With a chill in the air, it’s time to think about fall flowers for pots. Nothing is more exciting than the harvest season. Deep, rich colors share a warmth as nights get cooler, wind is more refreshing, and temperatures fluctuate unpredictably.
Our favorite spring and summer blooms are past their prime. It’s time for tougher, more durable fall flowers for pots. More tolerant of colder weather and wilder winds, below are fantastic fall flowers to liven up your pots.
Refreshing or replanting pots in fall is a wonderful way to decorate for the harvest season. Fall flowers in pots are gorgeous alongside pumpkins and gourds, dried flowers and grasses, and all your creative harvest-themed décor.
Key Takeaways
- Fall flowers for pots can handle cooler temperatures, some even thrive with frost.
- To celebrate the harvest season, fall flowers have warm, rich colors.
- When spring and summer blooms are past their prime, pop fall flowers in your pots for extravagant shine.
- Wonderful companions in your harvest-themed décor, fall flowers are gorgeous combined with pumpkins, squash, and dried grasses.
- Durable foliage and long-lasting blossoms, fall flowers tolerate wilder weather, wind, and fluctuating temperatures.
12 Extravagant Fall Flowers to Refresh Your Pots and Containers
1. Petunia (Petunia)
Petunias in containers look fantastic in fall. This makes them an excellent addition to the fall container garden. As tough summer annuals, petunias don’t show stress until severe cold weather. Also, flower variations make designing with petunias a blast! Seemingly limitless options are available such as smooth, ruffled, solid, striped, veined, speckled, single, and double flowers.
Find rich, harvest-inspired colors of Petunias to best enhance the fall display. Petunias also partner well with other frost-forgiving summer beauties that tough out cooler temps. There is an extensive group of annuals and perennials that provide their best show way past Labor Day. Our top contenders are below, but noteworthy contenders are Snapdragon, Alyssum, Dianthus, Calendula, and Salvia.
2. Million Bells (Calibrachoa)
This easy plant breezes through summer overflowing with abundant single or double mini-petunia-like blooms well into fall. The well-named Million Bells come in an unbelievable spectrum of colors. Hardy in USDA zones 9 to 11, Million Bells are available in many autumn-inspired shades of bronze, orange, magenta, and purple. Extraordinarily useful as a fall flower for pots, Million Bells overflow, mound, and spill, creating an incredible show when stuffed in fall pots and containers.
A fabulous feature of Million Bells is that they are self-cleaning. This means you can skip the task of deadheading and Million Bells will keep on blooming. Interestingly, self-cleaning petunia varieties are also available. This is because they are petunias crossed with calibrachoa for their self-cleaning habit.
3. Dusty Miller (Jacobaea maritima)
The snowflake-inspired foliage of Dusty Miller brings colorful harvest hues and rich autumn tones to life. For fabulous textural interest, Dusty Miller comes in variations of deeply scalloped leaves to nearly fern-like lace leaves. The naturally frosted silvery gray of the foliage provides an excellent contrast for many fall flowers. A wonderful companion plant in pots, Dusty Miller holds its best color when grown in full sun.
Tolerating frigid fall temperatures, this popular bedding plant is hardy in USDA zones 8 to 11. Depending on the variety, Dusty Miller grows 6 to 18 inches tall.
4. Ornamental Sedge (Carex)
With contrasting colors and striking variegated leaves, ornamental sedges are cool-season grass-like plants that create wonderful texture in pots. Study narrow leaves are graceful and arching to compliment bold upright or cascading fall bloomers.
Many Carex varieties stay small, 10 to 12 inches, making them perfect for pots, planters, and hanging baskets. Carex are sturdy plants that hold up in inclement weather. They look fantastic draped in frost.
Two North American native varieties to consider are Foothill sedge (Carex tumulicola), and Pennsylvania Sedge (Carex pensylvanica). Both are structurally interesting, growing arching mopheads of 12 inches or more. For even deeper autumn color, Evergold Weeping Sedge (Carex oshimensis ‘Evergold’) has warm yellow variegation, and Bronzita Sedge (Carex comans) grows a bronze mound of narrow leaves.
5. Purple Fountain Grass (Pennisetum setaceum ‘Rubrum’)
Delightful in a fall container display, Purple Fountain Grass needs lots of room as they can reach 5 feet in height. This tender perennial is a favorite for pot and container gardens. The deep maroon arching grass forms huge burgundy feather-like plumes that are beautiful and graceful.
Purple fountain grass is hardy in zones 9 to 11 so will require a move indoors or winter protection. They are perfect alone or at the back or center of a pot or container. Their elegant seed heads are wonderful in dried flower arrangements.
6. Ornamental Cabbage and Kale (Brassica oleracea)
If you are looking for plants that are tough as nails and flourish in fall, Ornamental Cabbage And Kale literally weathers the storm. They thrive in frosty weather with impressive durability. And, with foliage so pretty it looks like its blooming, Ornamental Cabbage And Kale steals the show with their contrasting reds, purples, pinks, greens, creams, and whites. From frilly flamboyant foliage to sturdy striking spiky leaves, Ornamental Cabbage And Kale are fantastic fall flowers for pots.
Available in a wide range of shapes and sizes, Ornamental Cabbage And Kale can be long-stemmed, or stout, frilly, or deeply scalloped. Hardy in USDA zones 2 to 11, these resilient plants bring out the best of fall pots and containers. The strapping tough leaves glide through fall delivering deeper colors as the temperature drops, even below 5° F.
7. Swiss Chard (Beta vulgaris var cicla)
If autumn bites with temperatures below 40° F, Swill Chard can take the freeze with ease. You might not think of this vegetable for ornamental gardening, but it has colors so exquisite they could only be made by nature. Related to beets, Swiss chard boasts vibrant stems, leaves, and leaf veins.
The upright Swiss Chard leaves and stems seem to be lit from withing in striking shades of vibrant red, orange, purple, yellow, and white. It isn’t as sturdy as ornamental cabbage and kale, but with its illuminated foliage, Swiss Chard is a glorious option to plant with fall flowers. It is hardy in USDA zones 6 to 10. It grows 1 ½ to 2 feet tall.
8. Heather (Calluna or Erica)
An exceptionally tough plant, Heather is a great fall flower for pots. The scale- or needle-like leaves form texturally interesting mats. Heathers draw attention with late season flowering spikes smothered in white, pink, and purple flowers. To accentuate your fall display, there are stunning autumnal shades to choose from.
Hardy in USDA zones 3 to 10, this robust plant hails from frosty bogs and rugged mountains of Europe. It prefers damp, slightly acidic growing conditions. These lovely toughies may take your fall-inspired pots and containers through Thanksgiving and excitingly, convert perfectly into winter holiday décor.
9. Mums (Chrysanthemums)
To warm up any chilly fall day, use Mums’ assortment of rich bold colors that range from bronze, burgundy, reds, oranges, yellows, and golds. The long-celebrated harvest flower, Mums provide the blossoms we crave as we head into winter.
Rounding, mounding plants virtually smothered in fabulous Autumn blossoms, Mums are perfect in fall pots and containers. Mums are often planted as a show-stopping solo plant, to perfectly exhibit their masses of magnificent warm glowing flowers. They can also be grown right in the garden as many varieties are hardy in USDA zones 5 to 9.
10. Pansies (Viola)
Adorable and cheerful, Pansies take the doldrums out of any gloomy fall day with their perky, uplifting faces. Choose rich jewel tones in warm autumn colors for a sunny display of fall pots and containers. Easy to grow, pansies perform with ease. They truly prefer cool weather. A sure-fire mood lifter in the contemplative autumn, Pansies’ rich vibrant colors and bold design bring a smile to any dreary day.
The exceptionally perfect fall flower for pots, pansies prefer moist rich soil in zones 6 to 9 and thrive in colder weather. Pansies play well with others. They bring out the best of ornamental grasses, cabbage, kale, and foliage plants, and there are a ton of varieties, colors, and sizes to choose from.
11. Coleus (Coleus)
Coleus warms up the fall display with hot contrasting colors, unique eye-catching variegation, and lush velvety foliage. Available in a spectacular range of sizes. There are dwarf types which reach 6 to 10 inches tall, and large types that grow 2 to 3 feet with 6-inch leaves.
The color palette of coleus is perfect for fall. Coleus prefers warm temperatures above 60° F, so they may need protection from frost. But excitingly, Coleus grows surprisingly well indoors. So this plant performs double duty in fall pots that can move indoors to warm up your home for winter.
12. Ornamental Peppers (Capsicum annuum)
Striking Ornamental Peppers really come into their own in fall. Smooth green foliage accentuates the abundant colorful fruit which gives these fall flowers for pots a breathtaking exotic touch. They do best when grown in full sun. Spicy colored fruit heat up beautiful fall pots and containers with round and elongated peppers in yellows, reds, oranges, purples, blacks, and white.
Fabulous harvest shades on a backdrop of glossy green foliage, Ornamental Peppers are hardy in USDA zones 9 to 11. Though they won’t last through frost, this is a fantastic plant for fall pots in warmer climates.
[wp-faq-schema title=”Frequently Asked Questions About Fall flowers for Pots” accordion=1]12 Extravagant Fall Flowers to Energize Your Harvest Season Pots
Nothing is more exciting than the harvest season. Deep, rich colors share a warmth as nights get colder, wind is more refreshing, and temperatures fluctuate unpredictably. We need tougher, more durable fall flowers for pots. Refreshing or replanting pots in fall with your favorite fall flowers is a fantastic way to add to your harvest-themed décor.