US Garden Design Guides

US garden design guides by state

Every US state has its own climate quirks β€” Texas gardens cope with 100Β°F summers AND surprise hard freezes; Florida gardens with hurricanes and sandy soil; Alaska gardens with a 100-day frost-free window and 18-hour midsummer daylight. Pick your state below for a curated plant list, native species, frost dates, and a free 3D designer filtered to your USDA zone.

These guides complement the broader USDA climate-zone overview β€” start with your state for region-specific practical advice, then drill into the zone page for a deeper plant database.

Alabama

AL

USDA zones 7b-9a

Alabama gardens enjoy one of the South's longest warm seasons with both Appalachian foothills and Gulf Coast climates inside one state.

See the Alabama guide β†’

Alaska

AK

USDA zones 1a-8b

Long summer daylight produces Alaska's famous giant cabbages and 50-lb pumpkins despite a season barely 100 days long.

See the Alaska guide β†’

Arizona

AZ

USDA zones 4b-10b

Arizona's gardening calendar inverts the rest of the country β€” the prime season runs October to April when it's cool enough to be outdoors.

See the Arizona guide β†’

Arkansas

AR

USDA zones 6b-8a

Arkansas straddles three regions β€” Ozark uplands, Delta flatland, and southern pine belt β€” each with its own garden palette inside a single state.

See the Arkansas guide β†’

California

CA

USDA zones 5a-10b

California's Mediterranean climate is one of only five worldwide and produces a year-round gardening season unmatched by any other state.

See the California guide β†’

Colorado

CO

USDA zones 3a-7a

Colorado gardens contend with thinner air and harsher UV than any other state, rewarding plants tough enough for the Rockies' boom-or-bust weather.

See the Colorado guide β†’

Connecticut

CT

USDA zones 5b-7b

Mountain laurel β€” Connecticut's state flower β€” anchors a New England woodland palette that few other states can grow as easily.

See the Connecticut guide β†’

Delaware

DE

USDA zones 7a-7b

Delaware's flat coastal plain and long warm season make it one of the easiest Mid-Atlantic states for vegetable gardening β€” Sussex County leads the nation in lima bean production.

See the Delaware guide β†’

District of Columbia

DC

USDA zones 7b-8a

DC's famous tidal-basin cherry blossoms set the gardening calendar β€” a zone-7b city that gardens like the upper South thanks to its urban heat island.

See the District of Columbia guide β†’

Florida

FL

USDA zones 8b-11a

Florida's winter is its prime vegetable season β€” tomatoes, peppers, and lettuce thrive from October to May while the rest of the country is frozen.

See the Florida guide β†’

Georgia

GA

USDA zones 6b-9a

Georgia's red-clay Piedmont is the gardening identity of the state β€” once amended properly, the same clay grows the South's best azaleas and peaches.

See the Georgia guide β†’

Hawaii

HI

USDA zones 9a-13a

Hawaii is the only state where tropical fruit, coffee, and orchids grow outdoors year-round β€” and where you can drive from rainforest to alpine desert in 90 minutes.

See the Hawaii guide β†’

Idaho

ID

USDA zones 3a-7a

Idaho's volcanic loess soils are the reason the state grows ~30% of US potatoes β€” uniquely deep, drainable, and mineral-rich.

See the Idaho guide β†’

Illinois

IL

USDA zones 5a-7a

Illinois sits on the eastern tallgrass prairie β€” its native plant palette is the model for prairie-style ornamental gardens worldwide.

See the Illinois guide β†’

Indiana

IN

USDA zones 5b-6b

Indiana straddles the prairie-to-eastern-deciduous transition zone, supporting both Midwestern prairie plants and Appalachian woodland species in the same yard.

See the Indiana guide β†’

Iowa

IA

USDA zones 4b-5b

Iowa's mollisol prairie soils need almost no amendment β€” drop a seed in the ground and it grows, which is why corn is king.

See the Iowa guide β†’

Kansas

KS

USDA zones 5b-7a

Kansas straddles the boundary between humid eastern tallgrass prairie and arid western shortgrass prairie β€” your county determines which palette works.

See the Kansas guide β†’

Kentucky

KY

USDA zones 6a-7b

Kentucky's limestone bedrock gives the Bluegrass region uniquely calcium-rich soils β€” the same reason the horses (and the bourbon corn) are world-famous.

See the Kentucky guide β†’

Louisiana

LA

USDA zones 8b-10a

Louisiana's subtropical climate and live-oak-and-Spanish-moss aesthetic produce a uniquely Southern garden palette found almost nowhere else in the country.

See the Louisiana guide β†’

Maine

ME

USDA zones 3b-6a

Maine's wild lowbush blueberry barrens are unique in North America β€” and the same acidic glacial soils make rhododendrons and azaleas exceptional here.

See the Maine guide β†’

Maryland

MD

USDA zones 5b-8a

Maryland packs Appalachian highlands, Piedmont, and tidewater Eastern Shore into one small state β€” three garden palettes within a 3-hour drive.

See the Maryland guide β†’

Massachusetts

MA

USDA zones 5b-7a

Massachusetts' acidic cranberry bogs and Cape Cod sand make it the country's #2 cranberry producer β€” and create unbeatable conditions for blueberries and rhododendrons.

See the Massachusetts guide β†’

Michigan

MI

USDA zones 4a-6b

Michigan's Lake Michigan fruit belt is the country's leading producer of tart cherries β€” a microclimate found nowhere else in the Midwest.

See the Michigan guide β†’

Minnesota

MN

USDA zones 3a-5a

Minnesota's University of Minnesota breeding program developed Honeycrisp, Zestar, and SnowSweet apples β€” proof that cold-climate fruit can be world-class.

See the Minnesota guide β†’

Mississippi

MS

USDA zones 7b-9a

Mississippi's combination of Delta black soil and a 250+ day growing season makes it one of the most productive vegetable-garden states in the country.

See the Mississippi guide β†’

Missouri

MO

USDA zones 5b-7a

Missouri sits at the crossroads of prairie, Ozark uplands, and Mississippi alluvial valley β€” gardeners can pull from three distinct native palettes.

See the Missouri guide β†’

Montana

MT

USDA zones 3a-6a

Montana's mountain-valley microclimates (the Bitterroot, Flathead, Gallatin) sustain orchards and gardens that would be impossible 100 miles east on the plains.

See the Montana guide β†’

Nebraska

NE

USDA zones 4b-6a

Nebraska's Sandhills β€” 19,000 sq mi of grass-stabilized sand dunes β€” are the largest such ecosystem in the Western Hemisphere, with a unique native palette.

See the Nebraska guide β†’

Nevada

NV

USDA zones 4a-10a

Nevada is America's driest state β€” and its native sagebrush-step palette is both extraordinarily water-thrifty and beautiful when designed intentionally.

See the Nevada guide β†’

New Hampshire

NH

USDA zones 3b-6a

New Hampshire's combination of granite bedrock and acidic forest soils produces world-class fall foliage β€” and exceptional conditions for blueberries and mountain laurel.

See the New Hampshire guide β†’

New Jersey

NJ

USDA zones 6a-7b

New Jersey's nickname is earned β€” the Inner Coastal Plain grows the country's best tomatoes thanks to a unique mix of sandy loam, ocean moderation, and 200+ day seasons.

See the New Jersey guide β†’

New Mexico

NM

USDA zones 4b-9a

New Mexico chile is a protected cultural and agricultural icon β€” and the state's high-desert palette of Apache plume, chamisa, and pinyon offers a uniquely Southwestern garden vocabulary.

See the New Mexico guide β†’

New York

NY

USDA zones 3b-7b

New York packs Adirondack alpine, Finger Lakes wine country, Catskill foothills, Hudson Valley, and NYC urban heat-island gardens into one state.

See the New York guide β†’

North Carolina

NC

USDA zones 5b-8b

North Carolina contains three sharply different ecoregions β€” Blue Ridge, Piedmont, Coastal Plain β€” meaning the plant list 4 hours west is unrecognizable to a Coastal Plain gardener.

See the North Carolina guide β†’

North Dakota

ND

USDA zones 3a-4b

North Dakota's Red River Valley is so flat and so fertile it grows ~70% of US sugar beets and is one of the world's premier durum wheat regions.

See the North Dakota guide β†’

Ohio

OH

USDA zones 5b-6b

Ohio sits at the prairie-deciduous transition β€” its native palette mixes oak-hickory forest plants with eastern tallgrass prairie species in the same yard.

See the Ohio guide β†’

Oklahoma

OK

USDA zones 6a-8a

Oklahoma's eastern redbud blooming in late March is the unofficial start of the state's gardening season β€” and the red Permian Bed clay is part of the state's gardening identity.

See the Oklahoma guide β†’

Oregon

OR

USDA zones 4b-9a

Oregon's Willamette Valley climate β€” mild winters, dry summers, rich volcanic soil β€” is one of the world's premier wine grape and hazelnut regions.

See the Oregon guide β†’

Pennsylvania

PA

USDA zones 5b-7b

Pennsylvania's Lancaster County limestone soils support Plain Sect farming communities that have produced the country's most productive non-irrigated farmland for over 200 years.

See the Pennsylvania guide β†’

Rhode Island

RI

USDA zones 6b-7a

Rhode Island's small size and 400 miles of coastline mean almost every garden is influenced by the Atlantic β€” perfect for seaside-cottage planting palettes.

See the Rhode Island guide β†’

South Carolina

SC

USDA zones 7a-9a

Charleston's Lowcountry is one of the country's oldest continuously gardened landscapes β€” its live-oak-and-azalea palette dates back over 300 years.

See the South Carolina guide β†’

South Dakota

SD

USDA zones 3b-5a

South Dakota's Black Hills create a 7,000-foot island of cooler, wetter forest in a sea of dry prairie β€” and a unique gardening microclimate.

See the South Dakota guide β†’

Tennessee

TN

USDA zones 5b-8a

Tennessee's east-to-west elevation drop of 6,000 feet packs in Appalachian forest, Cumberland Plateau, Nashville Basin, and Mississippi Delta β€” four distinct garden regions.

See the Tennessee guide β†’

Texas

TX

USDA zones 6b-10a

Texas is so large and diverse that no single 'Texas garden' exists β€” Houston grows tropicals, Lubbock grows cold-hardy natives, and El Paso gardens like Phoenix.

See the Texas guide β†’

Utah

UT

USDA zones 4a-9a

Utah's Wasatch Front grows the country's most famous freestone peaches thanks to the lake-effect microclimate of the former Lake Bonneville lakebed.

See the Utah guide β†’

Vermont

VT

USDA zones 3b-5b

Vermont's sugar maples produce more maple syrup than any other state β€” and the same cool, wet conditions make it North America's premier apple-cider region.

See the Vermont guide β†’

Virginia

VA

USDA zones 5b-8a

Virginia is widely considered the birthplace of American horticulture β€” Monticello's gardens and the Tidewater plantations established many of the South's enduring planting traditions.

See the Virginia guide β†’

Washington

WA

USDA zones 4a-9a

Washington grows ~60% of all US apples β€” the rain-shadowed Columbia Basin combines hot dry days with cool nights and irrigation from the Columbia for unmatched fruit conditions.

See the Washington guide β†’

West Virginia

WV

USDA zones 5b-7a

West Virginia is the most mountainous state east of the Rockies β€” its hollows and ridges create dozens of microclimates within a single county.

See the West Virginia guide β†’

Wisconsin

WI

USDA zones 3b-5b

Wisconsin is the country's #1 cranberry producer β€” the same acidic sandy bogs also produce exceptional blueberries and rhododendrons in unexpected pockets.

See the Wisconsin guide β†’

Wyoming

WY

USDA zones 3a-6a

Wyoming is the windiest state in the lower 48 β€” successful gardens here are built around windbreaks first, plants second.

See the Wyoming guide β†’

Not sure where to start?

Open the free 3D garden designer β€” pick plants filtered by your state and USDA zone, then see them rendered to scale before you buy a single one.

Try the free 3D garden designer