25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (2024)

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (1)

Springtime is all about getting your garden in the ground—but that doesn't mean the planting fun stops when the heat hits. You can keep planting fruits, veggies, and flowers into early summer and seed fall crops in late summer, too. From asters to zinnias, these are the 25 best summer plants you can grow this season.

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Beans

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (2)

  • Botanical Name:Phaseolus vulgaris
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 6.2

Wait to plant beans until all danger of frost has passed in your region—ideally, soil temps will be at least 60 degrees. Because their roots are delicate, it's best to direct sow pole beans and bush beans. Be sure to provide a trellis for pole beans, which need support to climb as they grow.

02of 25

Basil

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (3)

  • Botanical Name:Ocimum basilicum
  • Sun Exposure:Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 7.0

Summer's best-loved herb thrives in warm, frost-free weather. Plant it along with your tomatoes once all danger of frost has passed. Pinch back the tips of young plants to encourage branching and bushier, fuller growth.

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Tomatoes

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (4)

  • Botanical Name:Solanum lycopersicum
  • Sun Exposure:Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.2 - 6.5

Those in cooler climates might be tempted to plant their tomatoes as soon as daytime temperatures warm up, but chilly nights and spring cold snaps can nip your juicy tomato dreams in the bud. Just remember—don't plant to-MAY-toes until May at the earliest in colder regions.

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Eggplant

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (5)

  • Botanical Name:Solanum melongena
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.5 - 7.2

Another member of the Solanum genus along with potatoes and tomatoes, eggplants love hot summer weather. Because these plants need rich soil to thrive, add compost to the soil about a week before you put them in the ground. Install stakes or tomato cages when planting to give your young plants the support they need as they grow.

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Cucumber

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (6)

  • Botanical Name:Cucumis sativus
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.5 - 7.0

As long as all danger of frost has passed, you can plant cucumbers—whether transplants or seeding directly into the soil. Keep the soil evenly moist throughout the season, as mini-droughts can make the cucumbers taste bitter.

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Okra

  • Botanical Name:Abelmoschus esculentus
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 6.8

Heat-loving okra is a relative of hibiscus, offering beautiful blooms to enjoy before the plants fruit. Harvest the pods when they're between two and four inches long—any bigger and they tend to have a tough, woody texture—and fry, saute, stew, or pickle them.

07of 25

Marigolds

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (8)

  • Botanical Name:Tagetes
  • Sun Exposure:Full sun
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 – 7.5

Cheery marigolds make beautiful bedding plants, but they play an important role in the vegetable garden. Plant them along with crops like tomatoes, eggplants, squash, and cucumbers—it's thought that they help protect your veggies from pests.

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08of 25

Cantaloupe

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (9)

  • Botanical Name:Cucumis. melo var. reticulatus
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 6.5

Few fruits are as satisfying—or easy—to grow yourself as cantaloupe (also called muskmelon). Make sure these spreading plants have plenty of room to grow, or provide a tall, sturdy trellis for their vines to climb.

09of 25

Zinnias

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (10)

  • Botanical Name:Zinniaelegans
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.5 - 7.5

Bright and colorful, zinnias make a great addition to summer flower beds, cutting gardens, and borders on paths or veggie gardens. They're long-blooming, drought-tolerant, and quite easy to grow, too.

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Hibiscus

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (11)

  • Botanical Name:Hibiscus rosa-sinensis
  • Sun Exposure:Full sun to part shade
  • Soil Type:Moist, well-draining soil
  • Soil pH:6.5 - 6.8

These tropical beauties naturally grow in hot, humid climates, making them great for summertime planting. In temperate climates, plant them in containers so you can bring them indoors and overwinter them until the following spring.

11of 25

Hot Peppers

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (12)

  • Botanical Name:Capsicum annuum
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 6.8

It makes sense that hot peppers would love hot temperatures, right? These Central American natives thrive in the summer sun. Let the soil dry out a bit between waterings, but keep an eye out for flower drop, which indicates that the plant isn't getting enough water.

12of 25

Coneflower

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (13)

  • Botanical Name:Echinacea spp.
  • Sun Exposure:Full sun to part shade
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.5 - 7.2

Known for its purported immune-boosting properties, coneflower also makes a great addition to your flower garden. These colorful blooms attract pollinators like bees and butterflies, too.

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Summer Squash

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (14)

  • Botanical Name:Cucurbita pepo
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Loamy, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 6.5

Also called yellow squash or crookneck squash, summer squash has a mild, refreshing, and slightly sweet flavor. Direct seed them once all danger of frost has passed. As with cucumbers, water the soil directly and keep the leaves from getting wet to stave off powdery mildew.

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Winter Squash

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (15)

  • Botanical Name:Cucurbita maxima, Cucurbita moschata, Cucurbita pepo
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.5 - 7.0

Winter squashes like butternut, honeynut, acorn, kabocha, pumpkins, and kuri love warm temperatures, unfurling their long, trailing vines as they grow—so be sure to give them lots of space. As fruits form, place something underneath the squashes like a stone or brick to keep them from rotting on the vine.

15of 25

Cowpeas

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (16)

  • Botanical Name:Vigna unguiculata
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Sandy, loamy well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.5 - 6.5

Cowpeas or field peas love hot temperatures and bright sun. Pick them when the pods are around four inches long and eat them whole, or leave them on the plant to ripen more fully for use as a shelling bean. Leave the pods on the plants for another month or so to fully dry out if you'd like to store them as dried beans.

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Sweet Potatoes

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (17)

  • Botanical Name:Ipomoea batatas
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.0 - 6.5

Yes, you can grow your very own sweet potatoes! Purchase sweet potato slips, or sprouts, and about a month until after the last frost to plant them, as they're very sensitive to cold. Harvest and cook small amounts of the edible greens as you wait for the tubers to fatten up in early fall.

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Lantana

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (18)

  • Botanical Name:Lantana camara
  • Sun Exposure:Full sun
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.5 - 6.5

Just because spring is over doesn't mean you can't plant flowers! Choose a cool, overcast summer day to plant a lantana shrub in your garden. They make great statement plants, set apart from bedding plants to adorn your garden on their own.

18of 25

Malabar Spinach

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (19)

  • Botanical Name:Basella alba or Basella ruba
  • Sun Exposure: Full to part sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, moist soil
  • Soil pH:5.5 - 8.0

Native to tropical Southeast Asia, this heat-loving vine can be grown as an annual in temperate climates. It's an excellent cooking green, with shiny green foliage and bright red stems. Be sure to provide it with a sturdy trellis or other support to climb.

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Asters

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (20)

  • Botanical Name:Symphyotrichum
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Loamy, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:5.8 - 6.5

Plant colorful, late-blooming aster varieties in summer to get beautiful blooms all the way through fall's first frost. These daisy-like plants bloom when days begin to shorten in fall. They're perennials, so choose a planting spot where you won't mind them coming back year after year.

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Brown-Eyed Susan

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (21)

  • Botanical Name:Rudbeckia hirta
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.8 - 7.7

Bold, bright brown-eyed susans are a low-maintenance, easy-growing addition to any flower garden. Once they've established, simply deadhead spent blooms to keep the plants looking fresh and promote new growth.

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Beets

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (22)

  • Botanical Name:Beta vulgaris
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Loamy soil
  • Soil pH:6.2 - 6.8

As you make your summer planting plans, don't forget to think ahead to fall. To get another round of cool-weather crops like beets from your garden, direct-seed in mid-to-late summer once night temperatures have begun to cool off.

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Collard Greens

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (23)

  • Botanical Name:Brassica oleraceaL. var.acephala
  • Sun Exposure: Full to part sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.5 - 6.8

Like its close relatives kale and cabbage, collard greens can be planted in spring or fall. Sow seeds directly into the soil in midsummer, about two months before your region's last frost date. You may want to cover the plants with a floating row cover to protect them from pests like harlequin beetles, which tend to be more persistent in summer than in early spring.

23of 25

Broccoli

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (24)

  • Botanical Name:Brassica oleraceavar.italica
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained, loamy soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 7.0

Broccoli loves the cool shoulder seasons of spring and fall. For a late-season crop, seed in July or August, then harvest when the heads are about the size of your fist—any later and the tightly-packed buds will begin to open. If winters are mild in your region, you can also sow in the fall for a spring harvest.

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Cauliflower

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (25)

  • Botanical Name:Brassica oleraceavar. Botrytis
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Soil Type:Rich, well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 7.0

Cauliflower is another cool-season plant that can go in the ground in early spring or late summer. Shoot to plant seedlings about two months before your last frost date for a fall crop—ideally, daytime temperatures will be below 75 degrees. For colder climates, look for varieties that mature in just two months, since the plants can be damaged by frost.

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Spinach

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (26)

  • Botanical Name:Spinacia oleracea
  • Sun Exposure: Full to part sun
  • Soil Type:Well-drained soil
  • Soil pH:6.0 - 7.0

When the days start getting shorter in late summer, cheer yourself up by planting fall crops like spinach. Direct seed spinach varieties about two months before your first fall frost date, then plan to harvest four to six weeks later. In temperate climates, you can keep sowing seeds into the fall so the plants will overwinter for you to harvest in spring.

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MyDomaine uses only high-quality, trusted sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial guidelines to learn more about how we keep our content accurate, reliable and trustworthy.

  1. Aucoin M, Cooley K, Saunders PR, et al. The Effect of Echinacea Spp. on the Prevention or Treatment of COVID-19 and Other Respiratory Tract Infections in Humans: A Rapid Review.Advances in Integrative Medicine. 2020;7(4):203-217. doi:10.1016/j.aimed.2020.07.004

25 Beautiful Summer Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season (2024)

FAQs

What is the prettiest perennial? ›

Japanese Anemone. These charming perennials provide late season color that lasts well into fall. Also called windflower, they have a delicate beauty, with a profuse number of pink or white blooms nodding on long stems atop its mounded foliage.

Is there a perennial that blooms all summer? ›

Butterfly Blue pincushion flower is a nonstop perennial that blooms all summer. The cushion-like blue flowers are on slender stalks reaching 12 to 15 inches tall and are a surefire way to attract butterflies.

What flower will bloom all summer long? ›

Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) is an herb plant that flowers all summer, June through September, on stems growing 2 to 3 feet in height. The species form has clusters of white flowers, but cultivars are available that offer flowers in many colors.

What is the most beautiful summer flower? ›

You'll find everything from lovely zinnias to charming sunflowers. Go for tall varieties like delphiniums or consider eye-catching perennial flowers (think cosmos, asters and daisies). Need good ground covers for shady spots such as in between tree roots? Some of our top picks include salvias and portulacas.

What is the best thing to plant in July? ›

Vegetables to Plant in July
  • Lettuce (heat-tolerant and bolt-resistant varieties)
  • Peas.
  • Pumpkins.
  • Radishes.
  • Squash.
  • Swiss chard.
  • Tomatoes (from transplants; also, temperatures must be below 90 degrees or fruits won't set)
  • Zucchini.

What to plant in a summer vegetable garden? ›

Veggies You Can Plant in Mid-Summer
  • Beans. Beans love warm, sunny days! ...
  • Cucumbers. Cukes grow fast, especially in the warm summer months. ...
  • Squash. ...
  • Carrots. ...
  • Herbs like basil, marjoram, chives and sage do well when planted in the late spring and summer, and can even thrive indoors throughout the winter.

Which perennials bloom the longest? ›

Longest Blooming Shrubs and Perennials
Firefly YarrowStand By Me Bush ClematisTuscan Perennial Sunflower
Pyromania® Red Hot PokerSweet Romance® LavenderAmazing Daisies® Shasta Daisy
'Cat's Pajamas' and 'Cat's Meow''Cloudburst' Tall Cushion PhloxOpening Act Hybrid Phlox
Luminary® seriesProfusion Perennial Salvia series

What is the most popular plant in the garden? ›

Perhaps the most popular perennial flower out there is the rose, which comes in a variety of sizes (including climbing and miniature varieties) and colors to suit pretty much any garden color scheme or style, Wright says. Roses do best in full sun, and well-drained soil to thrive in your garden.

Is there a flower that blooms all year? ›

Lavender. Lavender is not only beautiful, it also adds a calming smell to the home. Yes, the mighty lavender—a favorite of humans and pollinators alike—can bloom all year, and its amazing purple flowers will naturally scent your home 365 days a year.

Is there a shrub that blooms all summer? ›

Summer Flowering Shrubs: Butterfly Bush

With arching spikes full of purple, white, pink or yellow florets, butterfly bush will bloom from midsummer through the first frost. Gardeners prize it for its impact—it can grow up to 15 feet, with hundreds of blossoms—and because it will endure drought and heat.

What is the most popular summer flower? ›

Think varieties like the sunflower, black-eyed Susan, and Shasta daisy, as well as low maintenance plants like lavender and coneflowers. Beginners may want to start with a bed of delphinium or begonias, while more seasoned growers can try their hand at dahlias and hydrangeas.

What is the longest blooming plant? ›

The anthurium is the world's longest blooming plant. Native to tropical environments, these plants are easy to care for and are popular for their bright flowers, which come in a variety of colors – red, pink and orange. Each anthurium flower spike can last up to eight weeks.

What is the best flower for hot weather? ›

Top Heat-Resistant Plants for Your Summer Garden
  • Zinnias. Zinnias are a group that originally came from Latin America. ...
  • Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) ...
  • Blanket Flower (Gaillardia species) ...
  • Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia species) ...
  • Cosmos. ...
  • 6. “ ...
  • Egyptian Star Cluster (Pentas lanceolata) ...
  • Lantanas.

What summer flowers are good for full sun? ›

When you're looking for full sun flowers for pots, consider summer snapdragons, lantana, mandevilla vines and portulaca. This planter of full sun flowers includes 'Akila Lavender Shades' osteospermums (also known as African or Cape Daisies), 'Cool Wave Frost' spreading pansies and 'Clear Crystal' white alyssum.

When should I plant flowers for summer? ›

While spring blooming bulbs should be planted in the fall, summer-blooming bulbs should be planted in mid-spring, after the frost's risk has passed. Usually, we're safe to plant summer-blooming bulbs after the second week of May. However, if you haven't planted your summer bulbs yet, it's not too late!

What are the best plants for summer pots outdoor? ›

Use Sun-Loving SunPatiens

An ideal choice for a humid, sweltering clime, this cheery planter combines 'Tropical Salmon' SunPatiens, foxtail asparagus fern, and 'Neon' pothos. It's a cheery dose of bright hues for hot days and warm nights. SunPatiens can grow in sun or shade, while pothos prefers full or part shade.

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