Cottage Garden Hub

Cottage Garden Planner: Plants, Soil, Layouts and Border Tools

Create a romantic, abundant cottage garden using beginner-friendly plant lists, simple planning tools and practical UK growing advice. Use the calculators below to work out your soil type, border size, plant quantities and flowering gaps before you start planting.

Plant suggestions are general guidance only. Always check final suitability, toxicity and local growing conditions before planting.

A lavender-edged path leading through a rose trellis in an English cottage garden at Goodnestone Park, Kent
Goodnestone Park, Kent · photograph via Wikimedia Commons
The basics

What is a cottage garden?

A cottage garden is relaxed, romantic and generously planted โ€” flowers, herbs and climbers woven together into soft, abundant borders. It is forgiving by nature, which makes it one of the friendliest styles for beginners.

Layered planting

Tall, mid and low plants stacked so borders feel full from front to back.

Dense, soft borders

Plants grow into each other, leaving little bare soil and few gaps for weeds.

Flowers, herbs & climbers

Roses and perennials mixed with scented herbs and climbers on every upright.

Pollinator-friendly

Nectar-rich, informal planting that hums with bees and butterflies all season.

Paths & arches

Soft, winding paths and a rose-clad arch give structure to the romance.

Traditional English feel

An informal, timeless look โ€” generous, slightly wild, and full of charm.

How it compares to other garden styles

Cottage Garden

Romantic and informal. Dense, layered borders of flowers, herbs and climbers.

You are here

Formal Garden

Symmetry, clipped hedges and structure. Tidy, restrained and architectural.

Wildlife Garden

Native, habitat-led planting. Left a little wild to support birds and insects.

Mediterranean Garden

Sun-baked, drought-tolerant planting โ€” gravel, silver foliage and herbs.

Tropical Garden

Bold leaves and exotic shapes for a lush, dramatic, jungle-like feel.

The structure

The cottage garden design formula

Cottage gardens look spontaneous, but the best ones follow a simple recipe. Include a little of each layer below and your borders will feel full, balanced and colourful for as long as possible.

LAYER 01

Tall background spires

Vertical accents at the back โ€” foxgloves, delphiniums and hollyhocks.

LAYER 02

Mid-height flowering plants

The heart of the border โ€” peonies, phlox, lupins and hardy geraniums.

LAYER 03

Front-of-border edging

Soft, low plants that spill over the edge โ€” lavender, catmint, alchemilla.

LAYER 04

Climbers

Roses, clematis and honeysuckle clothing walls, fences and arches.

LAYER 05

Evergreen structure

A few evergreens hold the garden together through the bare winter months.

LAYER 06

Pollinator plants

Nectar-rich flowers โ€” echinacea, verbena and sedum โ€” to feed bees all season.

LAYER 07

Herbs and scent

Lavender, thyme and roses near paths and seating so the garden smells wonderful.

LAYER 08

Spring bulbs

Snowdrops, daffodils and tulips for early colour before perennials wake up.

Interactive tool

Border plant quantity calculator

Work out roughly how many plants you need to fill a new border โ€” and how to split them between tall, mid-height and front-of-border layers.

How many plants will my border need?

Enter your border size and planting style, then press calculate.

Interactive tool

Soil type finder

Your soil decides which plants will thrive. Answer two quick questions and we'll identify your soil type, suggest cottage plants for it, and show how to improve it.

What type of soil do I have?

Dig a small hole, take a handful of moist soil and answer below.

After rain, your soilโ€ฆ
Rubbed between your fingers, it feelsโ€ฆ
Interactive tool

Sunlight & aspect finder

Most cottage plants love sun, but there's a beautiful palette for shade too. Tell us which way your border faces and how shaded it is.

How much sun does my border get?

Choose the aspect and the level of shade at the spot.

Which way does the border face?
How shaded is the spot?
Interactive tool

Flowering gap planner

A great cottage garden has something in flower nearly every month. Tick the months you already have colour, and we'll suggest plants to fill the gaps.

When does my garden have flowers?

Tap each month you already have something in bloom.

Months I already have flowers
Plant library

Cottage garden plant finder

Browse beginner-friendly cottage plants and filter by the conditions you have. Tap any filters that apply โ€” combine a few to narrow the list.

โ€” shown

Ready-made schemes

Planting combinations that just work

Not sure what goes with what? Each of these tried-and-tested groupings is designed to thrive together and flower in harmony.

Sunny Romantic Border

Climbing roseFoxglove CatmintAlchemilla
Conditions
Full sun, fertile soil
Flowering
May to September
Maintenance
Medium โ€” deadhead the rose, trim catmint
Positioning
Rose on a wall behind, foxglove mid, catmint & alchemilla at the front

Pastel Border

DelphiniumPeony LavenderHardy geranium
Conditions
Full sun, free-draining loam
Flowering
May to August
Maintenance
Medium โ€” stake delphiniums early
Positioning
Delphiniums at the back, peony mid, lavender & geranium edging

Clay Soil Border

AstrantiaHardy geranium HeleniumJapanese anemone
Conditions
Sun to part shade, heavy clay
Flowering
June to October
Maintenance
Low โ€” all four cope well with clay
Positioning
Helenium & anemone for height, astrantia & geranium at the front

Dry Sunny Border

LavenderLamb's ear Sea hollyRed valerian
Conditions
Full sun, free-draining or poor soil
Flowering
May to September
Maintenance
Low โ€” little watering once established
Positioning
Sea holly & valerian mid, lavender & lamb's ear at the front

Shade Border

FoxgloveHellebore PulmonariaAstrantia
Conditions
Part shade to shade, moisture-retentive soil
Flowering
January to August across the group
Maintenance
Low โ€” a gentle tidy in late winter
Positioning
Foxglove for height, hellebore, pulmonaria & astrantia layered to the front

Pollinator Border

LavenderVerbena bonariensis EchinaceaSedumCatmint
Conditions
Full sun, free-draining soil
Flowering
June to October
Maintenance
Low โ€” leave seedheads for winter wildlife
Positioning
Verbena tall & see-through, echinacea & sedum mid, lavender & catmint edging
Year-round care

UK cottage garden maintenance calendar

One simple job a month keeps a cottage garden looking its best. The current month is highlighted for you.

January Winter

Prune climbing roses while they're dormant.

February Winter

Cut back old perennial stems and seedheads.

March Spring

Mulch and feed borders as growth begins.

April Spring

Install plant supports before plants need them.

May Spring

Chelsea chop leggy perennials and start deadheading.

June Summer

Sow biennials such as foxgloves for next year.

July Summer

Deadhead regularly and water during dry spells.

August Summer

Collect ripe seed from favourite plants.

September Autumn

Divide congested perennials to make new plants.

October Autumn

Plant spring-flowering bulbs in borders and pots.

November Autumn

Plant tulips and tidy fallen leaves.

December Winter

Protect tender plants and plan next season.

Learn the easy way

Common cottage garden mistakes

Every gardener makes these at first. A little awareness now saves a lot of disappointment later.

!Too much bare soil

Cottage borders look best packed. Gaps invite weeds and look sparse โ€” plant generously.

!Forgetting supports

Tall plants flop without staking. Add supports early, before plants actually need them.

!Ignoring soil

Plants chosen to suit your soil thrive. Fighting your soil type rarely ends well.

!Only summer flowers

A one-season border looks bare for months. Plan colour across all four seasons.

!No evergreen structure

Without evergreens the garden disappears in winter. Add a few for year-round shape.

!Overcrowding

Abundance is the look, but plants set too close compete and suffer. Respect mature spread.

!High-maintenance plants

Fussy plants overwhelm beginners. Start with reliable, low-care choices and build up.

!Ignoring mature size

That small pot becomes a 2m shrub. Always check final height and spread before planting.

!Toxicity oversight

Some favourites are toxic. Check before planting near children, pets or vegetables.

!Poor flowering succession

Everything blooming at once leaves long gaps. Stagger plants for continuous colour.

Curated kits

Helpful kits for cottage gardeners

Grouped suggestions to get started, organised by job. These are optional โ€” every tool here can be borrowed, bought second-hand or added over time.

The links in this section are paid affiliate links. If you buy through them we may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. We only suggest genuinely useful items.

Beginner Tool Kit

  • Hand trowel & hand fork
  • Secateurs
  • Gardening gloves
  • Watering can
Shop the kit

Soil Preparation Essentials

  • Garden compost
  • Well-rotted manure
  • Soil conditioner
  • Horticultural grit
Shop the kit

Bulb Planting Kit

  • Bulb planter tool
  • Spring & autumn bulbs
  • Plant labels
  • Kneeling pad
Shop the kit

Pollinator Extras

  • Nectar-rich plug plants
  • Bee house
  • Wildflower seed mix
  • Shallow water dish
Shop the kit

Tall Plant Support Kit

  • Link stakes
  • Plant support rings
  • Jute twine
  • Metal obelisk
Shop the kit
Coming soon

Printable Cottage Garden Planner

We are preparing a printable Cottage Garden Starter Kit with planting grids, worksheets, schedules and border planners for gardeners who prefer planning on paper.

Coming Soon on Etsy
The small print

Disclosures & disclaimers

Affiliate disclosure

Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you buy through them, PlantMapper may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This never affects which products we suggest.

Gardening disclaimer

All planting advice is general guidance for UK gardens. Results vary with local climate, soil and aspect โ€” always confirm a plant's suitability for your conditions.

Plant toxicity disclaimer

Several cottage plants are toxic if eaten or can irritate skin. Check each plant before growing it near children, pets or food crops, and wear gloves when handling.