Flowers to Plant in Texas
Published: February 1, 2026 · Updated: May 23, 2026
Texas gardeners benefit from a long growing season that lets gardeners enjoy flowers for nine months or more each year. Mild winters mean many perennials stay semi-evergreen, and the early spring warmth gives a head start on summer-blooming varieties. The key to success is selecting varieties rated for your USDA zone and timing your planting around local frost dates. Below you will find the top flower picks for Texas’s climate, organized by season.
Best Spring Flowers for Texas
Lantana
perennialColors: orange, yellow, pink, red, purple, bicolor
Lantana is a heat-loving, drought-tolerant powerhouse that blooms nonstop from spring through the first frost. Butterflies adore it, and it shrugs off the intense summer heat that wilts many other flowers.
Salvia
perennialColors: red, pink, coral, purple, white
Autumn Sage blooms nearly year-round in warm zones, is a hummingbird magnet, and thrives in the heat and drought of southern summers. It forms tidy, aromatic shrubs that require almost no maintenance.
Knockout Rose
shrubColors: red, pink, yellow, white, coral
Knockout Roses revolutionized warm-climate gardening by offering continuous bloom with high disease resistance. They bloom on new wood, so even a hard winter freeze is followed by vigorous spring regrowth and flowers.
Best Summer Flowers for Texas
Zinnia
annualColors: red, orange, pink, yellow, white, purple, lime
Zinnias thrive in the heat of zones 8–9, producing armloads of cut flowers all summer. They attract swallowtail butterflies and are the easiest annual to grow from direct-sown seed.
Sunflower
annualColors: yellow, orange, red, bicolor, cream
Sunflowers add instant height and cheer to warm-climate gardens and are irresistible to bees, birds, and children alike. In zones 8–9 you can start them earlier and enjoy a longer blooming period.
Crape Myrtle
shrubColors: pink, red, purple, white, lavender
Crape Myrtle is the iconic summer-blooming shrub of the South, producing panicles of crepe-textured flowers for 60–90 days. Its exfoliating bark and fall color provide year-round ornamental value.
Planting Calendar Highlights
March
- Plant warm-season annuals
- Direct sow zinnias and sunflowers
- Plant lantana and pentas
- Azalea
- Lantana (begins)
- Knockout Rose
- Amaryllis
- Fertilize established perennials and shrubs
- Mulch beds with 3–4 inches of pine straw or bark
- Begin regular watering schedule for new plantings
May
- Plant heat-tolerant annuals (portulaca, pentas, vinca)
- Set out caladium bulbs
- Lantana
- Zinnia
- Pentas
- Daylily
- Crape Myrtle (late)
- Increase watering as summer heat builds
- Watch for spider mites in hot, dry conditions
- Shear salvias and catmint for rebloom
July
- Minimal planting—focus on maintaining existing plants
- Crape Myrtle
- Zinnia
- Firebush
- Lantana
- Portulaca
- Focus on watering and heat stress management
- Treat for chinch bugs and fire ants as needed
- Refresh mulch if it has decomposed
October
- Plant spring bulbs (tulips need refrigeration)
- Set out ornamental kale and pansies
- Chrysanthemum
- Ornamental Kale
- Mexican Bush Sage
- Camellia sasanqua
- Plant trees and shrubs for fall root establishment
- Dig and divide overgrown perennials
- Apply 3–4 inches of mulch to beds for winter
Most Popular Flowers in Texas
Texas gardeners gravitate toward a handful of flowers that consistently outsell alternatives in regional nurseries. The current top five for Texas are Texas Bluebonnet, Indian Paintbrush, Lantana, Salvia greggii, Pride of Barbados. Each is well-adapted to Texas's combination of climate, soil, and seasonal rainfall — and each appears on regional best-seller lists year after year.
The list above isn't the same as what you'd see in Ohio or Oregon — and that regional difference matters more than most homeowners realize. A flower that thrives in Texasmay struggle two states over because of soil pH, summer humidity, winter chill hours, or photoperiod. When you're choosing flowers, regional bestsellers are the highest-confidence starting point. Branch into less common species after you've confirmed that the regional staples actually perform in your specific yard.
Best Fall & Winter Flowers for Texas
Texas's mild fall weather extends the bloom season far longer than most US states. Cool-season annuals (pansies, snapdragons, ornamental kale, dianthus) are typically planted in October or November and bloom through winter into early spring across most of Texas. Mums perform best when planted in late September. Native Texas fall bloomers — Maximilian sunflower, Gregg's mistflower, fall aster (Symphyotrichum oblongifolium), and Texas bluebell — provide critical late-season pollinator forage during the monarch migration. In South Texas, true winter dormancy is rare and pansies often bloom from October through April.
Fall blooms extend the Texas flower season well past the summer peak. Garden chrysanthemums (mums) are the headline fall flower across all US zones — plant nursery-pot mums in early September for immediate color, or plant garden mums in spring for established perennials that return reliably each fall. Asters provide the second wave of fall color, with native New England aster (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae) and New York aster blooming September through October in Texas gardens.
For continuous color into late fall and winter, cool-season annuals like pansies, violas, snapdragons, and ornamental kale tolerate frost down to -7°C (20°F) and bloom through the first hard freeze. In Texas's warmer zones, these annuals provide color through winter and into early spring — plant in October or November for immediate winter display. Sedum 'Autumn Joy' and ornamental grasses (switchgrass, little bluestem, miscanthus) provide structural fall interest with seedheads and foliage that persist through winter.
For winter interest beyond annuals, consider hellebores (Lenten roses) for shaded Texas gardens — these evergreen perennials bloom February through April even in moderate winters. Witch hazel, winter jasmine, and red-twig dogwood add structural color to winter gardens. Texas's warm winters allow camellias, gardenias, and hibiscus to bloom in winter and early spring — choose varieties rated for your specific zone. Plan your fall and winter garden layout in spring when nurseries stock the widest selection of fall-blooming and winter-interest plants.
How to Prepare Your Texas Garden for Planting
Texas soils vary dramatically by region — Houston and the Gulf Coast deal with heavy clay (Houston Black gumbo); the Hill Country has thin soil over limestone with high pH (alkaline 7.5–8.2); the Panhandle and West Texas have sandy loam with low organic matter; East Texas is sandy and acidic. Test before amending — the same compost-and-mulch routine doesn't fit every Texas region. For Hill Country alkaline soil, choose plants that tolerate high pH (lantana, salvia, Texas sage) rather than fighting the soil. For Gulf Coast clay, raised beds with imported topsoil often outperform amended in-ground beds.
Soil quality is the single biggest factor in Texas garden success — and Texas's soil varies dramatically by region. Test your soil before amending: a basic soil test from your county extension office or a home test kit reveals pH (target 6.0 to 7.0 for most flowers), texture (sand vs silt vs clay), and key nutrient levels. Most flower problems traced to 'planting wrong' actually originate with unsuitable soil that no amount of right-time planting can overcome.
For heavy clay soils common in many Texas regions, amend the planting bed with 5 to 10 cm (2 to 4 inches) of compost worked into the top 30 cm (12 inches). Avoid sand alone in clay — sand mixed with clay produces concrete-like results. Pumice or expanded shale work better as a structural amendment. For sandy soils, the same compost amendment improves moisture retention and nutrient holding capacity. For neutral loam soils (the easiest case), light compost amendment is sufficient maintenance — no major restructuring needed.
Adjust pH only if soil testing confirms a problem. Most flowers prefer slightly acidic to neutral soil (pH 6.0 to 7.0). For acidic soils below 5.5, apply garden lime in fall for spring planting. For alkaline soils above 7.5, apply elemental sulfur in fall — pH adjustment with sulfur takes 6 to 12 months to fully take effect. Hydrangeas are the major exception: bigleaf hydrangeas bloom blue in acidic soil (below pH 5.5) and pink in alkaline soil (above pH 6.5), so adjust accordingly for desired color.
Time your bed preparation to your Texas climate. In Texas's warm climate, fall through early winter is the best bed prep window — cooler temperatures protect amended soil structure. Spring prep is feasible but the heat can limit how much active soil work you can do. Add 5 cm (2 inches) of mulch after planting to retain moisture and suppress weeds — shredded bark, pine needles (in acid-loving beds), or composted leaves all work well.
Attracting Pollinators with Texas Flowers
Texas sits squarely on the Central Flyway for monarch butterfly migration — both spring (March–April) and fall (September–October) migrations pass through the state in massive numbers. Plant native Texas milkweed (Asclepias asperula or A. tuberosa) along fence lines and in beds to support egg-laying and caterpillar food. Avoid the non-native tropical milkweed (A. curassavica) sold at many Texas nurseries — its year-round growth disrupts migration timing and increases parasite infection rates. Gulf Fritillary butterflies are abundant statewide and require passionflower (Passiflora incarnata) as their host plant. For Texas hummingbirds, plant Turk's cap (Malvaviscus arboreus), Texas red yucca (Hesperaloe parviflora), and salvias — Ruby-throated hummingbirds nest across East Texas while Black-chinned hummingbirds dominate Central and West Texas.
Texas gardens support a remarkable diversity of native pollinators — bees, butterflies, moths, hummingbirds, and beneficial flies — when planted with the right mix of flowering plants. The 2024 University of Delaware research by Doug Tallamy documented that native plants support 4 to 35 times more native insect species than introduced ornamentals — and native insects are the foundation of native bird food webs. Choosing flowers with high pollinator value pays dividends well beyond aesthetic appeal.
Top pollinator flowers for Texas gardens include native coneflower (Echinacea purpurea), black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta), bee balm (Monarda), butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa), wild bergamot, native asters, goldenrod, and native sunflowers. Lavender, salvia, catmint, and zinnia are excellent non-native choices for honeybees and a wide range of native bee species. For hummingbirds, plant tubular red and orange flowers — cardinal flower, trumpet honeysuckle, salvia, and bee balm. For night-flying pollinator moths, plant evening-fragrant flowers like moonflower, evening primrose, and night-blooming jasmine.
Milkweed (Asclepias) is the single most important plant for monarch butterfly conservation — monarchs lay eggs only on milkweed, and milkweed is the sole food source for monarch caterpillars. Texas sits in the monarch migration range, and planting native milkweed species (butterfly weed, swamp milkweed, common milkweed) directly supports monarch reproduction. Avoid the non-native tropical milkweed (Asclepias curassavica) common in nurseries in warm states — its year-round growth disrupts monarch migration patterns and increases parasite infection rates. Plant only native milkweed species.
Design your Texas pollinator garden around bloom succession — plant species that bloom in different windows so something is always flowering from April through October. Early-spring bloomers (crocus, hellebore, native willow) feed emerging queen bees. Late-summer and fall bloomers (goldenrod, native asters, sedum) provide critical pre-migration fuel for monarchs and overwintering food for native bees. Cluster plantings of 3 to 5 of the same species together — pollinators forage more efficiently on patches than on scattered single plants. Skip pesticides entirely on pollinator plantings; even organic-approved insecticides like spinosad and pyrethrin are toxic to bees and butterflies. Hand-removing pests or accepting some leaf damage is the right approach in pollinator-friendly gardens.
Texas Cities
Frequently Asked Questions
- What flowers grow best in Texas?
- Texas falls primarily in the Warm (Zones 8–9) climate zone. Top spring picks include Lantana, Salvia, Knockout Rose, while summer favorites are Zinnia, Sunflower, Crape Myrtle. The best flowers for your specific city depend on your exact USDA zone.
- When should I plant flowers in Texas?
- In the warmer parts of Texas, you can begin planting cool-season flowers in late February. Wait until after the last frost date — typically mid-March to mid-April — for warm-season annuals and tender perennials.
- What USDA zones are in Texas?
- Texas spans USDA hardiness zones 7a, 7b, 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b. Your zone determines which perennials survive winter and when to safely plant annuals. Use our city guides below for zone-specific recommendations.
- Are perennials or annuals better for Texas gardens?
- Both have a place in Texas gardens. Perennials like Lantana and Autumn Sage return each year and form the backbone of a low-maintenance garden. Annuals like Pentas fill gaps with continuous season-long color.
- What are common flower gardening mistakes in Texas?
- Overwatering established drought-tolerant plants like lantana and salvia: These Mediterranean and subtropical plants thrive on neglect. Water deeply once a week at most after establishment. Soggy soil causes root rot and shortened lifespan. Planting tulips without refrigerating the bulbs first: Zones 8–9 do not provide enough natural cold hours. Refrigerate tulip and hyacinth bulbs for 8–12 weeks before planting in December. Keep bulbs away from ripening fruit in the fridge. Committing 'crape murder'—topping crape myrtles every year: Choose the right size cultivar for the space and prune only to remove crossing branches, suckers, and seed pods. Topping creates weak, knobby growth and fewer flowers.