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Holly Crossley

Best fall plants for privacy – 11 beautiful choices for seasonal garden screening

Best fall plants for privacy.

When creating the perfect outdoor space to enjoy, it's important to incorporate some garden screening to maintain privacy in your yard. This can look different throughout the year, with different seasonal plants stepping in to offer coverage.

From garden shrubs and perennial flowers to vibrant, compact trees, there's a natural garden privacy solution for every type of plot. For fall, there are many beautiful choices of plants for privacy that will also add color, texture and even wildlife benefits to a backyard.

Here, we've compiled some of the best fall plants for privacy so you can create a stunning backdrop for your yard while it's still warm enough to spend some time outdoors.

(Image credit: Getty Images/ photo by Bill Koplitz )

11 stunning fall plants for privacy

Update your fall garden with plants that both add to your fall palette and offer privacy from others. Some of these plants will also wow into winter, so you can enjoy their color and foliage for longer.

1. Chokeberry

Chokeberries attract birds to backyards (Image credit: Jari Juntunen / Alamy Stock Photo)

Chokeberry bushes, also known as Aronia arbutifolia, can be used to create a tall, deciduous privacy hedge. In spring, their pretty white flowers will attract pollinators, while the berries that follow are great for birds. These fall shrubs for privacy look stunning when the foliage turns a fiery red, turning it into a seasonal spectacle.

These resilient shrubs can be planted in either full sun or partial shade, and should be pruned when they're dormant.

You can buy chokeberry bushes from Nature Hills.

2. Miscanthus

Miscanthus is a well-loved ornamental grass (Image credit: Tim Gainey / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Height: 3-10ft
  • Spread: 2-6ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 4-9
  • Best for: Modern schemes

Miscanthus, a type of ornamental grass for privacy, is a lovely choice for surrounding a fall patio. Cultivars provide height, movement, and texture, and are particularly well-suited to modern backyards and prairie-style planting.

'Miscanthus is easy to grow and looks amazing in fall with fluffy seed heads. It grows tall and dense, giving you great coverage while swaying gently in the breeze,' says Marek Bowers, landscape design expert and founder of Bolder Green.

Try 'Silver Feather', from Nature Hills, which, as its name suggests, has silvery, feathery plumes. Meanwhile, 'Fire Dragon' (also from Nature Hills) turns orange and red in the fall. Plant them in full sun in well-draining soil to help them thrive.

Rather than cutting back dying foliage, leave it to stand to develop a reflective, light-brown hue to cheer the winter garden. In early spring, you can then cut miscanthus back, leaving around four inches above ground.

3. Japanese anemone

These pretty bloomers are perfect for perennial borders or large pots (Image credit: I love Photo and Apple. / Moment / Getty Images)
  • Height: 2-4ft
  • Spread: 1-3ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 5-8
  • Best for: Late-season flowers

Japanese anemones bring a profusion of neat, pink-or-white flowers with yellow centers to the late summer and fall garden, atop long stems. Planted en masse, they are effective at creating a light screen around a seating area – and they can be planted in containers to give them extra height.

As robust herbaceous perennials that die back to ground level in winter, there's no need to prune your Japanese anemones. Grow them in well-drained but moisture-retentive soil, ideally in partial shade, for the best results and returning blooms in summer.

Try 'Curtain Call Deep Rose', from Nature Hills, for rich pink blooms.

4. Acer

Add a vibrant pop of color to your space (Image credit: Tim Gainey / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Height: 4-25ft
  • Spread: 4-25ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 5-9 (depending on variety)
  • Best for: Colorful trees

One of the best trees for fall color, the more compact varieties of acer are ideal for adding privacy to a patio, whether planted in a nearby border or in a strategically placed pot.

'Maple leaves turn vibrant reds and oranges, which not only give you privacy but also make your yard look stunning,' says Marek.

'Red Dragon', available from Fast Growing Trees, is a beautiful choice that grows up to 12 feet once mature. In the fall, it creates a dense canopy of feathery, crimson foliage. Plus, it's disease-resistant.

5. Sunflower

Try growing a screen of these beauties (Image credit: Anne Gilbert / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Height: 3-12ft
  • Spread: 1-3ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 2-11
  • Best for: Tall flowers

Another pretty flower that lasts well into fall, sunflowers can be planted in a row to create a tall screen.

We think a packet of 'Velvet Queen' is ideal for creating a screen marking the boundary of a vegetable garden. The deep crimson and burnt orange tones are a delight amongst other autumnal hues. 'Chocolate Cherry' sunflowers, from Burpee, have a similar appearance and grow up to seven feet tall.

Once the blooms have faded, you can harvest sunflower seeds of these annuals to grow more next year, or leave them for the birds to enjoy.

6. Katsura tree

If you're looking for something taller, opt for these elegant trees (Image credit: John Richmond / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Height: 40-60ft
  • Spread: 20-30ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 4-8
  • Best for: Fragrant foliage

Once mature, Cercidiphyllum japonicum, or the katsura tree, will provide both privacy and is one of the best trees for shade to add your outdoor living space.

It has heart-shaped foliage which turns a beautiful spectrum of fiery hues in the fall. Not only this, but these leaves also omit a fragrance similar to caramel throughout the season.

These wide-spreading, disease-resistant, deciduous trees thrive in full sun or partial shade, in well-draining soil, and benefit from mulching.

7. Beautyberry

It's no wonder these shrubs are known as beautyberry (Image credit: Jacky Parker Photography / Moment / Getty Images)
  • Height: 3-6ft
  • Spread: 4-6ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 6-10
  • Best for: Colorful berries

These gorgeous shrubs are well-loved for their clusters of jewel-like berries produced in the fall. These often hold on throughout winter as one of the best shrubs with winter berries, even when the leaves have dropped, attracting birds.

'In its maturity, the bush can rise up to three-to-five feet tall, the ideal size for hedging to provide privacy,' says Melvin Cubian from Plantin. 'Additionally, with the elegantly crisscrossing and bending branches, this plant will provide another interesting focal point to the backyard,' he adds.

They are disease, pest, and deer resistant, and – as a bonus – are also known as a mosquito-repellent plant. They can be planted in containers or in the ground to create a natural screen.

'It’s super low-maintenance,' notes Marek. Beautyberry prefers to grow in slightly acidic soil and it's wise to regularly prune this plant to keep it shapely.

8. Camellia

Camellias produce large, blousy blooms in shades of pink, red, yellow, and white (Image credit: BIOSPHOTO / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Height: 4-15ft
  • Spread: 6-10ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 7-9
  • Best for: Large, fall flowers

For privacy year-round, opt for an evergreen shrub. And if you want flowers throughout the colder months, too, then camellia is the perfect choice.

Some types of camellia, such as Camellia sasanqua 'Yuletide', available from Nature Hills, produce their large, showy blooms from fall onwards, amongst dark, glossy foliage.

They like acidic soil and a sheltered spot that isn't too sunny, and should be watered using harvested rainwater during periods of drought. There are a few camellia problems you might come across, like common pests and yellowing foliage, but they can be resolved easily.

9. Fothergilla

These shrubs have glorious fall foliage (Image credit: Chris Sansom / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Height: 2-6ft
  • Spread: 2-5ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 5-10 (depending on variety)
  • Best for: Pollinator-friendly spring flowers

Fothergilla displays brilliant orange, red, and yellow fall foliage. In the spring, these shrubs' fragrant flowers are among plants for pollinators, adding another layer of beauty to your garden.

'In its flowering, which happens in spring, enjoy its brush-like flowers that crown at the tip of each arching branch - a wonderful snack for bees and butterflies,' says Melvin. 'In the fall, the leaves turn yellow, red, and burgundy, which matches well with other plants in the fall landscape,' he adds.

While some are more compact, 'Mount Airy' fothergilla from Nature Hills can reach heights of six feet, making it a useful shrub for creating privacy. This plant thrives in acidic soil and benefits from mulching to consrve moisture.

10. Blue Mist Spirea

Blue beard flowers are a magnet for bees (Image credit: Steffen Hauser / botanikfoto / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Height: 2-4ft
  • Spread: 2-4ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 5-9
  • Best for: Container flowers

Blue mist spirea (Caryopteris x clandonensis) is a compact shrub that offers striking blue flowers in late summer and early fall, attracting butterflies and bees. It's also known as blue beard.

Some cultivars reach up to three feet or more in height, such as 'Dark Knight' from Nature Hills. This makes them a good low-hedge option for privacy. Like Japanese anemones, they can also be planted in raised containers for extra height to screen a seating space.

It's a relatively low-maintenance plant, requiring well-drained soil and occasional pruning to shape it.

11. Forsythia

(Image credit: thrillerfillerspiller via Alamy)
  • Height: 2-6ft
  • Spread: 2-6ft
  • Hardiness: USDA 4-9
  • Best for: Colorful hedging plant

Forsythia is loved for the bright yellow blooms it shows off in spring, but it also makes a great contender for a fall privacy plant. After enjoying its blooms, watch the foliage of forsythia turn red, orange, and even purple in fall.

'If you fancy colorful hues for your view-blocking living barriers, forsythia should be on your top list. Its slender branches can dramatically arch, providing another sense of garden aesthetics,' says Melvin.

It grows in various soil types, thriving best in a sunny position, and you should make sure to prune forsythia after it finishes blooming to encourage it to remain compact and bushy through summer and fall. Something to note, however, is that after providing good screening in fall, forsythia will lose its leaves in winter.

If you love this plant for its yellow flowers, you'll enjoy 'Meadowlark' (from Nature Hills) for its fall foliage that is also a yellow and often purple.

FAQs

What are the best fall privacy plants for pots?

Large containers filled with lofty plants are an effective solution for creating privacy in a smaller space. A compact variety of acer, for instance, makes a striking addition to a fall patio. Tall and hardy evergreen herbs, such as rosemary or bay, are other good choices and are useful in the kitchen, too.

What are the best fall privacy plants for shade?

As well as beautyberry, Japanese anemones, and acers, try oakleaf hydrangeas which have colorful fall foliage. Many evergreen shrubs also do well in less sunny spots, including holly, box, and varieties of viburnum.


Many of these can be planted together for a truly stunning display that spans different heights. And if you want to maintain a sense of garden privacy throughout the winter – when many of the plants will drop their leaves – consider planting an evergreen hedge behind them. Alternatively, you could install a sturdy fence or wall, perhaps adorned with a fast-growing climbing plant to create a living fence.

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