As a gardening enthusiast, I’m always on the lookout for new and exciting ways to spruce up my outdoor space.
That’s why I’ve compiled a list of 51 outdoor garden ideas that are sure to inspire you to create your own backyard oasis.
Whether you have a small balcony or a sprawling yard, there’s something on this list for everyone.
From cozy fire pits to elegant water features, these ideas will help you transform your garden into a peaceful retreat.
You’ll find tips on how to create a lush green space, as well as ideas for adding color and texture to your outdoor area.
Whether you’re a seasoned gardener or just starting out, these ideas will help you take your outdoor space to the next level.
So grab your gardening gloves and let’s get started!
1.Catch the Eye
Marie IannottiIncorporating an island garden in the lawn makes a great focal point.
Dress it up even more with bold, eye-catching ornaments or large containers.
Since the island is viewed from all sides, you can plant tall, full plants in the center to inspire a feeling of abundance.
2.Give Your Garden Space
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Ensure there is some distance between you and the garden; it will make the area seem much larger.
A thin strip of lawn provides enough separation to create a view from your living area.
Frame the view with small trees and shrubs and then paint the area with soft textures and colors.
Now when you walk out onto your deck, you can step right into the composition.
Even the smallest garden will make a big difference.
3.Brighten Your Garden With Colorful Furniture
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Adding bright-hued furniture and ornaments can keep your garden colorful, even when your plants are not in flower.
This is one time that having a small garden is a real advantage because you can get a lot of impact from only a few well-chosen pieces.
They can be moved about the garden or they can become a part of the garden.
You can also easily DIY this decor with a can of spray paint.
4.Expand Your Garden Space With Curves
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Curving paths that partially obscure the view around them will optically expand your garden.
Avid gardeners can wind their way throughout the yard, but even a single crescent will create intrigue.
Keep the look cohesive by repeating color intermittently throughout the planting.
The use of cool blue plants at the end of the border further creates a sense of distance.
5.Use Geometrical Plants to Add Formality
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Create your own Versailles with the help of clipped hedges and evergreen parterres with geometrical details.
One good pruning in the spring and a little touch-up mid-season is all it takes to make your home your castle.
You can dress it up or down with seasonal pots of colorful flowers and furniture to suit your taste.
6.Use Containers to Create a “Garden”
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A group of planters can delineate a small “garden,” even without grass or yard space.
Whether you are trying to create a sense of privacy or encourage neighbors to stop by and chat, a simple table and chairs encircled with large containers turns this open space into a joyful bistro-like gathering spot.
7.Play With Vertical Garden Space
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By training vines along the wall of the house and the adjoining fence, an intimate, yet opulent, dining space is created.
This is especially useful if the only space you have to garden in is a tiny courtyard.
The small pond in the foreground adds a cottage garden feel, with moss growing on the stone and wide clumps of flowering plants.
8.Frame a View
Marie Iannotti
Drawing the eye to a nearby view, like into a wooded area, will make your small garden feel more expansive.
Nothing works better than a see-through fence with a gate.
Let the garden path lead right up to the gate and then make it all the more alluring by placing a focal plant or container on the other side of the gate.
It doesn’t matter if you never venture into the woods, you will feel like the expanse is all part of your yard.
9.Try Out Trellises
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Growing a tree along a trellis is a great way to reap the benefits and save space.
The only thing more amazing than how much fruit you can get from one espaliered tree is how attractive and tempting it looks spread out on a patio fence or wall.
While it looks very complicated and exacting, all it takes to grow a trellised fruit tree is some hooks, wire, and patience.
In a few years, you’ll have an orchard within arms reach.
Apples, pears, peaches, plums, even persimmons can all be trained to grow this way.
10.Try DIY Raised Garden Beds
Using DIY raised garden beds adds rustic charm to this cottage garden from Liz Marie Blog that is surrounded by a vinyl picket garden fence.
Depending on your materials, this could be an extremely budget-friendly option to add structure to a small yard or garden.
11.Add a Ladder
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Using a ladder as a functional trellis or storage solution for potted plants and herbs makes it easy to add a curtain of greenery to a wall, whether you choose a rustic ladder with well-worn character or paint it a bright, cheerful color.
Ladders are often used to hold things indoors and are just as functional and attractive outside.
12.Incorporate Luxury Garden Furniture
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Add grandeur to your small garden by choosing high-end furnishings.
Rather than a standard deck with an umbrella table and grill, this space incorporates a water garden filled with lush, low-maintenance plants, such as hostas, ornamental grasses, water lilies, and a flowering clematis vine, for color.
The sound of trickling water can be enjoyed in over-sized, comfy chairs that offer a respite from the afternoon sun with an over-sized arbor and bamboo shades.
13.Capitalize on Trees
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If you are lucky enough to have a shade tree in your yard, put it to good use and create a seating area nearby.
The spiraling pattern of the borders makes the space seem larger.
Raised beds nearby provide extra seating or table space and make the garden easier to maintain.
14.Add Lights for Evening Sparkle
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Adding hanging lights will create a magical feeling in your small garden come evening.
You can string the trees with fairy lights or create your own, personalized lanterns.
A rope attached to the lids of canning jars filled with candles or LED lights does the trick here.
Make it even more magical by including some fragrant flowers, to take over as the flowers take a backseat in the dark.
15.Beckon With Blooms
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Using plants to lead guests into your garden or home feels joyful and welcoming.
Vines and shrubs are also a great option, but when your entryway is entirely paved, containers are the way to go.
Don’t go small on impact. Either choose a large container and fill it to overflowing with plants or use smaller pots and lots of them.
These geraniums and impatiens make a joyful greeting without getting in the way of anyone going up the steps.
Annual plants are great choices because they will remain in bloom all season.
16.Plant Potted Fruit Trees
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Planting small trees in containers is a great way to frame a garden space (just about anything that can be grown in the ground can be grown in a container).
If you spend the bulk of your outdoor time on your deck or patio, bring some appetizing plants right near your table.
Dwarf citrus trees are perfect candidates for patio containers.
They don’t need an overly large pot and remain small enough to move about if you need to.
Although citrus trees cannot withstand freezing winters, they can be brought indoors to enjoy as houseplants until you and your tree are ready to revel in summer sunshine again.
17.Play With Garden Proportion
Marie Iannotti
Larger shrubs keep the proportion of a more traditional foundation planting and also reduce the amount of maintenance you will have to do.
And using this combination will help set your house apart with some unexpected curb appeal.
That is something important to keep in mind if you live on a busy road.
Make sure you can still see out your windows but have fun tucking in small surprises of color and texture or scent.
18.Incorporate a Garden Birdfeeder
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Adding a bird feeder is a charming garden ornament option all year, especially in winter, when it attracts a flurry of hungry birds.
Some wildlife is welcome in the garden and birds would have to be at the top of the list.
They’ll add color, sound, and movement when your yard needs it most.
19.Have an Herb Garden
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Not only are potted herbs space savers, but making them the focal point of your small garden also serves a culinary purpose.
Herbs are among the easiest edible plants to grow and they require very little room in their planters.
You could even keep a pot on your table, for the freshest flavor possible.
20.Top Off the Railings
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Dress up the top of your deck’s railings with flower boxes contoured to fit snuggly over the rail.
They add color to the deck, without taking up floor space. They even give a little extra privacy.
21.Create a Container Garden
Marie Iannotti
Creating a container garden is the easiest way to add plants and color to a small space.
Mix up the sizes of the planting containers and also the plants, for a true garden feel.
Maintaining a color palette within either the plants or the containers themselves will tie the space together and make it feel like a real garden.
22.Make a Succulent Tapestry
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If you don’t have the interest or the time to devote to a flowering garden, using succulent plants in your small garden is the answer for you.
These fleshy-leaved plants virtually never need to be watered and there’s no need to prune or deadhead, either.
Many will happily spread and flow into one another, creating a tapestry carpet that smothers out weeds.
Even if they don’t have spectacular flowers, the leaves can be colorful enough on their own.
And many survive for years on neglect.
23.Provide Privacy With a Hedge
Sebastiaan Van Angelbeek-Van Trappe / EyeEm / Getty Images
Add weight to a small garden space by defining it with green walls. Walking through hedges announces that a garden has begun.
You can make it your private sanctuary.
Evergreen hedges also provide the perfect backdrop for smaller plants and accent colorful flowers and foliage.
24.Add a Garden Gazebo
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Put up a gazebo, whether it is rustic or ornate, and you will find yourself dressing it up with plants and comfy cushions and making up excuses to visit your small garden space.
There’s something about being in a gazebo that makes you feel like you are truly part of the garden, inviting you to bring a pitcher of lemonade, a snack, and a few friends and sit for a moment.
There is no better place to inspire some summer reading or have a glass of wine at the end of the day than in your gazebo.
25.Use Stock Tanks
For this small patio garden, Most Lovely Things planted galvanized stock tanks set on a gravel base with tomato plants and herbs.
These are incredibly easy to DIY and budget friendly.
A planter-sized stock tank will clock in at under $100.
26.Place a Potted Tree in the Landscape
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Every yard and garden needs a tree to lift the eyes, and adding a potted tree will add interest and practicality.
Even dwarf trees can grow quite large and take over the space.
And tree roots travel much wider than the branches of the tree and they can push through lawns and even your home’s foundation.
The perfect solution is to add a potted tree or two to your yard.
You’ll need a fairly large pot, but the roots won’t wander any further than their container, while you get to enjoy the breathing space.
27.Go Big on Garden Decor
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Display creative collections of items to bring personality to your small garden.
It’s the perfect place to put your style on show and a great way to do that is to display the things you love to gather.
Whether it is wooden wheelbarrows, bright glass bottles, seashells, or garden gnomes, the things that inspire you to make a small space garden even more intimate.
28.Try a Small Veggie Garden
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Starting small is often the key to enjoying vegetable gardening, which can be a lot of work. (And you definitely don’t need a “lower 40” to grow your food.)
You’ll be surprised how much you can grow in a few square feet of soil. Tomatoes, peppers, and beans can even be grown in containers.
Limited space should not limit your enjoyment of a homegrown meal.
29.Make Your Garden a Retreat
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If you have a little more yard space, but still want an intimate garden, set your garden or patio retreat back from your home.
This placement will make the area feel like a retreat, tucked in a shady corner of your yard.
Fill it with soft, sumptuous plants, add a little privacy screening, and live out there day and night.
30.Add One Dramatic Plant
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Add some drama to a small space by including one large, animated plant, like this arching agave.
It almost doesn’t matter what else is planted nearby, since all eyes will be on your diva.
Place it along a path, where there will be no chance of missing it.
It will anchor your whole garden and make any flaws seem to disappear.
31.Try a Mini Garden Folly
Marie Iannotti
Adding a small-scale folly to your garden will add so much whimsy; it’s an old trick, but it works just as well now as it did centuries ago.
On large estates, elaborate small buildings were built on the fringe of the garden, just for whimsy.
They were called follies and were meant for visual appeal, not for any practical use.
However, they are hard to miss and it is almost a guarantee that any visitor to your garden will make the walk out there to get a closer look.
32.Beckon Viewers With a Garden Gate
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Garden gates do wonders to draw guests into your garden, so add one to create some intrigue.
Give people an idea of what’s to come, in front of your gate, and then leave the gate a little ajar to let them know they are welcome to come through.
How could you resist wandering down that path?
The fact that the gate is dangling open causes you to create a story of what’s going on down there, in your mind.
33.Use Flowering Shrubs
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Incorporate shrubs to add multi-season interest and minimal maintenance to your small garden.
When the sun hits flowering shrubs, they can light up your yard.
You can find shrubs that flower at just about any time during the growing season in colors for every taste.
They are the quickest way to add impact.
34.Pave an Inviting Path
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Pave a pathway to make your garden more interesting and inspiring.
They make your eye pause as it scans down a border and, with a few carefully placed bends, trick you into pausing and having a good look around.
Paths can be left bare, planted over with grass, or they can be made of some type of stone or gravel.
Brick paths are especially enchanting because the color is such a natural complement for most plants and the patterns they create make even the smallest garden seem larger.
35.Opt for a Tea Garden
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Make your small garden into a tea garden to make thematic use of your limited space.
The Japanese Tea practice can be very exacting, but the sense of peace created in a tea garden can be created in any size space, even if you break some of the rules.
Most are kept very simple, with a small wooden building or gazebo and a handful of subtle plants.
If you are looking for a quiet, contemplative idea for your small garden, a tea garden could hit the spot.
36.Provide a Pergola Over the Garden
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Cover your garden with a pergola to frame the space and offer a unique space for plants to climb and bloom.
Dress up a trellis or pergola across a path in your yard with a dramatic flowering vine, like wisteria or climbing hydrangea, and you’ve essentially doubled your garden space.
You could even drape it with grapes or ornamental gourds, for color and function.
37.Make an Entrance
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Building a subtle entryway to your garden, even if it is just a simple arch, will always create impact.
This works especially well if your front yard is tame and inconspicuous and beyond the entryway is much more spirited.
Having a defined and inspired entrance to your garden can change the feel of the space, the way going from black and white to color did for the Land of Oz.
38.Add a Water Garden
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A water feature—no matter how small or simple—brings a soothing energy to a small garden.
Water is such a welcome element in any yard.
It always has a cooling effect and if you add a small fountain, the sound is very soothing.
Water gardens do not have to be large. You can easily grow water lilies in a few square feet of water.
39.Indulge in Fall
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Keeping fall color in mind is every bit as important as having flowering shrubs to make your garden pop all year.
Your space will explode in size when the light hits the changing leaves of plants like Fothergilla, spicebush (Lindera benzoin), oakleaf hydrangea (Hydrangea quercifolia), and highbush blueberries.
40.Lose the Lawn
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If pushing around a lawnmower is not for you, don’t be afraid to skip the grass and plant your garden right up to your living area.
If you miss walking on something green, there are plenty of plants that will grow between the cracks of your stepping stones.
41.Create Coordinated Accents
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Matching your flowers to your planters an dother garden accessories will create a cohesive design that is pleasing to the eye.
For beginning inspiration, just think about the colors and texture you like.
You’ve probably already done that when choosing your plants. Extend it into the ornaments you pick.
The idea is that if you like bold, hot colors, glazed pots in similar colors will brighten things even more.
Likewise, if you’re drawn to more subdued colors, like these irises, incorporate structures in similar hues.
Before you know it, you’ve designed a garden.
42.Reuse, Repurpose, Recycle
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Create some eye-level interest in your garden with tall containers.
You can find all sorts of options in a salvage store, like chimney pipes and concrete columns.
You can be as artistic or whimsical as you like.
The containers and stands may steal the show from your plants, but you can also swap the plants in and out for a whole new feel.
43.Do Double-Duty Containers
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If space is at a premium, make sure everything in your garden serves multiple functions.
Just as you would create layers of plants in a border, you can underplant container-grown trees and other large plants with smaller, showier plants.
44.Build Your Own Living Wall Garden
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Inspire the same effect as a living wall by attaching potted plants all along an outside wall for a small garden.
Living walls of plants are stunning, but they are also complicated to put up and tricky to maintain.
This way they will still be alive with greenery and you can move them around or swap them out as you like.
45.Use Hanging and Vertical Space
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Don’t feel limited to the ground—make use of hanging space to display plants as a small garden variation.
There’s a bounty of plant stands available, and they make a great alternative for stacking pots and growing plants vertically.
And installing some hooks under your porch’s roofline or even in the top slats of your pergola offers even more places to display plants.
You’ll have the option of switching plants in and out with the season.
46.Make Use of Garden Mirrors
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Take a tip from interior designers and use a mirror to expand the space in your garden.
Position it to reflect your garden at you, but be careful not to place it in direct sunlight.
Mirrors work best in partially shaded gardens, where they can bring in more light and where they will glow in the evening light.
47.Settle on the Side Yard
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Rather than using a narrow side yard just to stash the garbage cans and hose, let it serve as a small garden, making a nice transition from the busy, public front yard into the family area of the backyard.
Choose plants that won’t grow so large you have to squeeze between them and keep your neighbors in mind.
Make sure it looks nice from the other side, too.
48.Dress up the Shed
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Treat utilitarian buildings as an architectural element in your garden and have some fun dressing them up.
A sheet of lattice on a wall makes the perfect surface to grow a flowering vine such as a climbing rose, a clematis, or a quick-growing annual vine.
Your storage shed is now a garden cottage.
49.Try a Tiny Window Box Garden
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If you have no yard space or outdoor space, use a deep window box as a small garden.
Window boxes instantly dress up any home, and you even gain a better view from inside the house.
Just by changing the plants, you can have seasonal accents all year.
50.Choose Plants That Spill and Soften
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Incorporating plants that tumble over walls onto paving and paths will soften hard edges and blur the line between living space and garden.
This gentle flow gives the space the illusion of expanding.
When you use ebullient plants that are a bit unruly to begin with, you create a bit of abandon and wildness.
51.Incorporate All the Comforts of Home
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Adding some indispensable comforts, such as a ceiling fan, shelves and, of course, overstuffed cushions can help a covered patio truly become an outdoor room.
The same logic can be applied to a patio space or other seating area nestled in your small garden.
FAQ
- How do you begin planning a garden layout?Begin designing your garden layout by determining the size and shape of your border. This will help you get the best sense of the space to later pick out plants and any hardscaping elements.
- What garden idea is the most low maintenance?A small perennial garden will be the most low maintenance, as you won’t need to swap them out every year.
- What’s the most budget-friendly way to create a garden?The most budget-friendly way to build a garden is to be open to DIYing some elements, like planters. You can also stay under budget by getting plants from local plant swaps, making your own compost, and taking cuttings from friends’ plants.