37 Perfect Plants For Your Pollinator Garden

Thinking of planting a pollinator garden but not sure where to start? There are quite a few pollinator-friendly plants that you can grow in just about every hardiness zone. In this article, gardening expert Liessa Bowen looks at her favorite plants you can use to create a beautiful pollinator-friendly garden!

pollinator plants

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Planting a pollinator garden may conjure up images of a cluster of multicolored blooms surrounded by delicately fluttering butterflies. This may be a moment in the life of a pollinator garden, but there’s a lot more than that.

Pollinators are most obvious when they are flittering, buzzing, and drifting from flower to flower on a warm sunny day. You can provide flowers to attract pollinators throughout the growing season, and you can provide much-needed habitat for the entire year.

In this article, we will look at what it takes to create a sustainable year-round pollinator garden. This includes learning a little about the pollinators that will come to visit, and what they need for their entire life cycle. We will also recommend specific pollinator-friendly plants that will really help make your pollinator garden come to life.

What Are Pollinators?

Basically, a pollinator is anything that helps transport pollen from one flower to another. This can include many types of insects: butterflies, moths, bees, beetles, flies, and wasps. Pollinators can also be other small animals, such as birds, bats, or rodents.

Pollinators are important in our ecosystem. Plant communities depend on pollinators to maintain genetic diversity for healthy plant populations. We all depend on plants for clean air, clean water, and the oxygen we breathe. Many plants rely on pollinators to produce seeds and fruits, which are then eaten by animals. Much of the food we eat depends on pollinators. Providing a patch of habitat that helps pollinators benefits everyone!

Pollinator Gardening Basics

Close-up of a honey bee, Apis mellifera, which collects nectar from the orange flowers of the Asclepias tuberosa weed butterfly. The coloration of the bee consists of a black background with yellow spots. The bee has two transparent wings and thin legs. The flower is bright orange in color with thin corrugated petals and long orange stamens. Blurred background of an orange-green flower field.
A pollinator garden is the creation of an insect habitat where plants can provide food, nectar, water, and even protection.

By creating a pollinator garden, you are creating wildlife habitat. Your pollinator garden can provide valuable sources of food, nectar, water, protection, and larval host plants. Many plants can provide for multiple pollinator needs, such as being a food source for both adult and larval insects, or providing both nectar for insects and seeds or fruit for birds.

A well-planned pollinator garden includes the following:

Food

Flowering plants provide nectar sources throughout the growing season. Host plants  provide food sources for larval stages of butterflies and moths. Don’t always deadhead your flowers. Many flower seed heads will continue to attract seed and fruit-eating birds

Water

Fountains, bird baths, and puddles all provide water sources for insects, birds, and other small wildlife.

Shelter and nesting sites

You can provide nesting sites for some species of bees that use hollow plant stems (for cavity nesting bees) and bare earth (for ground-nesting bees). You can provide shrubs for birds to use for nesting sites and as protected places to rest.

Many people are particularly interested in butterflies because the winged adults are such a beautiful sight in the garden. A compete butterfly habitat should provide for all stages of the butterfly life cycle: nectar plants for adults, larval food plants for caterpillars, and safe places for the changing pupae. In the chrysalis stages between caterpillar and adult, they need undisturbed areas, often resting in standing dead vegetation.

Many butterfly caterpillars feed exclusively on one or two species of plant. These plants are commonly referred to as larval host plants. There are several larval host plants in this list that provide both food for caterpillars as well as flowers that are attractive to multiple other pollinators.

Don’t use pesticides

It’s important to remember that many pollinators are insects, and other pollinators eat insects. Don’t use pesticides in your pollinator garden as this will kill your pollinators and potentially harm the wildlife that feeds on insects. If you have an infestation of unwanted insects, use a very targeted approach to removing them either by hand or using the safest products you can find.

Year Round Pollinator Garden

Pollinators don’t magically appear only when your favorite flowers bloom. You can attract pollinators to your garden throughout the year by providing a wide variety of plants. Choose plants that flower at different times to provide nectar sources from spring through fall.

To create a thriving pollinator garden that provides reliable blooms year after year, choose perennials that grow well in your climate zone. Consider also what your yard can provide in terms of moisture, sunlight, and soil type. Choose plants that will grow best in the conditions you have.

Grow Natives

If you want to garden with native plant species, you are supporting ecosystem restoration and providing native habitat. Native plants are more likely to be a food source for multiple species because these are the plants that are adapted to grow in your area and with your local naitive wildlife. Native plants also tend to be easier to control and less likely to have invasive growth habits.

Multiple Benefits

Pollinators aren’t the only ones to benefit from a pollinator garden. Many other animals may take advantage of this desirable habitat. People also benefit by enjoying the colorful garden activity and the simple pleasure of gardening to benefit our local wildlife.

Plants for Pollinators

Now that you understand the need for pollinators in your garden, let’s examine some of the best plants you can add to your garden to attract them. There are plenty of different options to choose from, no matter what hardiness zone you reside in. Let’s dig in and take a deeper look!

Anise Hyssop

Close-up of Anise Hyssop flowers that bloom in the summer garden. Tall buds with clusters of thorns and small purple flowers. The foliage is bright green, of the usual form with pointed edges. Blurred background of blooming Anise Hyssop.
Anise Hyssop has fragrant foliage and magnificent long buds with clusters of small purple flowers.
Scientific Name: Agastache foeniculum
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 2 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-8
  • Bloom Time: Summer to fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds
  • Larval host plant: No

This is a good low-maintenance plant for average soils. Anise Hyssop is a member of the mint family and has fragrant foliage. It will grow into clumps, with spikes of small purple flowers that are very attractive to a number of different pollinators. It can spread rapidly by self-seeding to be sure to keep an eye on it and remove extra plants that you won’t want.

Astilbe

Close-up of bright pink astilbe flowers blooming in a summer garden. Flowers consist of pinnate pink inflorescences. The foliage is dark green with pointed edges. Slightly blurred background.
Astilbe blooms with feathery pink inflorescences.
Scientific Name: Astilbe spp.
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: Asia, North America
  • Sun Exposure: Partial shade to shade
  • Plant Height: 1 to 2 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-8
  • Bloom Time: Late spring through early summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: No

Astilbe bursts into bloom early in the growing season with beautiful, feathery pink flowerheads. It prefers rich, moist soil, and does well with partial shade. It tends to stay fairly low and compact, but the foliage may die back by late summer if it gets too dry. This is a great perennial for a lush moist shade garden.

Basil

Close-up of a basil plant growing in a garden. The leaves are glossy, and bright green with matte veins. The flowers are small, white with white stamens. The sun illuminates the plant. The background is blurry.
Basil is an excellent plant as a pollinator in the garden, as its small white flowers attract pollinators.
Scientific Name: Ocimum basilicum
  • Plant Type: Annual herb
  • Geographic Origin: Tropical Asia
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 1.5 to 2 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 2-11
  • Bloom Time: Summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: No

Basil is a familiar culinary herb. It is equally at home when grown in a container, as a companion plant in the vegetable garden, or planted with a pollinator garden. It is easily grown from seed sown in the spring. Basil produces small white flowers throughout the summer which attract birds, bees, and butterflies.

Bee Balm

Close-up of a pink monarda flower with a bee. The flower is bright pink with thin thorn-like petals and a black center. The bee sits on the side of the flower. Foliage is bright green. Against the background are blurry blooming flowers of the monarda.
These are magnificent flowers with thin, thorn-like petals and a black center.
Scientific Name: Monarda fistulosa
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 2 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-9
  • Bloom Time: Mid to late summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and hummingbirds
  • Larval host plant: No

There are many cultivars of Monarda. Bee Balm, also known as Wild Bergamot, being native to North America. Scarlet Bee Balm (Monarda didyma) is another commonly grown species, with similar characteristics, but bright red in color. Bee Balm flowers are very attractive to hummingbirds.

Blazing Star

Close-up of five Liatris spicata flowers blooming in a summer garden. Its upright shoots produce spiky inflorescences of purple flowers. The leaves are thin, light green. The background is blurry.
Blazing Star produces tall spikes of purple flowers that attract many pollinators and birds to your garden.
Scientific Name: Liatris spicata
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 2 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-8
  • Bloom Time: mid to late summer into fall
  • Attracts: Bees, butterflies, birds, hummingbirds
  • Larval Host Plant: Yes. Flower Moths

The Blazing Star is an excellent flower for a pollinator garden. Tall spikes of bushy purple flowers are hard to miss and attract a wide variety of insects and birds.

This striking perennial prefers full sun and moist soils but will tolerate occasional drought. Blazing Star is also a frost-hardy perennial, and can tolerate colder temperatures in winter.

Blue Wild Indigo

Close-up of a Blue Wild Indigo flower and a nectar-eating bee. The flower consists of small rounded purple florets similar to peas. The body of the bee has a bright, striped yellow-black coloration and fluffy texture, as well as two small black translucent wings. Green foliage on a blurred background.
Blue Wild Indigo blooms in late spring with showy purple flowers resembling peas.
Scientific Name: Baptisia australis
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 3 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-9
  • Bloom Time: Late spring to early summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval Host Plant: Yes, for many different types of butterfies.

The Blue Wild Indigo (also called Blue False Indigo) is a large bushy plant that is the larval host plant for several species of butterfly. In late spring, it produces a cluster of showy purple pea-like flowers that attract a variety of pollinators.

Once established, this hardy legume can look like a small shrub. It is resistant to deer, rabbits, drought, and poor soil conditions.

Blue Vervain

Close-up of Verbena hastata which blooms in a summer flower garden against a blurred background of other perennials. Long, slender, branching inflorescences dotted with buds that open slowly from the base to small bright pink flowers throughout the summer. Blossoming small pale pink flowers have 5 thin petals and a dark pink center.
This plant is excellent for a pollinator garden as it attracts a variety of pollinators with its small clusters of purple flowers.
Scientific Name: Verbena hastata
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 2 to 6 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-8
  • Bloom Time: Summer through early fall
  • Attracts: Birds, butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Verbena Moth, Common Buckeye Butterfly

Blue Vervain is native to the eastern United States and is an excellent wildflower for a pollinator garden. Small spikes of purple flowers appear in summer and attract a variety of pollinators. After flowering, seed eating songbirds will visit to eat the seeds.

This plant can spread by underground rhizomes and by seed, so be sure to give it plenty of space. It can be controlled by regular pruning and thinning.

Borage

Close-up of a Borago officinalis flower and a bee hovering nearby. Blue flowers with five narrow, triangular, pointed petals and a dark purple center with a pointed end protruding outwards. The stems are bright pink and the leaves are bright green. Also, the stems and leaves are very fuzzy. The bee flies next to the flower. The body of the bee is fluffy, yellow-black striped, it also has two translucent wings. The background is green and blurred.
Borage produces attractive blue flowers with fuzzy leaves and stems.
Scientific Name: Borago officinalis
  • Plant Type: Annual herb
  • Geographic Origin: Mediterranean region
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 2 to 3 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 2-11
  • Bloom Time: Late spring to early summer
  • Attracts: Bees and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Painted Lady Butterfly

Borage is an attractive annual herb that grows readily from seed. It will self-seed freely if allowed. Borage has attractive purple flowers and very fuzzy leaves and stems. It is quick and easy to grow and makes an appealing garden addition that attracts a variety of pollinators.

Buttonbush

The leaves are oval or elliptical, with a short petiole, 7-18 cm long. The flowers are collected in a spherical inflorescence 2-3.5 cm in diameter, on a short peduncle. Corolla four-lobed, white or yellow. The gynoecium protrudes slightly from the corolla. The butterfly is dominated by an orange background color. Multifaceted black and white patterns cover all four wings. Antennae of medium length have club-shaped thickenings at the end. The background is green and blurry.
This large shrub has many fluffy, round, and fragrant flowers that attract pollinators.
Scientific Name: Cephalanthus occidentalis
  • Plant Type: Deciduous shrub
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 5 to 12 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-9
  • Bloom Time: Mid-summer
  • Attracts: Bees, butterflies, hummingbirds
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Titan Sphinx Moth, Hydrangea Sphinx Moth, Royal Walnut Moth

Buttonbush is a large bushy shrub. It loves moist soils and does well in both full sun and partial shade. In mid-summer, a multitude of fluffy-looking, round, sweet-scented blooms appear. The flowers are very attractive to a variety of pollinators.

In the fall, this shrub ends its growing season covered with beautiful red foliage. If you have a large moist area that needs vegetation, consider planting a Buttonbush. 

Coral Honeysuckle

Close-up of about seven red flowers of Lonicera sempervirens against a blurred background of green foliage. The flowers are thin red and tubular with thin, long bright yellow stamens protruding from the flower.
Coral Honeysuckle blooms with incredibly beautiful thin red tubular flowers that attract hummingbirds.
Scientific Name: Lonicera sempervirens
  • Plant Type: Vine
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 8 to 15 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-9
  • Bloom Time: Late spring to early summer
  • Attracts: Hummingbirds, birds, butterflies, bees
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Spring Azure, Snowberry Clearwing Moth

Also called Trumpet Honeysuckle, this attractive native vine sports a multitude of slender red trumpet-like flowers. Hummingbirds love them.

Because it is a vigorously growing vine that gets rather long, it is an excellent plant to grow on a large trellis or along a fence. It is tolerant of a variety of soils, but prefers a rich moist soil.

Cosmos

Close-up of blooming Cosmos flowers in a summer garden. The stems are vertical, strongly branched, thin and flexible. Bright purple and pink flowers, similar to daisies, collected in loose inflorescences with a golden center. The background is blurry.
This incredibly delicate annual blooms from spring to autumn with attractive flowers.
Scientific Name: Cosmos spp.
  • Plant Type: Annual
  • Geographic Origin: Central and South America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 1 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 2-11
  • Bloom Time: Late spring through fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees
  • Larval host plant: No.

If you need a quick, easy-to-grow, space-filler annual for your butterfly garden, Cosmos flowers are a great choice. They can bloom from spring through fall, and in ideal conditions, will reseed themselves. Their bright, colorful flowers attract many bees and butterflies.

Dill

Close-up of a dill flower growing on a vegetable bed. Wide umbels of tiny yellow flowers are held on thin green stems emanating from the main stem. A small brown bug sits on one of the dill flower umbels. The background is green and blurred.
This fragrant herb makes a great addition to your pollinator garden as it blooms in wide umbels of tiny flowers.
Scientific Name: Anethum graveolens
  • Plant Type: Annual herb
  • Geographic Origin: Northern Africa, Arabian Peninsula
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 3 to 5 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 2-11
  • Bloom Time: Summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Black Swallowtail

Dill is a familiar and very aromatic herb. It can be grown in an herb garden, vegetable garden, flower garden, pollinator garden, or in a container. Broad umbels of tiny flowers mingle with delicate frilly foliage, adding their unique texture to any gardening arrangement. It is a larval host plant for the Black Swallowtail Butterfly and many pollinators visit the flowers for nectar.

Dogwood

Close-up of a flowering branch of a Dogwood tree. Many bright pink flowers with green foliage grow on a branch. The flowers have 4 thin petals, which are slightly twisted at the edges. The petals are bright pink, but closer to the center they turn white and turn into a golden center. The background is slightly blurred, with green grass in the garden.
This flowering tree produces flowers that attract spring pollinators to your garden.
Scientific Name: Cornus florida
  • Plant Type: Small tree
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 15 to 30 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-9
  • Bloom Time: Spring
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and birds
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Spring Azure Butterfly

There are a few small trees that add to a pollinator-friendly landscape butterfly host plants. The Flowering Dogwood is one of these. It is a familiar spring-blooming flowering tree whose flowers attract springtime pollinators. In the fall, fruit-eating birds eat the small red fruits.

Other well-known small trees that are caterpillar host plants include the Pawpaw, Redbud, and Wax Myrtle. If you have space for a small tree in your landscape, consider adding one of these beautiful trees with wildlife appeal.

Fennel

Close-up of a fennel flower with a bee. Wide umbels, which consist of small yellow flowers, are held on thin green stems that emanate from the main stem. A dark brown bee with black stripes sits on one of the inflorescences. Blurred background with blooming fennels in the garden.
Fennel produces feathery leaves and clusters of tiny yellow flowers that attract pollinators.
Scientific Name: Foeniculum vulgare
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: Mediterranean region
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 3 to 5 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-9
  • Bloom Time: Summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Black Swallowtail

Fennel is an aromatic herb at home in both a traditional garden setting and as part of a pollinator garden. It has fine feathery foliage and clusters of tiny yellow flowers that attract large numbers of pollinators. Fennel is a low maintenance plant that will freely reseed itself.

Foxglove

Close-up of purple foxglove flowers on a blurred green background. The bright purple tubular flowers have many dark purple freckles inside. Against the background are many flowering foxgloves in the summer garden.
Foxglove is a perennial plant that produces magnificent tubular flowers in a variety of colors that attract hummingbirds and bees.
Scientific Name: Digitalis purpurea
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: Europe
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 2 to 5 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-8
  • Bloom Time: Late spring to early summer
  • Attracts: Hummingbirds, bees
  • Larval host plant: No

There are many varieties of foxglove, blooming in shades of pink, purple, and white, but all have long tubular flowers that attract hummingbirds and bees.

Foxglove is a biennial, or short-lived perennial, but will reseed itself and come back year after year. These plants prefer moist soil and a bit of afternoon shade. The Foxglove Beardtongue (Penstemon digitalis) is native to the United States and has white flowers.

Hibiscus, Rose Mallow

Close-up of a large pink Hibiscus Rose Mallow flower. The flower consists of five bright pink large petals turning into a dark pink in the middle. A white long stamen with pollen is inside the flower. Blurred green background.
Hibiscus prefers to grow in moist soil and produces large flowers that attract pollinators.
Scientific Name: Hibiscus grandiflorus
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: United States
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 3 to 7 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-9
  • Bloom Time: Summer to fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Gray Hairstreak Butterfly, Painted Lady Butterfly

There are many different types of hibiscus, and most are quite attractive to pollinators. The Rose Mallow (H. grandiflorus) is native to the southeastern United States and thrives in moist soil.

Flowers are large and quite showy and attract many pollinators. This is a rather large plant that would do well near the edge of a pond or stream, or as a larger plant for a border or landscaping edge.

Joe Pye Weed

Close-up of a flowering Joe Pye Weed plant. On a tall stem, covered with small foliage, a large brush was formed from many purple flowers. Blurred green background with blooming Joe Pye Weed plants.
This plant blooms in late summer with large clusters of purple flowers.
Scientific Name: Eupatorium purpureum
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 4 to 7 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-9
  • Bloom Time: Summer through fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Pearl Crescent Butterfly

Joe Pye Weed is a flowering giant. By mid to late summer, the tall leafy stalks produce large clusters of purple flowers that are a magnet for a variety of pollinators. Joe Pye Weed prefers full sun and moist soil. If you need a tall accent plant, Joe Pye Weed would make a great choice.

Lavender

A close-up of lavender flowers blooming in a field, with an incredibly beautiful butterfly on one of the flowers. Softly pubescent blue-lilac flowers, collected in interrupted spike-shaped inflorescences of 6-10 pieces in whorls. Butterfly wings are orange with random black patterns all around. Slightly blurred background of a blooming lavender field.
These incredibly fragrant flowers attract a lot of pollinators to your garden while also giving it an extraordinary purple color.
Scientific Name: Lavandula angustifolia
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: Europe
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 2 to 3 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-8
  • Bloom Time: Summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: No

Lavender is a very aromatic perennial herb that attracts many pollinators. It can be grown in a container or  incorporated into an herb garden, flower garden, or pollinator garden. Spikes of small purple flowers bloom during summer months, and in warmer climates, the foliage may stay green throughout the year.

Lobelia “Great Blue”

Close-up of a Lobelia siphilitica flower. The flowers are small, up to 2 cm in diameter, two-lipped, purple-blue. The leaves are bright green, large. Blurred green background.
This flower produces showy blue flowers in summer and prefers rich, moist soil.
Scientific Name: Lobelia siphilitica
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 2 to 3 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-9
  • Bloom Time: Mid-summer to fall
  • Attracts: Bees, butterflies, hummingbirds
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Pink-washed Looper Moth

The Great Blue Lobelia is a native wildflower that occurs naturally in areas with rich, moist soil. It does not like dry soil. This would be a great low-maintenance plant for a moist partially-shaded wooded edge.

Spikes of showy blue flowers bloom during the summer. A related plant, Cardinal Flower (Lobelia cardinalis), has similar qualities and habitat requirements. Cardinal Flower also blooms in midsummer with tall spikes of brilliant red flowers.

Lupine

Close-up of pink lupine flowers, in full bloom, and green grass in a sunny spring garden. Inflorescences at the top of the racemose form, consist of many pale pink flowers and are placed in whorls. The leaves have a complex shape and are connected to the shoot with a leaf cushion.
These showy flowers prefer cooler climates and well-drained, rich soil.
Scientific Name: Lupinus spp
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 3 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-8
  • Bloom Time: Late spring through summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Karner Blue Butterfly, Frosted Elfin Butterfly

Lupines come in a variety of bright, showy flower colors and can be grown easily from seed as annuals or short-lived perennials. Once established, these plants can grow vigorously for a few years, but often die back.

They will, however, reseed themselves if allowed. They prefer cooler climates with well-drained, rich, moist soil with full sun, but also do well with partial shade.

Milkweed

A close-up of a bright orange Milkweed flower. Multi-flowered umbels of small orange flowers. Bright green oblong foliage along the stem. Slightly blurred background.
Milkweed is an incredibly colorful plant that is used by monarch butterfly caterpillars as a host plant.
Scientific Name: Asclepias tuberosa
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 1 to 2 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-9
  • Bloom Time: Summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, Bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Monarch Butterfly

If there’s one plant that every pollinator garden should have, it’s Milkweed. There are several species of native Milkweeds available, all are attractive to pollinators, and they all grow readily from seed.

The different milkweed varieties may have different leaf shapes and different flower colors, but they are all enjoyed as a larval host plant by the Monarch Butterfly caterpillar.

Mountain Mint

Close-up of a mountain mint bush. Upright, branched, herbaceous perennial plant, 50-80 cm high, with narrow, lanceolate leaves. Inflorescence corymb, with densely planted small white flowers. Some of the buds are green because they haven't bloomed yet. Slightly blurred green background.
It has mint-scented leaves and clusters of small flowers that attract pollinators.
Scientific Name: Pycnanthemum spp
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 1 to 3 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-8
  • Bloom Time: Summer through fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: No

The Mountain Mints are a group of plants with very minty-scented leaves and clusters of small inconspicuous flowers that attract a multitude of pollinators. Mountain Mint tends to form a clump and, like many other varieties of mint, may spread quickly.

Growth and spreading can be controlled by regular pruning or by growing in containers. They grow best in moist to dry, well-drained soil, and full sun.

Narrow Leaf Sunflower

Close-up of blooming Helianthus angustifolius flowers. Bright yellow small flowers, similar to small sunflowers, with a black center. The petals are thin and long. Blurred yellow background.
Narrow Leaf Sunflower blooms with cheerful yellow flowers in mid to late summer.
Scientific Name: Helianthus angustifolius
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 5 to 8 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-9
  • Bloom Time: Summer to fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, birds, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Silvery Checkerspot Butterfly

These are tall plants with an abundance of cheerful yellow mid to late summer blooms. The Narrow Leaf Sunflower makes a wonderful accent plant for a pollinator garden. There are other species of Helianthus that also do well in a pollinator-friendly garden.

Each has its own characteristics and environmental adaptations, so if you want a Sunflower, choose whichever Helianthus best suits your specific needs and conditions.

Nasturtium

Close-up of a bright red Nasturtium flower against a background of green foliage. The orange-red nasturtium flower consists of five velvety petals, a corolla, and a brightly colored calyx. This cup of nasturtium looks like a long spur, resembling a hood. The leaves are shield-shaped, with white veins running from the center, like small umbrellas.
Nasturtiums are a great addition to a pollinator garden, as they produce vibrant orange and yellow flowers that attract many pollinators.
Scientific Name: Tropaeolum spp
  • Plant Type: Annual
  • Geographic Origin: Central and South America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 1 to 2 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 2-11
  • Bloom Time: Late spring through fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Great Southern White Butterfly

Nasturtiums grow readily from seed and will self-seed if allowed. Most Nasturtiums are smallish, clumping annuals, but there are varieties of climbing Nasturtium that can grow to 10 feet tall.

These plants fit nicely in an herb garden, annual flower garden, or to fill in open spots in a pollinator garden. The cheerful orange and yellow flowers attract an assortment of pollinators.

New England Aster

Close-up of a New England aster blooming in a garden. The small flower baskets of the New England bush aster form paniculate racemes with short brown-gold stamens. The reed petals of the flower are purplish or magenta. A large and beautiful butterfly sits on a flower. His wings are orange in color with random black patterns all over.
New England Aster blooms in autumn with delightful purple flowers with brown-yellow centers.
Scientific Name: Symphyotrichum novae-angliae
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 3 to 6 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-8
  • Bloom Time: Late summer through fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Pearl Crescent Butterfly

An established patch of New England Aster makes a stunning fall flower display. Because these plants start blooming when other summer flowers are starting to fade, Asters provide a much-needed nectar source from late summer until frost. Be sure to give these native plants plenty of space, as they can grow into robust clusters.

New Jersey Tea

Close-up of Ceanothus jersey tea blooming with white small flowers in a summer garden. Blooming white flowers are collected in lumpy inflorescences, which are held on thin red stems. The leaves are bright green. Slightly blurred background of a summer garden.
New Jersey Tea produces clusters of small fragrant white flowers.
Scientific Name: Ceanothus americanus
  • Plant Type: Deciduous shrub
  • Geographic Origin: North American
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 3 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-8
  • Bloom Time: Late spring to early summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Mottled Duskywing Butterfly, Spring Azure Butterfly, Summer Azure Butterfly

In the spring, New Jersey Tea blossoms with clusters of small, fragrant, white flowers. This is an attractive native shrub that grows nicely in a home landscape. It grows well in average, well-drained soils. It develops a deep root system which, once established, helps it tolerate dry conditions.

Panic Grass

Close-up of a Panicum virgatum bush. Broad, upright shrub with green, showy foliage. Round burgundy seeds on thin green stems. Blurred grass field background.
This ornamental grass forms interesting stands in your garden and is also a host plant for several species of butterflies.
Scientific Name: Panicum virgatum
  • Plant Type: Ornamental grass
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 4 to 6 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-9
  • Bloom Time: Late summer through fall
  • Attracts: Birds, butterflies
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Common Wood Nymph Butterfly, various Skipper Butterflies

If you have a large area and would like to feature a large native ornamental grass, Panic Grass is a good option. This plant forms clumps that make an interesting and varied addition to a traditional flower garden.

It can be planted along edges and borders, or in a wide open area as an accent plant. Panic Grass is the host plant for several species of butterflies, and birds will forage for the seeds throughout the fall and winter months.

Parsley

Close-up of white-yellow parsley inflorescences in the garden. The inflorescences are collected in small umbrellas, from which thin green stems emanate to the main stem of the plant. The background is blurry green.
Inflorescences of tiny parsley flowers attract many pollinators.
Scientific Name: Petroselinum crispum
  • Plant Type: Annual herb
  • Geographic Origin: Greece, Yugoslavia
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 0.75 to 2 foot
  • USDA Plant Zone: 2-11
  • Bloom Time: Spring to summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Black Swallowtail Butterfly, Anise Swallowtail Butterfly

Parsley is at home grown in a container, in the herb garden, and as part of a pollinator garden. Don’t worry if you see green, yellow, and black-striped caterpillars munching on your parsley leaves; these will turn into the beautiful Black Swallowtail butterfly. The clusters of tiny flowers attract many different insect pollinators.

Passionflower

Close-up of a Passiflora flower blooming in a summer garden. The flower is unusual, large, has about 8 oblong white lanceolate petals, a crown of blue-lilac threads that turn purple towards the center and touch the yellow center, 5 stamens ending in orange anthers facing down. Slightly blurred background with green foliage and blooming Passionflower flowers.
This delightful vine produces unusual purple flowers that are a host plant for butterflies.
Scientific Name: Passiflora incarnata
  • Plant Type: Vine
  • Geographic Origin: United States
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 6 to 8 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-9
  • Bloom Time: Summer to early fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Many different types of butterflies

Passionflower is a native vine with beautiful and unusual purple flowers. This plant can grow along the ground as a ground cover, or it can be grown on a trellis, wall, or fence.

Passionflowers produce flowers that are fragrant and attractive to a variety of pollinators, plus they are a butterfly host plant. Passionflower can, however, grow rather vigorously, so be sure to allow it plenty of space and remove any unwanted new sprouts.

Phlox

Close-up of blooming Phlox paniculata in a summer garden. Phlox flowers are tubular-funnel-shaped, five-petalled, from 2 to 5 cm in diameter, fragrant. The flower is pale pink with a dark pink dot in the center. Blurred green background.
Phlox prefers to grow in a shady spot and in moist, well-drained soil.
Scientific Name: Phlox paniculata
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 2 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-8
  • Bloom Time: Early summer to fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: No

While there are many cultivars of Phlox available, the Garden Phlox (Phlox paniculata) is native to the United States. Clusters of 5-petaled purple flowers appear in early summer and may last into early fall. This is a good flower to grow in a partially shaded spot with rich, moist, well-drained soil. This easy-to care for perennial makes an excellent ground cover.

Pipevine

Close-up of an Aristolochia tomentosa flower. The flower is solitary, greenish-yellow, tubular on a long pedicel, with a wrinkled, three-lobed, yellow limb. The background is green, slightly blurred with branches and green foliage of the creeper.
The pipevine is a woody vine that prefers full sun and is a host plant for the Pipevine Swallowtail butterfly.
Scientific Name: Aristolochia tomentosa
  • Plant Type: Woody vine
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 20 to 30 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 5-8
  • Bloom Time: Summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Pipevine Swallowtail Butterfly

Pipevine, or Dutchman’s Pipe, is a woody vine that can grow quite large. It prefers moist soils and full sun. Because of it’s large size and persistent growth habit, it should be planted in an area where it can have plenty of space.

It’s a great plant for a pollinator garden because it is the host plant for the Pipevine Swallowtail butterfly, whose caterpillars enjoy munching the leaves. It has unique but rather inconspicuous flowers that somewhat resemble little yellow pipes.

Purple Coneflower

Close-up of blooming flowers of Echinacea purpurea. The flowers are large, and purple, consisting of red-brown central tubular flowers and marginal reed flowers of pink-purple color. The foliage is pale green. A beautiful butterfly sits on one of the flowers. The butterfly is black with orange and white chaotic patterns on the wings.
These hardy perennials make a great addition to your pollinator garden with their incredibly bright and attractive purple flowers.
Scientific Name: Echinacea purpurea
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 2.5 to 3 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-8
  • Bloom Time: Summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, birds, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Silvery Checkerspot Butterfly, Wavy-lined Emerald Moth

Purple Coneflowers are an easy-to-grow native wildflower. They support not only insect pollinators but seed-eating songbirds, particularly the American Goldfinch, that loves to eat the dried seeds. Coneflowers do well in a sunny spot with average well-drained soil. These low-maintenance perennials are sure to please with their large purple flowers.

Spicebush

Close-up of a flowering Spicebush branch against the background of other branches and a blue sky. The yellow flowers grow in showy clusters with 6 sepals. Blurred background.
The Spicebush blooms with small fragrant yellow flowers until the leaves appear.
Scientific Name: Lindera benzoin
  • Plant Type: Deciduous shrub
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Part shade
  • Plant Height: 6 to 12 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 4-9
  • Bloom Time: Early spring
  • Attracts: Butterflies and other pollinators, birds
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Spicebush Swallowtail Butterfly, Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly

In early spring, before leaves appear, small, fragrant, yellow flowers adorn the stems of the Spicebush shrub. These spring flowers attract the earliest pollinators. Later in the season, two species of Swallowtail Butterfly can be seen eating the spicy-smelling leaves.

In fall, the female plants produce small red berries which are eaten by fruit-eating birds. Spicebush is a plant that is “dioecious” which means male and female flowers are formed on different plants, and must be cross-pollinated in order to set fruit. These plants grow well in a moist shaded woodland garden.

Stokes’ Aster

Close-up of a honey bee sitting on a purple Stokesia laevis flower. Inflorescence - a single basket, purple-blue, that has a wrapper of several rows consisting of thin ruffled reed petals. In the center, the petals are short and white. The body of the bee has an orange-black striped color. Blurred green background.
Stokes’ Aster blooms with showy purple flowers in spring that attract many pollinating insects to your garden.
Scientific Name: Stokesia laevis
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 1 to 2 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone:
  • Bloom Time: Late spring through summer
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Pearl Crescent Butterfly, Checkerspot Butterfly

Native to the southeastern United States, the Stokes’ Aster is a beautiful addition to a pollinator garden. Showy purple flowers appear from spring to early summer and attract a variety of pollinators. This plant prefers moist, well-drained soils, but will also do well with dryer soil conditions.

Violets

Close-up of a pale purple violet flower blooming in a garden. Thin petals with dark purple prominent veins. Slightly blurred green grass in the background.
These small purple flowers are a host plant for both large and small grouse butterflies.
Scientific Name: Viola spp
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun to part shade
  • Plant Height: 6”
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-9
  • Bloom Time: Spring
  • Attracts: Fritillary butterflies as larval host plant
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Greater Fritillary Butterfly, Lesser Fritillary Butterfly

If you have violets in your yard and you think they’re a nuisance, think again. Keeping a small patch of violets in the corner of your yard can be a plus for your pollinator garden.

While they may not attract many adult pollinators, Violets are the host plant for both Greater and Lesser Fritillary butterflies. Violet flowers come in purple, yellow, white, and multicolor birdfoot varieties.

Yarrow

Close-up of a honey bee on white Yarrow flowers. The flowers are small, snow-white with a yellow center, collected in small inflorescences. The bee has a brown-black striped color. Blurred green background.
Yarrow prefers to grow in full sun and can grow well in poor soils.
Scientific Name: Achillea millefolium
  • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
  • Geographic Origin: Europe, Asia, North America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height: 2 to 3 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 3-9
  • Bloom Time: Late spring to early fall
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
  • Larval host plant: Yes. Painted Lady Butterfly

Native varieties of Yarrow tend to have white blooms, but cultivars can be found with flower colors in white, yellow, and many shades of pink. Yarrow has frilly fern-like leaves that make a nice garden accent, even when not blooming.

It grows quite well in full sun and poor soil.  Yarrow has a tendency to spread rapidly by both self-seeding and underground rhizomes, but can be controlled by regular pruning and thinning.

Zinnia

Close-up of a butterfly that feeds on a zinnia flower. The flower of zinnia is bright pink, with simple petals. Bright red center with bright yellow stamens along the contour. The butterfly has an unusual coloring of chaotic patterns of black, white and brown. Blurred green background.
Zinnias have nectar and seeds that attract many pollinators to your garden.
Scientific Name: Zinnia spp
  • Plant Type: Annual
  • Geographic Origin: North and South America
  • Sun Exposure: Full sun
  • Plant Height:  0.5 to 4 feet
  • USDA Plant Zone: 2-11
  • Bloom Time: Early summer through frost
  • Attracts: Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, and songbirds
  • Larval host plant: No

Zinnias are extremely diverse flowering plants. They can be short or tall, large-flowered or miniature-flowered, and have a vast array of flower colors. A patch of Zinnias in a pollinator garden will almost always have insects and birds visiting to enjoy the nectar and seeds.

Final Thoughts

Whether your yard is large or small, you can make room for pollinator-friendly plants. There are so many options to choose from, including annuals, perennials, native species, herbs, grasses, vines, shrubs, and trees. If you have the space, plant a variety of flowering plants that will bloom throughout the growing season to provide a constant supply of nectar.

Be sure to consider the entire life cycle of pollinators. The adults need flowers to feed on, butterfly and moth larvae need host plants to nourish their caterpillars, and insects need safe havens to overwinter. Avoid using insecticides in your pollinator-friendly landscape. Most of all, have fun creating your own pollinator-friendly habitat!

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