This Front Yard Flower Garden Plan is designed to bring instant charm—and long-term curb appeal—to smaller landscapes. This design features a 3‑foot‑deep border along the house, blending flowering shrubs, hardy, reliable perennials, and cheerful bulbs for season‑long color. With a path leading to your door and shrubs near the curb to frame the view, this design creates a layered look that’s simple to plant, easy to maintain, and guaranteed to boost curb appeal from spring through fall.

Part of Our Garden Plan Collection

This plan is part of our Garden Plan Layout Library, featuring tested layouts for vegetables, flowers, and mixed gardens. Each plan guides you on what to plant, when, and how—so you can grow with confidence and enjoy a steady supply of blooms for cutting or decorative purposes.

What This Plan Delivers

  • A professionally designed front yard layout with shrubs and perennials arranged for layered height.
  • A plant palette focused on reliability, pollinators, fragrance, and color for all four seasons.
  • A complete plant list with suggested alternatives and tips for pruning and seasonal care.
  • Step-by-step instructions for creating and maintaining the garden
Quick Overview
Feature Details
Garden Type:  Front Yard Flower Garden
Difficulty Level Beginner
Hardiness Zones: 4–8
Sun Exposure: Full Sun to Part Sun
Seasonality: Late Winter through Early Fall
Soil Type: Rich, well-draining raised bed mix
Maintainance Needs: Low to moderate (simple pruning + annual compost top-dressing)
Special Features: Best for foundation borders, curb appeal upgrades
Garden Size:  ~18’ wide × 12’ deep

The Front Yard Flower Garden Plan

This plan combines flowering shrubs (your structural anchors) and mid-layer perennials. We recommend adding early bulbs to the front of the bed (e.g., crocus adds late winter color before shrubs leaf out). 

Front Yard Flower Garden Plan
A simple front yard plan with shrubs and perennials. Add bulbs to the frost of the bed for early spring blooms!

The Plant List

Layer / Type Plant # of Plants Notes
Flowering Shrubs (Backbone Layer) Hydrangea 4 Late-season blooms; panicle types for longest display
Mock Orange 1 Fragrant white spring flowers
Weigela 1 Long-blooming; great for pollinators
Ceanothus 1 Beautiful blue flowers; evergreen structure
Climbing Rose 1 Adds height and romance on one corner
Perennials & Pollinator Favorites Lavender 6 Fragrant, long-blooming; softens hard edges
Agastache 3 Loved by bees; blooms for months
Fuchsia 1 Choose fall-blooming varieties for late color
Lupine 6 Adds dramatic spires in early summer
Hollyhock 7 Cottage-garden height and charm
Delphinium 5 Tall spires; stake for best results
Deutzia 1 Spring-flowering shrub
Camassia 8 Bulb; spring blooms, pollinator-friendly

See guides to all plants listed above here: Almanac Flower Growing Guides.

pollinating flowers for front yard
The colorful flowers featured in the Front Yard Flower Plan!

How to Create Your Front Yard

1. Prepare the Bed

Clear weeds and amend the soil with compost if needed. Because this garden relies on shrubs and perennials, good soil structure will pay off for years.

2. Plant Your Shrubby Backdrop

  • Start with the largest plants first: climbing rose, mock orange, ceanothus, weigela, and hydrangeas.
  • Space for mature size—avoid crowding.
  • Frame corners with the rose and mock orange.
  • Place hydrangeas toward the front edge for a welcoming, cottage-style look.

3. Add Mid-Layer Perennials

  • Tuck lavender, agastache, lupine, and others among the shrubs to create a flowing, blended border.
  • Lavender softens straight lines.
  • Agastache attracts bees and adds long-lasting color.
  • Hollyhocks or delphiniums create height and movement.

4. Plant Early Bulbs

Add crocus at the bed’s front edge for a pop of late-winter brightness before anything else wakes up.

5. Mulch & Water In

Mulch to conserve moisture and suppress weeds. Water new plantings deeply for the first season.

6. Seasonal Care

  • Lavender: Trim by one-third in fall (never cut into woody centers). Trim ageing flowers.
  • Delphinium/Hollyhock: Stake early and watch for slugs in spring.
  • Hydrangea: Do not remove old flower heads until after frost danger passes—they protect new buds.
  • Annual Compost: Add 1–2 inches of compost at season’s end to refresh nutrients.

Gardener Spotlight: Susie’s Experience

The backbone of my garden plan is the shrubby backdrop. I wasn’t interested in overpruned and shaped shrubs, but in beautiful flowering perennial plants that would delight the eye. (Most are spring-flowering, but if you choose a fall-flowering Fuchsia, and some of the later-flowering hydrangeas, you should be able to have something pleasant to look at throughout the season.)

They are mixed with low-maintenance perennial flowers, which I chose to add color and also feed the native pollinators through the season. Finally, a few bulbs are planted at the front of the border to soften the look for spring before the leaves have come out!

flowers for front garden bed
More flowering shrubs and perennials featured in the Front Yard Flower Plan!

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Do I need full sun for this plan?

A. Full sun is ideal, but many of these plants tolerate part sun, especially hydrangeas and mock orange.

Q. Is this garden low-maintenance?

A. Yes. Beyond light pruning and staking tall flowers, care is minimal. Compost in fall and trim lavender yearly.

Q. Can I swap in other plants?

A. Absolutely—substitute in any hardy, flowering shrubs or perennials that match your region’s climate and sun levels.

Q. Will this attract pollinators?

A. Lavender, agastache, lupine, and echinacea are pollinator magnets, so you’ll see bees and butterflies.

More References

Frost Chart Calculator

Landscape Advice for Beginners

Free Gardening Tools and Calculators

Wit & Wisdom

“Small gardens can make a big difference.” — Doug Tallamy, entomologist, ecologist.

Think in Layers — Height Creates Depth. Low to tall planting adds beauty, structure, and more blooms in less space.

Pick Plants That Bloom in Succession. A steady rhythm of blooms keeps pollinators fed and your front yard colorful from spring through fall.

“The earth laughs in flowers.”
— Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

Other Plans to Explore

Looking for more front yard or perennial garden plans? Try these plots:



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