Garden Flower Gardens 15 Orange Flowers That Add Vibrant Color to Your Garden These bold beauties are the ultimate yard accent. By Ann Hinga Klein Ann Hinga Klein Ann Hinga Klein covers breaking news for The New York Times and writes about people and the environment for a variety of national publications. In her more than 40 years of reporting, she has never met a topic she could not cover. She is currently focusing on the urgent issues of environment and soil health. Editorial Guidelines and Alexandra Kelly Alexandra Kelly Alex is the senior home editor for Martha Stewart. She has over 10 years of experience producing digital content in the home and lifestyle space, ranging from cleaning and organizing to etiquette and home design. Editorial Guidelines Updated on July 17, 2024 Close Photo: herreid / GETTY IMAGES If you love the color orange, consider adding a pop of it to your garden, where it can break up all-white beds or complement other bold brights like fuchsia and red. Orange flowers are also the ultimate yard accent: They command the eye, serve as a focal point for a part of your landscape you want to highlight, and provide a welcome contrast to the stretch of verdant, lush lawn you work hard to maintain. Adding orange flowers to your landscape doesn't just have aesthetic benefits. You'll also make a few pollinators happy in the process. Butterflies find orange among the most attractive hues in nature, according to the National Wildlife Federation. Ready to add a few of these statement bloomers to your space? Ahead, we spoke with experts to learn their favorite orange flowers for the garden. Douglas Conley, garden coordinator with the Matthaei Botanical Gardens at the University of Michigan Shannon Currey, horticulturist with Izel Native Plants 12 Green Flowers to Grow in Your Backyard 01 of 15 Burning Hearts Orthosie / GETTY IMAGES Heliopsis helianthoides var. scabra brightens almost any landscape—even in poor and clay soil—with cheery, two-toned blooms in orange and yellow. "It weaves in really well with other perennials," Currey says. "I love it in a mixed planting. And it has striking, almost burgundy-colored foliage, especially in cooler climates." Zones: 3 to 9Size: 3 to 4 feet tall x 12 to 18 inches wideGrowing conditions: Full sun; likes well-draining, dry to medium soil, but tolerates a wide range of soils and will tolerate drought Find Your Garden Zone Here 02 of 15 Indian Blanket kuarmungadd / GETTY IMAGES Fast-growing Gaillardia pulchella attracts bees, butterflies, and birds who feed on its seed heads. "It would be great along with the butterfly milkweed," Currey says. "Both like well-drained, rocky, or sandy soils." Consider it along a pathway with a sandy base, where it will thrive and reseed. Zones: 3 to 10Size: 1 to 3 feet tall x 1 to 2 feet wideGrowing conditions: Sun; well-draining soil 10 Fastest-Growing Plants to Add to Your Garden This Season 03 of 15 Butterfly Weed McKinneMike / GETTY IMAGES Buyers used to pass up Asclepias tuberosa in garden centers when it wasn't in bloom, Currey says. "But once the public realized it was such a pollinator powerhouse, it became popular. Now we can't grow enough," she says. More to love about this orange milkweed variety: It's easy to grow. While most people only associate it with monarch butterflies, which need it for egg laying and larvae support, this perennial feeds a wide range of other pollinators, too, including hummingbirds and bees. Zones: 3 to 9Size: 24 to 48 inches tall x 12 to 24 inches wideGrowing condition: Full sun; excellent drainage 16 Pollinator Plants That Will Attract Birds, Bees, and Butterflies to Your Garden 04 of 15 Coneflower "Prairie Glow" magicflute002 / GETTY IMAGES Also known as brown-eyed Susan (not to be confused with black-eyed Susan), Rudbeckia triloba blooms profusely. "This plant will do well in a lot of different kinds of situations," Currey says. "It'll take dry soils or moist soils, and it's also deer-resistant." And while each orange flower won't live more than four or five years, "Prairie Glow" will reseed on its own. "People get a little shy about short-lived perennials," she says. "But there are some fantastic ones that are well worth having. It's well worth replenishing them or allowing them to reseed." Zones: 4 to 8Size: 3 to 4 feet tall x 12 to 18 inches wideGrowing conditions: Full sun 05 of 15 Copper Iris EvaKaufman / GETTY IMAGES A parent plant to the more familiar Louisiana iris, Iris fulva has been gaining fans outside its original range in the Mississippi River Valley for its ability to thrive in saturated soil. "This is a beautiful iris," Currey says, adding that this late spring orange flower will give you a nice succession of blooms with other perennials that also love wet or moist soils, including New York ironweed (Vernonia noveboracensis), hardy hibiscus (Hibiscus moscheutos), and Joe Pye weed (Eutrochium). Zones: 5 to 9Size: 2 to 3 feet tall x 1 to 2 feet wideGrowing conditions: Full sun to part shade; fertile, consistently moist to wet soil 06 of 15 Orange Fringed Orchid GracedByTheLight / GETTY IMAGES Native to portions of Canada and the Eastern and Southern United States, Platanthera ciliaris loves peaty bogs and meadows. The orange flower blooms for about a month in late summer, producing clusters of delicate tangerine blossoms with whisker-like lower petals. If you have acidic soil and a boggy site—maybe a pond or stream—it's a fun option to try. "We're not all going to have the site conditions for this one, but it is pretty widespread from Ontario to Florida," says Conley. Zones: 4 to 9Size: 12 to 36 inches tall x 12 to24 inches wideGrowing conditions: Full to partial sun; peaty, boggy soil (adapts to drier soil as long as soil is damp during flowering) 07 of 15 Red Hot Poker "Pyromania Orange Blaze" Bandolinata / GETTY IMAGES For the juiciest shade of soda-pop orange you've ever seen, check out Kniphofia pyromania. With its soft, grass-like foliage, it would be a good companion to Liriope, with its similar foliage shape and cool, spiky lavender blooms, says Conley. Zone: 5 to 9Size: 24 to 30 inches tall x 18 to 24 inches wideGrowing conditions: Sun; almost any soil 08 of 15 Tiger Lily KenWiedemann / GETTY IMAGES Once a year, from mid- to late-summer, hundreds of gorgeous Lilium lancifolium plants bloom along a winding pergola near the Tenant House guest cottage on Martha's estate in Katonah, New York. Profuse bloomers, tiger lilies can produce as many as 10 flowers per stem. Conley is a fan of this hardy perennial, too. "We have one right outside our courtyard at the main entrance to the house that might be our most anticipated flower of the year," he says. Zones: 3 to 9Size: 3 to 5 tall x 7 to 8 inches wideGrowing conditions: Full to partial sun; moist, well-draining soil 09 of 15 Trumpet Honeysuckle sunti meechai / GETTY IMAGES Birds, bees, and hummingbirds love the coral-orange blooms of honeysuckle Lonireca sempervirens "Magnifica," Conley explains. A native honeysuckle, it can handle pruning but doesn't require it (unlike its invasive cousin, Lonicera Japonica). "If you've got a trellis or an arbor, you can tuck it in with a clematis and they'll cover different colors and blooming times," he says. Zones: 4 to 8Size: 4 to 7 feet tall x 4 feet wideGrowing conditions: Full sun to light shade; prefers moist, well-draining soil but can handle drought 10 of 15 Turk's Cap Lily aimintang / GETTY IMAGES Lilium superbum grows wild in the mountains of North Carolina, a few hours' drive from Currey's home in Durham. "It's very dramatic looking, almost like an Oriental or Asiatic lily, with multiple blooms hanging from upside down," she says. "It's almost like it's not real." In the home garden, Turk's Cap Lily creates an amazing focal point as well as a food source for pollinators. Zones: 5 to 8Size: 4 to 6 feet tall x 6 to 12 inches wideGrowing conditions: Full sun to part shade; well-draining medium to wet soil How to Create a Thriving Pollinator Garden 11 of 15 Orange Ballerina Tulip baphotte / getty Tulips come in a variety of colors, from pretty pinks to sunny yellows—but if you want something a little different, try the orange ballerina tulip (Tulipa "ballerina"). Their graceful shape mirrors that of a lily, with pointed petals that open beautifully. Zone: 3 to 7Size: 18 to 22 inches tallGrowing conditions: Full sun to part shade; well-draining, fertile soil How to Grow and Care for Tulips, the Low-Maintenance Spring Bloomer Every Gardener Should Plant 12 of 15 Orange King Zinnia Anton Nikitinskiy / getty Zinnias are a popular flower to grow in gardens and containers and for good reason. The pretty annuals are available in a variety of colors, including a vibrant orange. Choose the orange king zinnia (Zinnia elegans) for a pop of bright color amongst your reds, pinks, and whites. Zone: 2 to 12, grown as annualsSize: 2 to 3 feet tallGrowing conditions: Full sun; rich, well-draining soil How to Grow and Care for Zinnias, an Easy Flower That Blooms All Summer 13 of 15 Marigold schnuddel / getty Marigolds (Tagetes erecta) are a garden staple, acting as both a visually beautiful flower as well as an all-around companion plant to both vegetables and other flowers alike. Marigolds most often come in shades of yellow, orange, and red, providing a fiery spray of color. Zone: 2 to 11, grown as annualsSize: 6 to 12 inches tall x 6 to 9 inches wideGrowing conditions: Full sun; well-draining, loamy soil How to Plant and Care for Marigolds 14 of 15 Orange Nugget Dahlia Jonas Rönnbro / getty Dahlias are a stunning variety of flowers that bloom in late summer and through the fall. They come in a wide variety of colors and shapes, including the orange nugget (Dahlia "Orange Nugget"), a beautifully showy orange dahlia that will look stunning in your cut flower garden. Zone: 8 to 10; can be grown elsewhere as annualsSize: 25 to 30 inches tall x 4 inches wideGrowing conditions: Full sun to partial shade; moist, well-draining soil 15 of 15 Chrysanthemum Aubrey Orange IngaL / getty A staple of fall gardens, chrysanthemums come in outstanding jewel tones like deep burgundies, sunny yellows, deep purples, and of course, vibrant oranges, like chrysanthemum Aubrey orange (Chrysanthemum morifolium). You can plant chrysanthemums in your garden as a perennial border plant or in containers to decorate your front porch. Zone: 3 to 9Size: 18 to 24 inches tall and wideGrowing conditions: Full sun; well-drained soil How to Plant and Care for Mums—the Fall Showstoppers That Fill Gardens With Color Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit Sources Martha Stewart is committed to using high-quality, reputable sources—including peer-reviewed studies—to support the facts in our articles. Read about our editorial policies and standards to learn more about how we fact check our content for accuracy. Attracting butterflies - garden for wildlife. National Wildlife Federation.