Perennials
54 products
Plant once, enjoy for years — perennials come back stronger every season, filling your garden with dependable color, texture, and pollinator-friendly blooms.
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- Partner nurseries nationwide
- Based in
- York, SC
Goldsturm Black-Eyed Susan
Rudbeckia fulgida var. sullivantii 'Goldsturm'
- Zones
- 3-9 outdoors
Javelin Forte™ Deep Rose Spanish Lavender
Lavandula stoechas 'LABZ0006'
- Zones
- 7-9 outdoors
SunBelievable® Brown Eyed Girl Helianthus
Helianthus x annuus 'TMSNBLEV01'
- Zones
- 4-9 outdoors
About Perennials
Perennials are the backbone of a lasting garden. Unlike annuals you replant every spring, perennials die back in winter and return on their own year after year, getting fuller and more established with each season. One planting can reward you for a decade or more — which makes them some of the best value, lowest-effort plants you can put in the ground.
Color and texture you can count on. This is a category built for the long game: coneflowers and black-eyed Susans for high summer, daylilies and hostas for structure, salvia, coreopsis, sedum, and ornamental grasses for movement and late-season interest. Mix early, mid, and late bloomers and you'll have something coming into its own from spring straight through fall.
How to choose what's right for your garden
Start with your light and your hardiness zone — most perennials are rated for the cold they can survive, so pick varieties suited to your region and you'll get reliable returns. Pair sun-lovers like echinacea and rudbeckia with shade-friendly hostas and astilbe to cover every corner. Many perennials also clump and spread over time, so you can divide them in a few years and multiply your garden for free.
Easy to establish, easier to keep. Water consistently the first season while roots take hold, then most perennials become wonderfully self-sufficient and drought-tolerant. A spring cleanup and the occasional deadheading is often all they ask. Every plant in this collection is grown in our nursery network, inspected, and hand-packed in protective, season-aware packaging to arrive healthy and ready to root in — and we honor the state-by-state agricultural rules that govern where plants can ship.
Common questions
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Will perennials really come back every year?
Yes, as long as you choose varieties hardy to your climate. Perennials die back in winter and regrow from the same root system each spring, returning year after year and getting fuller as they mature. Check the hardiness zone listed for each plant against your region for the most dependable results.
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When is the best time to plant perennials?
Spring and early fall are ideal. Planting in milder weather gives roots time to establish before the stress of summer heat or winter cold. Fall planting in particular lets perennials settle in for a strong show the following year.
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How long until perennials bloom and fill in?
It depends on the variety, but a common rhythm is the first year to root, the second to grow, and the third to truly thrive. Many perennials flower in their first season, then come back noticeably bigger and more abundant each year after.
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Do perennials need a lot of maintenance?
Very little once established. Water consistently the first season, then most perennials become low-maintenance and drought-tolerant. A spring tidy-up, occasional deadheading to encourage more blooms, and dividing crowded clumps every few years is usually all it takes.
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Which states can these plants ship to?
Live plants are subject to agricultural shipping rules that vary by state. Those restrictions are built into fulfillment, so plants are only sent where they're allowed to go.