By the HMNDP Editorial Team | Last reviewed: June 2026
The 27 tall perennial flowers at a glance
Tall perennial flowers are hardy plants that reach 3 to 10 feet, come back every year, and anchor the back of a border or screen a view. The best-known picks are Agapanthus, allium, Baptisia, yarrow, Amsonia, and Rudbeckia. The single table below gives mature height, spread, USDA zone, sun, and bloom months for all 27, so you can buy and place them without cross-referencing four websites.
This is the spec sheet the popular galleries leave out. Every row lists height and spread and zone and sun and bloom time in one place. Species marked “stake” in the last column tend to flop; the staking section below tells you exactly how to hold them up.
| # | Plant (botanical) | Mature height | Spread | USDA zone | Sun | Bloom months | Bloom color | Support |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hollyhock (Alcea rosea) | 6-8 ft | 1-2 ft | 3-8 | Full sun | Jun-Aug | Pink, red, white, near-black | Stake |
| 2 | Joe Pye weed (Eutrochium) | 4-7 ft (to 10) | 2-4 ft | 3-9 | Full to part sun | Jul-Sep | Mauve, dusty pink | No |
| 3 | Giant allium (Allium giganteum) | 3-6 ft | 1 ft | 4-8 | Full sun | May-Jun | Lilac-purple globes | No |
| 4 | Delphinium (Delphinium elatum) | 4-6 ft | 1-2 ft | 3-7 | Full sun | Jun-Jul | Blue, purple, white | Stake |
| 5 | Cutleaf coneflower (Rudbeckia laciniata ‘Autumn Sun’) | 5-6 ft | 3-4 ft | 4-9 | Sun to light shade | Jul-Sep | Golden yellow | No |
| 6 | Culver’s root (Veronicastrum virginicum) | 4-6 ft | 2-4 ft | 3-8 | Full to part sun | Jul-Aug | White, pale pink | No |
| 7 | Snakeroot / bugbane (Actaea, syn. Cimicifuga) | 4-6 ft | 2-4 ft | 3-8 | Part to full shade | Aug-Sep | White bottlebrush | No |
| 8 | Monkshood (Aconitum) | 3-6 ft | 1-2 ft | 3-7 | Part shade | Aug-Sep | Deep indigo-blue | Stake (tall types) |
| 9 | Helenium ‘Butterpat’ (Helenium autumnale) | 4-5 ft | 2 ft | 3-8 | Full sun | Jul-Sep | Yellow, copper, red | No |
| 10 | Baptisia / false indigo (Baptisia australis) | 3-4 ft | 3-4 ft | 3-9 | Full sun | May-Jun | Indigo-blue (also yellow, white) | No |
| 11 | Threadleaf bluestar (Amsonia hubrichtii) | 3 ft | 3 ft | 4-9 | Full to part sun | May | Powder-blue stars | No |
| 12 | Agapanthus (Agapanthus africanus) | 2-4 ft | 1-2 ft | 7-11 | Full sun | Jun-Aug | Blue, white globes | No |
| 13 | Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) | 3-5 ft | 1-2 ft | 4-8 | Part shade | Jun-Jul | Pink, purple, white spires | Stake (tall) |
| 14 | Bee balm (Monarda didyma) | 3-4 ft | 2-3 ft | 4-9 | Full to part sun | Jul-Aug | Red, pink, purple | No |
| 15 | Purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) | 3-4 ft | 1-2 ft | 3-9 | Full sun | Jun-Sep | Purple-pink, white | No |
| 16 | Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) | 2-3 ft | 2-3 ft | 3-9 | Full sun | Jun-Sep | Yellow, red, terracotta, white | No |
| 17 | Russian sage (Salvia yangii) | 3-5 ft | 2-4 ft | 4-9 | Full sun | Jul-Sep | Lavender-blue haze | No |
| 18 | Garden phlox (Phlox paniculata) | 3-4 ft | 2-3 ft | 4-8 | Full to part sun | Jul-Sep | Pink, magenta, white | No |
| 19 | Meadow rue (Thalictrum ‘Elin’) | 6-8 ft | 2-3 ft | 4-8 | Part shade | Jun-Jul | Lilac, cream | No |
| 20 | Ligularia ‘The Rocket’ (Ligularia stenocephala) | 4-6 ft | 2-3 ft | 4-8 | Part to full shade | Jul-Aug | Yellow spires | No |
| 21 | Goat’s beard (Aruncus dioicus) | 4-6 ft | 3-4 ft | 3-7 | Part shade | Jun-Jul | Creamy white plumes | No |
| 22 | Japanese anemone (Anemone hupehensis) | 3-4 ft | 2-3 ft | 4-8 | Part shade | Aug-Oct | Pink, white | No |
| 23 | Ironweed (Vernonia) | 5-7 ft | 2-3 ft | 4-9 | Full sun | Aug-Sep | Violet-purple | No |
| 24 | Hardy hibiscus (Hibiscus moscheutos) | 4-6 ft | 3-4 ft | 4-9 | Full sun | Jul-Sep | White, pink, red dinner-plates | No |
| 25 | Queen of the prairie (Filipendula rubra) | 4-7 ft | 3-4 ft | 3-8 | Full to part sun | Jun-Jul | Cotton-candy pink | No |
| 26 | Foxtail lily (Eremurus) | 4-8 ft | 1-2 ft | 5-8 | Full sun | May-Jun | Orange, yellow, white spires | Stake |
| 27 | Plume poppy (Macleaya cordata) | 6-8 ft | 3-4 ft (spreads) | 3-8 | Full to part sun | Jun-Aug | Cream plumes | No |
Heights are typical garden ranges for mature plants; a hollyhock in rich, moist soil can top 8 feet, while the same plant in lean dry soil may stall at 5. Zones follow the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023 revision).
Best tall perennial flowers for full sun
The best tall perennial flowers for full sun are hollyhock (6-8 ft), giant allium (3-6 ft), delphinium (4-6 ft), ironweed (5-7 ft), and hardy hibiscus (4-6 ft). All want at least 6 hours of direct light and reward it with dense, upright growth. Full-sun picks tend to stand straighter than shade plants, which stretch and lean toward light.
If you want structure that reads from across the yard, giant allium and foxtail lily give you clean vertical lines in late spring. For high-summer color, hardy hibiscus opens dinner-plate blooms up to 10 inches wide on 4-to-6-foot stems.
- Tallest full-sun pick: hollyhock, 6 to 8 feet, though it usually needs staking.
- Longest bloom: Echinacea and yarrow, June through September.
- Toughest / most drought-proof: Russian sage and yarrow, both fine in lean soil. Pair either with the right feeding routine from our guide to choosing garden fertilizer for drought conditions.
Tall perennials that bloom all summer long
Tall perennials that bloom all summer include purple coneflower (Echinacea, Jun-Sep), yarrow (Achillea, Jun-Sep), garden phlox (Jul-Sep), Russian sage (Jul-Sep), and Helenium (Jul-Sep). These carry color for 10 to 14 weeks, unlike one-shot spring bloomers such as allium, Baptisia, and Amsonia that flower for 2 to 4 weeks and then coast on foliage.
Match the plant to the job. A long bloomer earns a prime spot where you look every day. A short, spectacular bloomer like allium works best woven between long bloomers that cover for it after it fades.
| Bloom window | Plants | Weeks of color |
|---|---|---|
| All summer (long) | Echinacea, yarrow, garden phlox, Russian sage, Helenium, bee balm | 8-14 |
| Spring, one-shot | Allium, Baptisia, Amsonia, foxtail lily | 2-4 |
| Late summer / fall | Japanese anemone, monkshood, snakeroot, ironweed, Joe Pye weed | 4-8 |
Tall perennials for shade and partial shade
The best tall perennials for shade are snakeroot / bugbane (Actaea, 4-6 ft), monkshood (Aconitum, 3-6 ft), meadow rue (Thalictrum ‘Elin’, 6-8 ft), Ligularia ‘The Rocket’ (4-6 ft), goat’s beard (Aruncus, 4-6 ft), and Japanese anemone (3-4 ft). All bloom without direct midday sun and bring height to spots where sun-lovers would flop and stretch.
Shade plants generally need steady moisture. Ligularia wilts dramatically at midday if the soil dries, and goat’s beard resents drought. These pair well with the broad, low foliage of hostas and ferns, which hide their bare lower stems.
Monkshood is worth a caution: every part of Aconitum is toxic if eaten, so keep it away from vegetable beds and where small children graze. Foxglove (Digitalis) is also toxic and, while listed here for part shade, self-seeds freely.
Tall perennials for the back of a border
For the back of a border, choose plants 4 feet and taller with a sturdy, upright habit: Joe Pye weed (4-7 ft), cutleaf coneflower (5-6 ft), Culver’s root (4-6 ft), plume poppy (6-8 ft), and ironweed (5-7 ft). Back-of-border plants form the backdrop, so pick species that stand without heavy staking and hold their shape into fall.
The standard rule is to arrange a border in three depth tiers so nothing hides behind something taller. Our full HMNDP planting and design library covers bed layout in depth; the short version:
- Back tier (4-8 ft): Joe Pye weed, plume poppy, Culver’s root, meadow rue. Plant these first, against a fence or wall.
- Middle tier (2-4 ft): Echinacea, phlox, Russian sage, bee balm, yarrow.
- Front tier (under 2 ft): low edgers and grasses that hide bare ankles. See our guide to ornamental grasses for structure and movement for front and mid-border partners.
Set back-tier plants at least 18 to 24 inches from a fence so you can reach behind them to weed, deadhead, and stake.
Tall perennials for privacy and screening
For a seasonal privacy screen, the strongest perennials are Joe Pye weed (4-7 ft, fast), plume poppy (6-8 ft, spreads fast), ironweed (5-7 ft), Miscanthus grass (5-7 ft), and hollyhock (6-8 ft). Perennial screens die back to the ground each winter and regrow each spring, so they block views only from roughly May through October, unlike an evergreen hedge.
This is the design detail the galleries skip. A screen needs the right plant count and spacing, not just a tall species. Space for the plant’s mature spread so canopies knit into a solid wall by midsummer.
| Screening plant | Height | Spacing for solid screen | Speed to fill | Winter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joe Pye weed | 4-7 ft | 24-36 in apart | Fast (6 ft by midsummer) | Dies back |
| Plume poppy | 6-8 ft | 30-36 in (runs, contain it) | Fast, aggressive | Dies back |
| Ironweed | 5-7 ft | 24-30 in apart | Moderate | Dies back |
| Miscanthus grass | 5-7 ft | 30-36 in apart | Slow (2-3 seasons) | Stands tan through winter |
| Hollyhock | 6-8 ft | 18-24 in apart | Fast but short-lived | Dies back |
If you want any structure in the cold months, ornamental grasses like Miscanthus are the only option here that stays standing; the tan plumes hold through winter and are cut back in early spring. Joe Pye weed fills the fastest, easily 4 feet by early summer and 6 feet by midsummer, which makes it the go-to for a one-season screen.
How tall a perennial must be to block a view or fence
To screen a standard 6-foot privacy fence, choose perennials that reach 6 to 8 feet at maturity so blooms clear the fence top. To block a seated sightline (a patio or deck view), 4 to 5 feet is enough. Measure from the eye level you want to hide: a seated adult’s eyes sit about 4 feet up, a standing adult’s about 5 to 5.5 feet.
Because perennials take a few weeks each spring to reach full height, a screen is thinnest in April and May. If you need year-round or instant height, combine perennials with a shrub or an evergreen backbone and let the perennials fill the gaps in front.
Do tall perennials need staking, and how to do it
Some tall perennials need staking and some do not. Plants with hollow or brittle stems and top-heavy blooms flop: hollyhock, delphinium, tall foxglove, foxtail lily, and tall monkshood almost always need support. Sturdy-stemmed prairie natives such as Baptisia, ironweed, Culver’s root, and Joe Pye weed usually stand on their own.
Delphinium is the classic offender. Its hollow stems get top-heavy in bloom, and a single heavy rain or even a pollinator landing can snap a spike. Stake before the plant gets tall, not after it has flopped.
- Install support early. Put stakes or grow-through rings in place in spring, before plants pass 12 to 18 inches. The plant grows up through the support and hides it.
- Match the method to the plant. Use a single bamboo or steel stake per spike for delphinium and foxtail lily; use a round grow-through ring or a peony hoop for bushy, multi-stem plants like phlox and Helenium.
- Drive stakes deep. Sink each stake at least 12 inches into the soil so it resists wind. Place it within a couple of inches of the stem base.
- Tie loosely with soft material. Use jute twine or plant tape in a figure-eight between stem and stake so the stem can flex without being cut.
Two no-stake tricks reduce flopping without hardware. Cut sun-loving clumps like Helenium, bee balm, and phlox back by one-third in late spring (the “Chelsea chop”) to make them shorter and bushier. And avoid over-feeding with high-nitrogen fertilizer, which pushes soft, floppy growth.
Statement plants for vertical structure
For pure vertical drama, the strongest statement perennials are foxtail lily (4-8 ft torch spires), delphinium (4-6 ft blue columns), giant allium (3-6 ft purple globes on bare stems), and Culver’s root (4-6 ft white candelabra). These give a garden its skyline: strong lines that draw the eye up and frame everything shorter around them.
Use vertical statement plants sparingly, in odd-numbered groups of three or five, spaced so each spire reads on its own. A single giant allium looks accidental; a cluster of five reads as a deliberate design moment. For fine, airy vertical texture that never needs staking, native low bloomers such as those in our plant identification and care guides pair well at the base of these giants.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best tall perennial flowers for full sun?
The best tall perennial flowers for full sun are hollyhock (6-8 ft), giant allium (3-6 ft), delphinium (4-6 ft), ironweed (5-7 ft), hardy hibiscus (4-6 ft), and Russian sage (3-5 ft). All need at least 6 hours of direct light daily. Russian sage and yarrow tolerate lean, dry soil best, while hardy hibiscus and delphinium prefer richer, moist ground.
Which tall perennials bloom all summer long?
Purple coneflower (Echinacea), yarrow (Achillea), garden phlox, Russian sage, Helenium, and bee balm bloom from roughly June or July through September, giving 8 to 14 weeks of color. By contrast, allium, Baptisia, and Amsonia are spring one-shot bloomers lasting only 2 to 4 weeks. Weave the short bloomers among long bloomers so the bed never looks bare.
What tall perennials work best for privacy screening?
Joe Pye weed (4-7 ft), plume poppy (6-8 ft), ironweed (5-7 ft), Miscanthus grass (5-7 ft), and hollyhock (6-8 ft) make the best perennial screens. Joe Pye weed fills fastest, reaching 6 feet by midsummer. Note that all perennial screens die back in winter except ornamental grasses, whose tan plumes stand until you cut them in spring.
What are the tallest perennial flowers for the back of a border?
The tallest reliable back-of-border perennials are plume poppy (6-8 ft), meadow rue ‘Elin’ (6-8 ft), hollyhock (6-8 ft), Joe Pye weed (up to 7 ft), and ironweed (5-7 ft). Place plants 4 feet and taller at the back, set 18 to 24 inches off a fence so you can reach behind to weed, deadhead, and stake.
How tall do perennials need to be to block a view or fence?
To screen a standard 6-foot privacy fence, use perennials that reach 6 to 8 feet at maturity. To block a seated sightline from a patio or deck, 4 to 5 feet is enough, since a seated adult’s eye level sits about 4 feet up. Perennial screens are thinnest in April and May before plants reach full height.
Do tall perennials need staking to keep from falling over?
Some do. Hollyhock, delphinium, tall foxglove, and foxtail lily have hollow or brittle stems and usually need staking. Sturdy prairie natives like Baptisia, ironweed, Culver’s root, and Joe Pye weed stand on their own. Install supports in spring before plants reach 18 inches, and cut bushy sun-lovers back by a third in late spring to reduce flopping.
How far apart should I space tall perennials for a privacy screen?
Space most screening perennials 24 to 36 inches apart so mature canopies knit into a solid wall by midsummer. Joe Pye weed and ironweed do well at 24 to 30 inches; Miscanthus grass and plume poppy need 30 to 36 inches for their wider spread. Hollyhock, being narrow, can go 18 to 24 inches apart in a tight row.
What tall perennials grow well in shade or partial shade?
Snakeroot / bugbane (Actaea, 4-6 ft), monkshood (Aconitum, 3-6 ft), meadow rue (6-8 ft), Ligularia ‘The Rocket’ (4-6 ft), goat’s beard (4-6 ft), and Japanese anemone (3-4 ft) all thrive in part to full shade. Most need steady moisture; Ligularia wilts at midday if soil dries. Keep toxic monkshood and foxglove away from vegetable beds and children.