31 beautiful garden trends for 2025
Give your garden a fresh new look
Looking for on-trend garden ideas? Over recent years, our gardens have become extensions of our homes, offering a green space in which we can relax, play, cook, dine and even work. So, let’s look ahead and see what 2025 has in store for your outdoor living space.
Whether you’ve got acres of land or a small balcony, discover the latest garden trends...
Low-effort vegetable gardens
Establishing a vegetable patch and growing your own produce is a great way to eat more healthily and cut the cost of your weekly shop. However, growing a full-scale vegetable and fruit garden takes a lot of time and money, so low-effort ways to grow produce are becoming more and more popular.
You could start small with a simple kitchen herb garden grown in containers or mix your favourite crops into flower beds. This type of companion planting offers hidden benefits by boosting pollination and protecting plants from pests naturally.
Moveable gardens
Just because you're renting does not mean you can't grow a beautiful garden. Or perhaps you like the option to take your garden with you if you move? Pots and containers are a great choice but make sure they are roomy to allow plants and shrubs plenty of space to grow.
But you don’t have to have everything in pots, you could also grow annuals. They last only one season so, after enjoying them, collect the seeds and plant them up again the following year.
Repurposed materials
There is a growing trend in design toward repurposing materials, reflecting a commitment to sustainability that designers championed at the latest RHS Chelsea Flower Show in the UK, one of the biggest gardening events in the world.
From pallet planters and roof tile bug hotels to old steel girders in this modern garden, using reclaimed materials minimises our environmental impact and adds unique character to any garden.
Naturalist landscapes
Creating a secret wild garden with a leafy backdrop, surrounded by billowing foliage, is growing in popularity, with people moving away from classical, formal layouts and trimmed lawns.
We’ll see gardens boasting an organic, overgrown look, where people can feel at one with nature, fully immersing themselves in this wild style. One bonus in achieving this trend is much less maintenance!
Rewilding for pollinators
Planting with insects in mind is key this year with pollinating flowers a priority for keen gardeners. Bees play a critical role in maintaining a healthy ecosystem for the planet. With a number of species already extinct, the efforts needed to encourage them further to thrive couldn’t be greater.
Go for wildflower turf and pollinating flowers such as lavender, butterfly bushes, sunflowers and poppies to help bring more creatures and colour into your garden. Adding water features can also help pollinators and encourage birds to visit your little oasis.
Artificial intelligence
Love it or hate it, there's no denying that artificial intelligence is the future, but how can it be integrated into a garden? Designers Tom Massey and Je Ahn demonstrated the idea at the Chelsea Flower show in London in 2024 with the Avanade Intelligent Garden. “The Intelligent Garden will have a ‘brain’. Wireless sensors will be monitoring it, telling us ‘I need a bit more water’ or ‘I need a haircut’,” Tom explains.
Monitors collected data that was fed back to create a digital “twin” of the space for visitors to interact with on screen. On a smaller scale, we're predicting seeing sensors to measure soil pH, temperature, moisture and nutrient levels, which will work to help save resources. For example, by watering only when the soil is dry.
Formal alfresco dining
Dining outside is nothing new, but until now it’s been reserved for barbecues, with guests chomping down on ketchup-covered hot dogs and burgers. Now we’re seeing a shift to homeowners using their outdoor spaces for more stylish affairs, hosting dinner parties and special occasions.
Dress your table as you would your indoor one, with gorgeous dinnerware, glasses and linens; and provide cushions for each guest. Choose foliage and flowers from your garden as a centrepiece and string festoon lights to illuminate your evening.
Cut-flower gardens
Wild cottage gardens with big blousy blooms – roses, tulips, lupins, delphinium, dahlias and more – are showing no sign of wavering. This year, more and more people are starting to carve out dedicated planting areas for floral harvesting.
Most cut flowers are sun-loving plants, so be sure to position them in full sun and plant bulbs in rows to make bedding and harvesting easier. Plant a variety of seasonal flowers and you’ll have a steady supply of blooms to adorn your home all year long.
Positive patios
According to Johanna Elvidge, Head of Domestic Design at Marshalls, we’ll see more people transforming their gardens into playful, positive spaces, encouraging socialising and time outside.
“These gardens will likely centre around seating areas, outdoor kitchens and fire-pits,” says Johanna. “All spaces which will encourage home life to spill outdoors.” She says we’ll see people carving the garden into different zones: “Having areas for open-air cooking, areas designated for children to play in and an area for brightly coloured flowers to liven the space through nature itself."
Neutral colours
Embrace 2025’s garden trend for all-white flowers and neutral tones. This minimalist style focuses on texture and form, creating tranquil outdoor spaces with a timeless appeal. Incorporate classics such as white roses and peonies for bold blooms or try delicate jasmine, anemones and lily of the valley to create a cottage-style border.
Add structure with white foxgloves or agapanthus and balance the palette with silvery foliage plants like lamb’s ear or dusty miller. Together, these choices craft a calming garden that feels effortlessly chic.
Wildlife habitats
With attention turning to protecting wildlife, we’ll see the slightly less manicured garden with wilder, overgrown verges and borders becoming more commonplace this year.
By embracing this care-free approach, gardeners are improving the biodiversity of their outside space, supporting the livelihood of a range of wildlife. Hedgehog highways are growing in popularity, as well as bug hotels, birdhouses and small shelters.
Xeriscaping
Our summers are getting hotter leading to an upturn in people searching for plants that require no irrigation. Xeriscaping, otherwise known as water-wise gardening, is the solution to our parched plants.
“Dry gardens will have colour, scent, texture and flowers from resilient plants including ornamental grasses, bulbs such as alliums that sweat out summer heat below ground,” says Guy Barter, RHS Chief Horticulturist. “Waxy, hairy or small-leaved plants that have evolved to resist water loss, such as Afghan sage, California lilac, cistus, lambs ears, lavenders, hardy palms and succulents and rosemary and thyme, to name only a few.”
All-year-round gardens
A key trend on the rise is people using their garden as an extension of their home, wanting to be outside from spring until winter. This means a surging need for furniture that is robust and functional.
“Outdoor furniture design has evolved massively and we’re seeing designs being combined with state-of-the-art materials,” says Reilly Grey, co-founder of Suns Lifestyle. Pieces are not only beautiful but are truly weather and rust-resistant. “It’s all about creating that aspirational lounging space that is beautiful in the summer and cosy in the winter”
Horti-futurism
This is the newest buzzword being bandied about for 2025, all about channelling an other-worldly sci-fi feel, bringing digital elements alongside the quirky and unusual.
Mark Lane, gardening expert for Stannah, says we should expect to see bold, bright plants and accessories for our gardens. “Neon is set to be a big trend,” he says. “Orange, fuchsia and red will also play a role, alongside park pinks and purple.”
Outdoor rooms
The appetite for exterior living continues to grow this year, with more of us desiring greater time spent in our gardens. In doing so, we’re creating dedicated outdoor ‘rooms’ where we can gather with friends or unwind on our own. Be that socialising around a firepit, lounging on a comfy modular sofa, dining alfresco style or pizza making in an outdoor oven.
Expect to see more garden spaces with all the essentials for outdoor living, arranged under purpose-built shelters, such as a pergola or an awning.
Meadowscaping
Our traditional green, neatly clipped lawns are making way for lush wild meadows. This dreamy low-maintenance lawn looks simply beautiful and provides an abundant haven for all creatures, great and small.
According to the UK's Royal Horticultural Society (RHS), enquiries relating to wild gardening have soured by over 28% and are set to continue rising, making meadow lawns a growing trend this year. Wild grasses and flowers including cow parsley, cornflowers, field poppies and even dandelions, traditionally considered an unwanted weed, are all perfect additions.
Shrinking lawns
Scorching from increasingly hot summers has made lawns tricky and more costly for people to manage. It’s no surprise then that we’re seeing homeowners transform their turf to larger flower beds and extended borders, with dedicated patio areas for seating.
It allows for more considered planting, with wildlife-friendly varieties and patches of wild meadow, encouraging more beautiful bugs and creatures into our gardens.
Pet-friendly gardens
Whether you have dogs or cats, or perhaps both, in 2025 we're going to be designing our gardens with our pets in mind. After all, they are important members of our family and they enjoy the outdoors just as much as we do. It goes without saying to avoid any toxic or poisonous plant species and instead fill your borders with pet-friendly plants such as cat grass or catnip for felines to nibble on.
You could also consider a fenced off section or an enclosed catio to avoid any pond or plant mishaps. Other considerations are a well-maintained lawn, cosy seating and shaded areas.
Garden wall art
Decorate your outdoor spaces in the same way you would do your home interiors, paying attention to walls and fences. Wall art is rising in popularity this year and not those typical wrought iron designs we've come to know.
This is actual fine art, framed and hung on the wall just like you'd find indoors, turning your gardening into an outdoor art exhibition. Waterproof, UV resistant, windproof, fade proof and durable, they make the perfect garden accessory.
Garden kitchens
Although the idea of a garden kitchen is hardly new, expect 2025 to be the year that outdoor kitchens go mainstream. “Moving on from the basic barbecue, customers are moving into creating full-on outdoor kitchens and this is something we expect to see grow into the new year,” says Reilly Gray, co-founder of Suns Lifestyle.
“Expect to see outdoor ovens, hobs, fridges and sinks become the norm, with the cooking moving from inside the house to the garden.” Plant a herb garden nearby for your finishing garnishes on drinks and dishes.
Small space gardening
Many of us have a small garden, or indeed only a balcony, so it makes sense to use every nook and cranny. A compact courtyard can provide just as much garden joy as a larger, more traditional lawned space.
Get creative by planting borders with a mix of varieties and maximise space with climbers and vertical planting. And have a go at painting the wall or fencing to bring in even more colour. A cute bistro table makes the perfect spot for enjoying your morning coffee.
Backyard birdwatching
Sales of bird feeders and birdseed have recently skyrocketed, suggesting many of us have caught the birdwatching bug. It’s not hard to see the appeal of beckoning birds into our gardens – they help ground us in nature and connect us with the seasons.
Indeed, our fascination with our winged friends has led many to rethink their gardens and add plants that provide shelter and good foraging options for birds.
Garden offices
Home offices are likely going to be the norm for the foreseeable future. But if you don’t have the space to sacrifice indoors, why not construct an outdoor working area?
A specially built garden office is the perfect option for those with the room, plus it creates a separate work area to help reinforce a good work-life balance.
Sustainable landscaping
Many of the best garden designers are looking for ways to work sustainably. At the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, concrete was noticeably absent as alternative low-impact materials were showcased.
From terrazzo tiles made of stone offcuts to 3D-printed terracotta bricks and recycled gravel, tradespeople and homeowners are looking for new ways to reduce waste in 2025.
Growing plants to dry and display
Growing your own flowers and grasses to cut and dry is hugely satisfying and the ultimate well-being way of bringing everlasting summer inside. Statice poppies and lavender are easy flowers to start with.
And, for grasses, you can't go wrong with dramatic pampas. Dried blooms are a huge interior trend right now so get on board.
External mural walls
Wall murals and feature walls have made a modern comeback recently and, thanks to weatherproof tile technology, are now making a statement in gardens.
Tiles glazed with colourful and highly decorative patterns can transform and protect a plain wall, making it a dramatic highlight of any outdoor space.
Statement patio tiles
From colourful encaustic and ceramic to etched cement, patterned tiling has been making its way from our bathroom floors and kitchen splashbacks and into our gardens – and 2025 is its time to shine.
There's no end of striking designs to choose from: these star pattern tiles zone this patio area, creating the perfect blend of indoor-outdoor living.
Broken-plan gardens
Echoing interiors, broken-plan gardens are slicing up open-plan outdoor living spaces. Expect to see more structures, walls and screens, be they natural or hard-landscaped.
These new pockets of privacy create blended multi-functional areas for cooking, entertaining, crop growing and relaxation.
Traditional revival
While a naturalistic approach defines many of 2025's new garden trends, The Flower Council predicts a revival of some traditional aspects of horticulture.
This may manifest in the type of plants we’re choosing for our gardens – expect retro and vintage flowering plants, climbing roses, low-growing fruit trees and bouquets arranged with great attention to detail.
Wellbeing features
With mental health and wellbeing rising to the top of many people’s priority lists, we may see an increase in stress-busting features added to our gardens.
Watch out for the introduction of soothing colour palettes, sensory elements like fragrant herbs and a proliferation of saunas, hot tubs and plunge pools.
Seasonal planting
We're often guilty of neglecting our gardens during the colder months. But with a renewed interest in the garden comes a desire to make them usable all year round.
This could involve adding a variety of plants that flourish in different seasons, so you're not left with a sad-looking garden when the temperature drops. You might also add features that make the elements enjoyable as the weather dips, such as heating, firepits and atmospheric lighting.