- Discover evergreen shrubs that bring year-round color and structure to low-light garden areas.
- Learn about a variety of shade-tolerant options, from versatile boxwoods to unique hollies and yews.
- Find the perfect evergreen to fit your space, zone, and desired style, even in challenging shade conditions.
- Get tips for successful planting and care to ensure your shade garden thrives.
Ah, the shady spots in our gardens! Often seen as a challenge, they are, in fact, a wonderful opportunity. Instead of barren earth or struggling annuals, imagine lush, vibrant greenery providing structure and beauty year-round. This is where the magic of evergreens for shade comes in. These incredible plants hold onto their foliage through every season, ensuring that even the darkest corners of your landscape remain alive and inviting, regardless of the weather. Whether you’re looking to create a dense privacy hedge, a charming border, or simply add a splash of reliable color, there’s a shade-loving evergreen ready to transform that overlooked space into a garden highlight. Let’s explore some fantastic options that prove shade is just another canvas for gardening creativity!
Contents
- Terrific Evergreen Shrubs for Partial to Moderate Shade
- American Boxwood
- Baby Gem™ Boxwood
- Blue Cascade Distylium
- Carissa Holly
- Dwarf Burford Holly
- Flirt™ Nandina
- Green Velvet Boxwood
- Variegated Boxwood
- Vintage Jade® Distylium
- Wintergreen Boxwood
- Evergreen Shrubs That Tolerate Full Shade
- Gold Dust Aucuba
- Green Mountain Boxwood
- Hicks Yew
- Japanese Plum Yew
Terrific Evergreen Shrubs for Partial to Moderate Shade
Most evergreen shrubs appreciate some light, even if it’s just dappled sun filtering through leaves or a few hours of morning sun. These varieties are versatile and can adapt well to various levels of shade that aren’t completely dark throughout the day.
American Boxwood
A true classic in the landscape world, the American Boxwood offers dependable green structure year-round. Its dense foliage makes it ideal for formal hedges or adding timeless elegance.
- Scientific Name: Buxus sempervirens
- Common Name: American Boxwood, Common Boxwood
- Growing Zones: 5-9
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun (Prefers some shade in hottest climates)
- Water: Moderate; well-drained soil
This trusted landscape staple provides year-round color, texture, and beauty. Reaching over 10 feet tall and 8 feet wide at maturity, this is one of the larger boxwoods available, making it excellent for creating a substantial screen or background planting. For a superb privacy screen, plant them about 6 feet apart.
Lush American Boxwood shrub used as a formal hedge
Baby Gem™ Boxwood
For smaller spaces or container gardening, the Baby Gem™ Boxwood is a dwarf variety with immense charm. It maintains a neat, rounded shape naturally.
- Scientific Name: Buxus microphylla ‘Baby Gem’
- Common Name: Baby Gem Boxwood
- Growing Zones: 5-9
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun (Prefers some shade in hottest climates)
- Water: Moderate; well-drained soil
This disease-resistant dwarf evergreen shrub is perfect for adding year-round structure to containers, lining walkways, or creating low borders where space is limited. Its compact size means less pruning is often needed.
Compact Baby Gem Boxwood growing in a garden bed
Blue Cascade Distylium
An exciting, relatively new introduction, the Blue Cascade Distylium is a broadleaf evergreen prized for its unique layered branching pattern and small, intriguing red flowers that appear in late winter.
- Scientific Name: Distylium ‘Blue Cascade’
- Common Name: Blue Cascade Distylium
- Growing Zones: 7-10
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun
- Water: Moderate; adaptable to various soil types
Reaching about 4 feet tall and wide at maturity, the Blue Cascade makes an excellent choice for foundation plantings, mass plantings, or slopes where its cascading habit can be appreciated. It offers great texture and year-round appeal.
Blue Cascade Distylium with small red flowers in winter
Carissa Holly
Looking for a low, no-fuss evergreen hedge? The Carissa Holly is a fantastic candidate. Its glossy, deep green leaves and compact, mounding shape make it incredibly versatile.
- Scientific Name: Ilex cornuta ‘Carissa’
- Common Name: Carissa Holly
- Growing Zones: 6-9
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun
- Water: Moderate; adaptable to various soil types
With a mature size of 2-3 feet tall and 3-4 feet wide, Carissa hollies make an excellent low-growing hedge, border plant, or accent in mixed beds. It requires very little maintenance once established, making it a gardener’s favorite.
Carissa Holly shrub with glossy green leaves perfect for a low hedge
Dwarf Burford Holly
This hardy holly is a robust performer, especially suited for warmer regions and coastal landscapes due to its tolerance for various conditions, including salt and pollution.
- Scientific Name: Ilex cornuta ‘Dwarf Burfordii’
- Common Name: Dwarf Burford Holly
- Growing Zones: 5-9
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun
- Water: Moderate; adaptable, prefers well-drained soil
The Dwarf Burfordi Holly is naturally pest, disease, deer, and rabbit resistant. With a naturally rounded shape and moderate size of 5 to 6 feet wide and tall at maturity, this evergreen works in just about any type of landscape design, serving as beautiful, resilient evergreen bushes.
Dwarf Burford Holly with rounded shape ideal for landscape evergreen bushes
Flirt™ Nandina
For a burst of vibrant color in a compact package, look no further than Flirt™ Nandina. This dwarf heavenly bamboo offers striking red and purple tones, especially in cooler weather.
- Scientific Name: Nandina domestica ‘Flirt’
- Common Name: Flirt Nandina, Dwarf Heavenly Bamboo
- Growing Zones: 6-10
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun
- Water: Moderate; prefers well-drained soil
As one of the smallest nandina varieties, reaching only 1 to 2 feet tall and wide, Flirt Nandina can fit anywhere. It’s excellent for containers or creating a vibrant border that offers a color punch throughout the year with its red, purples, and greens.
Vibrant Flirt Nandina shrub showcasing red and purple foliage
Green Velvet Boxwood
A favorite for its dense growth habit and easy-care nature, the Green Velvet Boxwood is particularly well-suited for urban environments and smaller yards.
- Scientific Name: Buxus ‘Green Velvet’
- Common Name: Green Velvet Boxwood
- Growing Zones: 5-9
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun (Prefers some shade in hottest climates)
- Water: Moderate; well-drained soil
These disease-resistant evergreen shrubs maintain a lovely cushiony shape whether you prune them formally or let them grow naturally. They provide a reliable backdrop or focal point with their consistent green foliage.
Dense Green Velvet Boxwood shrub ideal for pruning in urban gardens
Variegated Boxwood
Add a touch of brightness to shady borders with the Variegated Boxwood. Its leaves feature lovely splashes of creamy white against green, offering visual interest beyond just solid color.
- Scientific Name: Buxus sempervirens ‘Variegata’
- Common Name: Variegated Boxwood
- Growing Zones: 6-9
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun (Variegation holds best with some afternoon shade)
- Water: Moderate; well-drained soil
These make great small shrubs for shade, adding dimension and color to borders and layering the landscape. The variegation can help brighten up darker corners of the garden.
Variegated Boxwood leaves showing creamy white and green patterns
Vintage Jade® Distylium
Another excellent Distylium variety, Vintage Jade® offers a lower-growing, spreading habit that is perfect for ground cover or filling in larger areas in front of taller plants.
- Scientific Name: Distylium hybrid ‘Vintage Jade’
- Common Name: Vintage Jade Distylium
- Growing Zones: 7-9
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun
- Water: Moderate; adaptable to various soil types
This hardy, yet graceful evergreen shrub transforms landscapes with its lush texture and outstanding year-round interest. Growing to 2 to 3 feet tall and 5 feet wide at maturity, it’s a versatile choice for mass plantings, slopes, or foundation beds.
Wintergreen Boxwood
Known for maintaining its vibrant green color throughout the colder months, the Wintergreen Boxwood lives up to its name, standing out when other plants have faded.
- Scientific Name: Buxus microphylla var. koreana ‘Wintergreen’
- Common Name: Wintergreen Boxwood
- Growing Zones: 5-8
- Light: Partial Shade to Full Sun (Prefers some shade in hottest climates)
- Water: Moderate; well-drained soil
Its year-round bright green foliage and compact size and shape make it a great option for adding some pizazz to any size yard. These evergreens are stunners in containers too and are known for being more resilient to winter extremes than some other boxwood varieties.
Bright green Wintergreen Boxwood maintaining color through winter
Evergreen Shrubs That Tolerate Full Shade
Finding plants that genuinely thrive in deep, full shade can be tricky, but these resilient evergreens are up to the task, bringing life and structure to the darkest corners of your garden.
Gold Dust Aucuba
With its striking foliage resembling a dusting of gold, the Gold Dust Aucuba is an absolute gem for brightening up deeply shaded areas.
- Scientific Name: Aucuba japonica ‘Variegata’
- Common Name: Gold Dust Aucuba, Spotted Laurel
- Growing Zones: 7-10
- Light: Full Shade to Partial Shade
- Water: Moderate; prefers moist, well-drained soil
Featuring golden yellow spots on shiny green leaves, these shade-loving evergreen shrubs are quite unique. This heat-tolerant plant gives an almost tropical feel and works well in containers, even indoors as a houseplant. They can reach up to 8 feet tall and 5 to 6 feet wide at maturity, creating a substantial presence in the shade garden.
Gold Dust Aucuba leaves with distinctive yellow speckles thriving in shade
Green Mountain Boxwood
Known for its upright, conical shape, the Green Mountain Boxwood is a sturdy evergreen that performs admirably even in heavier shade conditions.
- Scientific Name: Buxus sempervirens ‘Green Mountain’
- Common Name: Green Mountain Boxwood
- Growing Zones: 5-9
- Light: Full Shade to Partial Shade (Adaptable to Full Sun, but best in shade)
- Water: Moderate; well-drained soil
This boxwood not only tolerates heavy shade but is also notably resistant to pests, diseases, and deer, making it a low-maintenance champion for challenging spots. Its shape makes it excellent for formal gardens or as vertical accents.
Conical Green Mountain Boxwood, a shapeable evergreen tolerant of full shade
Hicks Yew
A classic for creating dense, vertical screens in cooler climates, the Hicks Yew is a robust evergreen that handles significant shade with grace.
- Scientific Name: Taxus x media ‘Hicksii’
- Common Name: Hicks Yew
- Growing Zones: 3-7
- Light: Full Shade to Full Sun (Prefers some shade)
- Water: Moderate; requires excellent drainage
Hick’s Yews are a perfect choice for privacy screens or hedges, especially in cooler regions where other evergreens might struggle in the shade. Their dense foliage provides excellent year-round cover, and the attractive red berries offer food and shelter for birds. This unique evergreen shrub is extremely low maintenance.
Dense Hicks Yew hedge providing evergreen privacy and shelter
Japanese Plum Yew
Offering a unique texture with its soft, needle-like foliage that resembles miniature palm fronds, the Japanese Plum Yew is a standout evergreen for shady spots, especially in warmer climates.
- Scientific Name: Cephalotaxus harringtonia
- Common Name: Japanese Plum Yew
- Growing Zones: 6-9
- Light: Full Shade to Partial Shade
- Water: Moderate; prefers well-drained soil
The lush, evergreen foliage provides year-round interest. This low-maintenance shrub is lovely as a specimen plant, adding fine texture to the shade garden, but it also makes a great hedge plant. It’s also known for being deer resistant and heat tolerant, adding to its versatility in challenging conditions.
Japanese Plum Yew foliage resembling miniature palm fronds in a shady garden
Transforming shady areas doesn’t have to be a challenge. With the right selection of evergreens for shade, you can create a vibrant, interesting landscape that provides year-round beauty and structure. These resilient shrubs prove that even in the lowest light conditions, your garden can flourish.
Ready to add some evergreen charm to your shaded landscape? Share which of these shade-loving beauties is your favorite in the comments below, or explore more gardening possibilities on our site!