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Five plants for a low-maintenance border

Low-maintenance planting schemes need to be quick and easy to look after.

The key to success is to avoid growing plants that need regular watering, feeding, staking, clipping and deadheading. Instead, select plants that look after themselves and only need attention once a year, if at all. Use a combination of shrubs, including evergreens such as hebes, osmanthus, sarcococca and viburnums, perhaps with some grasses, then add perennials and ground cover plants to fill any gaps and keep weeds at bay.

There are also design tricks you can use to reduce the workload – for example, avoid making small fiddly shapes and tricky mowing edges, and use landscape fabric in areas prone to weeds. With the five plants we’ve chosen here, use simple repetition to create a low-fuss, high-impact border.

More on low-maintenance gardening:

Discover our five recommended plants for a low-maintenance border, below.


Amelanchier lamarckii

Five plants for a low-maintenance border

Amelanchier trees have a long season of interest. In early spring, its white starry flowers smother the branches before the coppery foliage appears. In summer, the leaves turn mid-green before a fiery autumnal display of reds, purples and oranges. Its red fruits, which mature to a metallic blue-black, are an important winter food for birds. It works particularly well in small gardens.

Height x spread: 4m x 3m.


Mahonia eurybracteata ‘Soft Caress’

Five plants for a low-maintenance border

This was RHS Chelsea Flower Show Plant of the Year in 2013, and for good reason. It has slender, almost feathery, evergreen foliage. It’s an extremely useful shrub for mass planting in either full sun or dappled shade beneath deciduous trees. From mid- to late summer, and often right into autumn, it carries cheerful spires of lemon-yellow flowers, followed by berries for the birds.

H x S: 1m x 1m.


Geranium psilostemon

Five plants for a low-maintenance border

This hardy geranium is one of the easiest herbaceous perennials to grow and packs a real punch in summer. The idea is that it fills gaps and sprawls a little across the shrubs and between the grasses, filling the border with colour from around June to August. It has bright magenta flowers with dark centres and classic, deeply cut, mid-green cranesbill leaves, which turn a lovely shade of purple-red in autumn.

H x S: 50cm x 1m.


Hebe ‘Sutherlandii’

Five plants for a low-maintenance border

This tight-knit shrub forms neat, rounded mounds of sage-green foliage. It looks as if it’s been clipped by hand into a loose form of topiary, yet it actually requires very little attention. Hebe ‘Sutherlandii’ can be mixed with all styles of planting, in bands as an informal hedge, or to hold the corner of a planting area. In summer it carries short white flowers that bees adore.

H x S: 40cm x 70cm.


Anemanthele lessioniana

Five plants for a low-maintenance border

Commonly known as pheasant’s tail grass, this evergreen has a lovely arching habit and is versatile, thriving in sun as well as light shade. It has green and oaty tones in summer and turns a coppery ginger in autumn, then holds its form and colour through the winter. It will freely self-seed around in any gaps.

H x S: 1m x 1m.


Border care plan

Buying and planting

Simple to maintain

Seasonal interest

Creating more plants for free


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