Berberis Hedge Plants & Shrubs
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Buy Potted Berberis Hedging Now For October Del...
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We take great care in delivering healthy trees to your doorstep. Each order is hand-picked, carefully packaged, and shipped using trusted couriers to ensure safe arrival.
All trees are shipped in eco-friendly recyclable packaging. Roots are securely wrapped to retain moisture during transit, keeping your tree healthy and ready for planting.
We currently deliver across the UK mainland. Unfortunately, we cannot deliver to Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man, or the Channel Islands due to plant health regulations.
Once your order has been dispatched, you will receive a tracking link by email so you can follow your tree’s journey from our nursery to your garden.
If you require delivery on a specific date (e.g., birthday gift, landscaping project), please add a note at checkout and we’ll do our best to accommodate.
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1 Year Bareroot GuaranteeBerberis Hedge Plants & Shrubs
Delivered Direct from Our Nursery
Buy Potted Berberis Hedging Now For October Del...
Berberis Hedge Plants & Shrubs
Delivered Direct from Our Nursery
Buy Potted Berberis Hedging Now For October Delivery
Pre-Order Bareroot Berberis Plants For 2025/26 Winter Planting Season
Berberis or Barberry are dense, low maintenance, small to medium-sized shrubs that make great intruder proof thorny hedges, with decent ornamental value. They clip well into formal shapes.
They can be deciduous or evergreen, and will grow in any well-drained soil with a modest amount of sun.
The planting density for your hedge depends on the purpose:
Most of our Berberis comes in only one or two sizes. Where there is a choice:
Smaller plants are cheaper, easier to plant, and tend to establish better because they are dug up with most of their roots intact.
You can also clip them attentively and ensure a very bushy plant from the base up.
Your mail order Berberis hedge plants are delivered by next working day courier.
If there is anything wrong with your plants when they arrive, Contact Us within 5 working days, and our friendly support team will sort it out.
All bareroot plants are covered by our Refund Guarantee, so you can give them a whirl with complete confidence.
Browse our full range of Hedging Plants, or have a look at our Ornamental Shrubs.
Best Berberis for boundary hedging: Berberis thunbergii, both Green and Purple, and Berberis julianae have the prickliest thorns. Berberis julianae and Berberis darwinii will grow the tallest, reaching up to 3-4m.
Best Berberis for colourful flowers: Berberis darwinii has vivid yellow-orange flowers, which mature into deep blue berries.
Best Berberis for Autumn colour: All the Berberis thunbergii varieties have good autumn foliage.
Best Berberis for mixed borders: Berberis 'Chocolate Summer' is a semi-dwarf variety that grows to under 1.5m, perfect for the back or middle of a flower bed.
You can grow a Berberis hedge in any well drained soil, including chalk, poor soils, and heavy clay as long as it is not waterlogged in Winter.
Berberis is very hardy, pollution tolerant, wind-resistant, and suitable for the coast.
Berberis plants are moderately vigorous, growing at 30-40cm per year, depending on your location (plants generally grow faster in the warmer South & West than in the cooler East & North of Great Britain) and your local conditions (wind-shelter and full sun are ideal).
You can plant Berberis hedging at any time of year, except when the soil is frozen.
The best time to plant Berberis is in winter (November to March), using bareroot stock, which is cheaper, easier to carry and plant, and tends to establish even better than the pot grown equivalents.
Watch our video on planting a formal hedge (it demonstrates beech, but it's the same for all formal hedging whether pot-grown or bareroot).
We always recommend using Rootgrow friendly fungi, especially if your soil is poor.
Water well after planting, and consistently during the first summer. A porous hose will make the job easier.
Keep the ground under your new hedge clear of weeds.
Remember: the two biggest causes of new hedges failing are drying out, and/or being choked by weeds.
New Berberis hedges only need very light trimming.
Only remove the leaf buds at the end of the stems, don't cut them back hard.
If you have a long row to do, there is no harm in using shears or a power trimmer and taking off about 1 inch from each stem.
Years 1 & 2: While your Berberis hedge is still establishing, it's best to trim it in winter. One light cut, just nipping off the ends of the new growth is all it needs.
You can trim your berberis hedge at any time without harming it.
One trim per year is sufficient to keep your hedge reasonably tidy. For the best flower display, trim in winter.
If you want a really tidy, formal hedge, trim again after flowering, although this will remove most of the berries.
The ideal shape for a normal hedge is slightly tapered, a bit like this but with less steep sides: / \ so that light can reach the lowest branches.
If your hedge runs east-west, its south facing side gets full sun and so could be vertical, like this: | \ where the left-hand edge represents the south facing side, and the north facing side is sloped as normal.
If you need to prune out a branch, it is ideal to do it in winter when the tree is dormant, but honestly anytime is fine.
By trimming your new Berberis hedge plants early and often, you force them to branch out.
The more side branches there are, the more leaves you get, and the nicer your hedge looks.
If you don't trim your Berberis hedging, it will become lanky and sparse, with long, arching, thorny stems attacking innocent passers-by!
By clipping the hedge, we maintain dense growth with lots of leaves down to the ground, with a shape that allows light to the lowest branches.
An overgrown or sparse old Berberis hedge that needs serious remedial pruning is best done in winter, when the plants are dormant.
This will ensure the most vigorous regrowth the following year.
However, an established Berberis is very tough, and you could hard prune it at any time without hurting it, as long as you water in dry weather if you hard prune it in summer.
Simply cut the whole thing down with loppers to stumps about 30cm high.
Remove dead wood, and for bonus points you could cut the oldest, thickest stems right down to ground level, especially in the centre, but that is optional.
If the soil is dry, water well, then mulch around the base to cover the bare soil.
For the first couple of years afterwards, trim the new growth only once a year in winter to tidy and encourage bushiness.
