Gardening Flowers Perennials 8 Fall-Blooming Native Plants to Add Late-Season Color to Your Garden By Viveka Neveln Viveka Neveln Instagram Viveka Neveln is the Garden Editor at BHG and a degreed horticulturist with broad gardening expertise earned over 3+ decades of practice and study. She has more than 20 years of experience writing and editing for both print and digital media. Learn about BHG's Editorial Process Updated on August 27, 2022 Share Tweet Pin Email Trending Videos Photo: Peter Krumhardt Native across much of North America, these perennials (and one shrub) bloom late in the season and often keep going until frost. Plant them throughout your landscape to extend the floral show, as well as provide food for many pollinators that are still out foraging until winter begins. 01 of 08 New England Aster Denny Schrock New England aster bears tons of pink, blue, purple, or white flowers that are gorgeous in a vase or in the garden. Butterflies and many other pollinators flock to these flowers. Name: Symphyotrichum novae-angliae Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil Size: To 6 feet tall Zones: 4-8 Buy It: Grape Crush New England Aster ($18, Breck's) 02 of 08 Goldenrod Scott Little Fall wouldn't be nearly as cheery without the yellow flowers of goldenrod brightening up the landscape. And despite the common misconception, goldenrod is not a source of seasonal allergies (ragweed, which blooms at the same time, is the real culprit). Name: Solidago rugosa Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil Size: To 4 feet tall Zones: 4-9 Buy It: Goldenrod Wildflower Seeds (from $6, Etsy) 03 of 08 Perennial Sunflower David Speer While most gardeners are familiar with the big-blooming annual sunflowers, perennial species are every bit as beautiful. 'Lemon Queen', for example, produces gorgeous creamy-yellow blooms in late summer and early fall. Name: Helianthus maximiliani Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil Size: To 8 feet tall Zones: 4-9 Buy It: Giant Maximillian Sunflower Seeds ($8, Etsy) 04 of 08 Helenium Peter Krumhardt Part of a big group of native plants in the daisy family, helenium offers cheery yellow, orange, or red blooms at the end of the season. And despite its common name of sneezeweed, it won't aggravate your allergies. It is so named because the flowers were made into snuff in the past, used to induce sneezing to clear out congestion. Name: Helenium autumnale Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil Size: To 5 feet tall Zones: 3-8 Buy It: Red Jewel Helenium ($28, Breck's) 05 of 08 Turtlehead Dean Schoeppner A fun plant with a fun name, turtlehead earned its moniker because of the shape of its purplish-pink blooms. Clusters of these unique flowers appear around August and keep going until freezing weather sets in. This perennial likes damp soil, so it makes a good choice near water gardens or in bog gardens. Name: Chelone lyonii Growing Conditions: Part shade and consistently moist soil Size: To 3 feet tall Zones: 4-9 Buy It: Chelone lyonii Tiny Tortuga/Turtlehead ($13, Etsy) 06 of 08 Mexican Bush Sage Bill Stites Dozens of plants in the sage family are native to North America, and Mexican bush sage is one of the showier ones you can grow. It has downy white stems, gray-green willowy leaves, and spikes of pinkish purple flowers that attract hummingbirds. It's perennial in the warmer regions of the U.S. but can be grown as an annual in colder areas where it isn't hardy. Name: Salvia leucantha Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil Size: To 4 feet tall Zones: 8-10 07 of 08 Anise Hyssop Marty Baldwin This tough, drought-tolerant perennial looks beautiful for months in summer and fall. That's when anise hyssop is covered with spikes of lavender-blue, licorice-scented flowers that pollinators love. It's also known as hummingbird mint because this mint family relative draws plenty of these winged visitors. Name: Agastache foeniculum Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil Size: To 5 feet tall Zones: 4-9 Buy It: Blue Fortune Anise Hyssop ($25, Breck's) 08 of 08 Witch Hazel Dency Kane Common witch hazel contributes color late in the season with both its spidery yellow, fragrant flowers and golden-yellow fall foliage. It's especially great for brightening up a shady garden when most other plants are winding down for winter. Name: Hamamelis virginiana Growing Conditions: Full sun to part shade and moist soil Size: To 12 feet tall and wide Zones: 3-8 Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit