10 Ultimate Deer-Proof Plants for Your Garden

One benefit of living in a deer filled area is I have been able to experiment.

There are plenty of websites out there claiming that plants like marigolds are completely deer resistant; well our deer seem to find them quite delectable.

Here is a list of 10 deer-resistant plants that I have never had to use deer repellent on and have never had a deer take a sample.

Yellow Swallowtail Butterfly on a Butterfly Bush.

Butterfly Bush

Buddleia davidii

This would be my number one favorite. Super low maintenance long bloom time and it attracts butterflies as well as other interesting insects.

All you have to do is cut it back in February or March. That's really it. If you'd like to you can cut off spent blooms, but you don't have to.

Full Sun

Zones 5-10

A large ornamental grass surrounded by russian sage, foxgloves,lamb's ear, common sage, black-eyed susans, and raspberries.

Ornamental  Grass

The great thing about ornamental grass is it provides you with some winter interest.

Leave it up until early spring, then cut it to the ground and it will flush our with new growth.

Full Sun to Part Shade

Zones vary depending on variety

Close up of lamb's ear.

Lambs Ear

Stachys byzantina

This is a great ground cover. It self-sows readily, but its seedlings are easy to pull out if you don't want them.

It should be cut back two or three times a year or  it smothers itself. But if that happens it's no biggie. Just let some of those self-sown seedlings grow and they will be adults in no time.

Full Sun to Shade

Zones 4-9

Russian Sage surrounded by ornamental grasses, sedum, lamb's ear, echinacea, liatris, black-eyed susans, and elephant ear.

Russian Sage

Salvia yangii

If you want it to have an upright habit and bush out nicely, I recommend cutting it back twice. Once in early spring and then again in late spring. You could also choose a cultivar that has more of an upright habit.

Full Sun

Zones 4-9

Anise Hyssop with two bumble bees surrounded by a butterfly bush, cleome, a butternut squash plant, echinacea, and a Siberian Iris.

Anise Hyssop

Agastache foeniculum

If you like fennel tea, you should grow this herb.

This can be an aggressive re-seeder. When cutting back spent blooms I recommend not putting them in the compost pile. I bag them for the town to take away and compost.

Full to part sun

Zones 4-9

Spotted Bee Balm with Echinacea in the background.

Bee Balm

Monarda

You have two choices with Bee Balm. Plant the classic variety and get a ton of gorgeous blooms and tall stature, along with the eventual powdery mildew, or you can get a cultivar that is powdery mildew resistant with way less bloom time. I choose the latter because the powdery mildew is not something I look forward to.

Full Sun

Zones 3-9

Millenium Allium with Echinacea in the background and Lavender in the foreground.

Allium

There are two basic kinds of allium for the flower bed. There are the bulbs you plant in the fall that bloom in late spring or early summer, and then there are the clumping allium that bloom in Midsummer. I have them both and I love them.

Lavender with ornamental grass and lamb's ear in the background.

Lavender

Lavandula

Who doesn't love lavender? It smells amazing, repels moths and other pests, has medicinal qualities, and you can even put it in your lemonade and cookies.

A cut-back after blooming encourages the next set of flowers. I like to give mine a hard prune in early spring when I start seeing new growth coming in to avoid it getting too woody.

Full Sun

Thyme surrounded by a hellebore, rudbeckia, sedum, a concrete sidewalk and a blacktop driveway.

Thyme

Thymus vulgaris

This is a great one for the edge of a sidewalk or in between pavers. I like to grow it close to the door so I can cut off a clump for cooking conveniently. Cut it back hard in early spring.

Full Sun

Zones 5-9

A pink hardy perennial salvia.

Hardy Salvia

Salvia officinalis

These need to cut back a couple of times a year. One hard cut back in early spring, and then after its first flush of blooms has petered out, you can cut it back for another set of blooms.

Full Sun

Zones 4-8

This is a good starting point for a deer-resistant garden. There are quite a few more plants to choose from but these are all easy to find.

When a plant claims to be deer resistant I give it a try. That's really the only way to learn for sure, because everyone's deer seem to have different tastes!

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