The 24 Best Plants for Shady Areas In Your Garden or Home

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The 24 Best Plants for Shady Areas In Your GardenHannamariaH - Getty Images


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No matter how you plan out your landscaping or garden space, there are always going to be some shady spots. Whether you've got a small tree in the yard, a privacy fence that blocks light along its edge, or another garden object that keeps the light mostly dappled, you can still beautify it with some shade-loving annuals and perennials.

Here are 24 of our favorite shade-loving plants! For more, check out our specific lists for shade-loving perennials and for shade-loving annuals.

Ligularia (Leopard Plant)

These big-leaved perennials have deep green foliage and a variety of pretty flowers that can be flat, like a black-eyed Susan, or fire upward, like the one pictured here.

They do well in most areas with dappled sun.

Varieties to try: Desdemona, Britt-Marie Crawford, The Rocket

ligularia leopard plant
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Begonias

Begonias can be easy to love! They're happy in the shade, grow well in pots or in the ground, and will bloom constantly with little tending until the first hard frost.

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red and white begonia
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Hostas

These unfussy perennials are much loved by gardeners everywhere. They can thrive in a variety of conditions and there's sure to be a kind that looks great for your garden. They tend to like it best when they get a bit of morning sun, and then shade in the afternoon.

Read more on growing hosta plants.

plants in garden
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Sweet Potato Vine

This decorative annual grows fast, handles shade well, and likes mildly acidic soil. It's great in pots, where it spills over beautifully, but will need frequent trimming in the ground.

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sweet potato vines and agave growing in a concrete urn container
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Tradescantia

This genus of largely shade-loving perennials goes by many names: spiderwort, inchplant, dayflower, and wandering dude. It can handle both sun and shade.

Read more on growing Wandering Dude.

spiderwort shade plants perennials
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Polka Dot Plant

This garden annual can be grown as an indoor housplant, where it can be perennial. It loves dappled shade. It's known particularly for the paint-splatter-like look of its leaves.

Learn more about growing polka dot plant.

hypoestes phyllostachya garden plant with beautiful foliage known as polka dot plant
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Sedum ternatum

Some varieties of sedum, such as Autumn Joy, need full sun, but ternatum, also called woodland stonecrop, does just fine in the shade. It has white flowers that bloom in the spring, and loves moist spaces.

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sedum ternatum plant, a low growing perennial shade plant
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Astilbe

These popular shade-loving perennials are sometimes called false goat's beard. They've got great foliage that resembles ferns, and look striking along a path when blooming.

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travel photography, landscape design with white astilbe bushes along a path paved with stone slabs closeup selective focus
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Ferns

Ferns naturally do well on the forest floor, so any part of your garden that gets mostly indirect light will suit them. Give these plants plenty of water to get established. They can be drought-tolerant after that.

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Japanese Painted Fern
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Lobelia

This shade-tolerant annual does best in moist, well-draining soil. It blooms best in cooler temps, so it's a great one for getting blooms in the early and mid fall!

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lobelia erinus 'sapphire' flowering in a pot in a july garden
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Hellebore (Lenten Rose)

This shade-perennial makes an excellent ground cover and has strikingly beautiful very early blooms.

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Helleborus flower
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Purple Heart Plant

A variety of tradescantia, but with all-purple leaves and even stems, this gorgeous plant can be a shade-tolerant fast-growing groundcover in warmer areas!

Learn more about Purple Heart Plant.

purple heart plant growing guide
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Forget-Me-Nots

Though they'll want a bit of sun, especially in Northern areas, forget-me-nots are quite tolerant of spots that get lots of afternoon shade. In the South, especially, they need it.

Learn more about growing forget-me-nots.

fforget me not plant guide myosotis sylvatica
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Lamium (Spotted Dead-nettle)

This shade-loving plant is great for under trees or other dim spots. It crowds out weeds and provides good ground cover, as well as these pretty flowers.

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pink flowers of spotted dead nettle lamium maculatum lamium maculatum flowers close up selective focus
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Clematis

Though many varietals of clematis need some sun, there are a few, such as Nelly Mosser, here pictured, that prefer to be entirely shaded—their delicately colored flowers fade in full sun.

Learn more about growing clematis.

Shop Nelly Mosser Clematis

vertical view of nelly moser clematis flower on a fence in the garden
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Toad Lily

The intricate flowers (spotted like a toad!) are the reason to grow these little gems. They handle shade well, but also do well in sun.

Read more of our favorite types of lilies.

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Close-Up Of Flower Blooming Outdoors
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Brunnera

These distinctive shade-lovers do well beneath trees and in other fully shady spots.

Read more plants that are best beneath trees.

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brunnera leaves
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Bleeding Heart (Dicentra)

These shade-loving plants are true garden workhorses! They're beloved by pollinators, resistant to deer, with striking flowers, and it loves shade. What more could you ask!

Find more deer resistant plants.

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hummingbird feeding at bleeding heart bloom
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Corydalis

With bell-shaped flowers and ferny foliage, this genus has both sun and shade-loving varieties. There are some stunning blue varieties that will add startling color to your garden.

Corydalis pink spring flowers
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Lungwort (Pulmonaria)

With sweet tiny spring flowers, this deer-resistant perennial is great for ground cover in shady areas. It's also good for attracting pollinators!

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Varieties to try: Raspberry Splash, Sissinghurst White

Lungwort
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Digitalis (Foxglove)

Plant these distinctive bell-shaped flowers wherever you want hummingbirds to appear. They do like some sun, but are readily able to handle light shade.

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Find more plants that attract hummingbirds.

close up, macro image of the summer flowering purple foxglove flower also known as digitalis purpurea
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Trillium

Also known as wood lily, this shade-loving staple can be found in forests around the Southeast. The distinctive three-part leaf and three-part flower make them easy to spot! And they love shady areas.

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Close-up image of a single, white, spring flowering Trillium flower
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Jack-in-the-Pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum)

This native US plant, also called "bot onion" loves even very shady spots and wet areas. The distinctive flowers, which shade their stamens, are fun to see in the spring.

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jack in the pulpit
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Lily of the Valley

Another forest staple, these fast-spreading plants can become invasive, so are best in pots where they're not native. But they love shady areas, have gorgeous bell-shaped flowers, and a long history of symbolism!

Read more about the Lily of the Valley.

Lily of the valley
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