Spacing Guide: Give Plants Room to Grow

It’s easy to plant trees and shrubs too close together—especially when they’re small.

But spacing matters. Giving plants enough room from the start leads to healthier growth and a better-looking landscape over time.


🌱 Think About Mature Size

Plants are often sold small, but they won’t stay that way.

  • Check the mature width of the plant
  • Space based on how wide it will grow—not how it looks today

Planting too close can lead to crowding, poor air flow, and uneven growth.


📏 General Spacing Guidelines

A simple rule:

  • Space plants about as far apart as their expected mature width

Examples:

  • A shrub that grows 6 feet wide → space about 6 feet apart
  • A tree with a 20-foot canopy → allow about 20 feet of space

For a fuller look, you can plant slightly closer—but expect some overlap over time.


🌿 Spacing From Buildings and Structures

Don’t forget to leave room around:

  • Houses and foundations
  • Fences
  • Walkways and driveways

Plants placed too close can outgrow their space and require pruning or removal later.


🌬️ Allow for Airflow

Proper spacing helps:

  • Reduce disease issues
  • Improve plant health
  • Maintain natural shape

Crowded plants compete for light, water, and space.


🌱 What Happens If Plants Are Too Close?

  • Growth may become uneven or stretched
  • Plants may need frequent pruning
  • Some may decline over time due to crowding

This often shows up a few years after planting.


🌿 Planning Tips

  • It’s okay if things look a little spaced out at first
  • You can use mulch or temporary plants to fill gaps
  • Think long-term—your landscape will grow into the space

🌿 Spacing for Hedges vs Natural Growth

Spacing depends on what you want your plants to do.


🌱 Natural Spacing (Individual Plants)

If you want each plant to grow to its natural shape:

  • Space plants based on their full mature width
  • This allows proper airflow and full development

This works best for:

  • Feature shrubs
  • Trees
  • Natural-looking landscapes

🌿 Hedge or Privacy Planting

If your goal is a screen, hedge, or privacy row:

  • You can plant closer than mature width
  • This encourages plants to grow together into a continuous row

A common approach:

  • Space plants at ½ to ¾ of their mature width

Example:

  • A shrub that grows 8 feet wide → space 4–6 feet apart for a hedge

This creates a fuller look sooner.


🌸 Plants That Naturally Spread (Like Lilacs)

Some plants expand over time by sending up new shoots from the base.

Examples include:

  • Lilacs
  • Some types of dogwood
  • Certain suckering shrubs

These plants will:

  • Gradually form wider clumps
  • Fill in space naturally over time
  • Create a more informal, natural hedge

Because of this:

  • You can space them a bit wider if you’re patient
  • Or plant closer for a faster privacy effect

🌿 Using Lilacs for Privacy

Lilacs can make an excellent informal hedge or screen.

  • For a looser, natural look: space farther apart and allow them to spread
  • For a denser hedge: plant closer together and let them grow into each other

Keep in mind:

  • Lilacs won’t form a tight, formal hedge
  • They create a seasonal screen (full in leaf, more open in winter)

🌿 Final Thought

There’s no single “correct” spacing—it depends on your goal. Give your plants the space they need now, and they’ll reward you with healthier growth and a more natural look over time.

  • Wider spacing = natural shape and less maintenance
  • Closer spacing = faster coverage and fuller appearance

Plan for how you want the space to look in a few years, not just how it looks today. A little patience early on leads to better results later.