacy screens, wood slat partitions and partially enclosed pergolas are effective (and nice to look at).

What plants are good for screening Neighbours? ›

A row of trees can also be a good alternative to a privacy hedge, allowing you to add screening at the top of a fence while still being able to plant in the border below it. Our growers recommend evergreen Yew or Portuguese Laurel, or deciduous Liquidambar or flagpole cherry blossoms for this job.

What is considered a perfect hedge? ›

A perfect hedge is a position that eliminates the risk of an existing position or one that eliminates all market risk from a portfolio. Rarely achieved, a perfect hedge position has a 100% inverse correlation to the initial position where the profit and loss from the underlying asset and the hedge position are equal.

What is the quickest growing hedge? ›

Leylandii is a fast-growing hedge plant that has the quickest growth rate of approximately 75-90cm per year. Leylandii, also known as Cupressocyparis, is a stunning hedge plant that will add elegance to your garden.

What shrubs are good for the front of the house? ›

What are the best low-maintenance shrubs for the front of the house? A few low-maintenance shrubs for the front of a house are hydrangeas, weigelas, boxwood, and spirea.

What are the best hedges for a front yard? ›

Shrubs such as privet, arborvitae and viburnum respond well to shearing and are a good choice for a formal landscape. For informal landscape plantings use lilac, dogwood or juniper to achieve a more natural look. For year- round screening, use evergreens such as yew, juniper or hardy forms of boxwood.

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