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£269.99
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Red Oak Tree Leaves Mature Red Oak tree in summer
Red Oak Sapling Trees
Quercus rubra
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.12
Ripening Common Walnuts on the tree
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £4.44
Goat Willow Trees in Spring Goat Willow Tree Catkins
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £2.99
Wayfaring Tree Berries
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £2.99
Small-leafed Lime tree flowers Greenspire Lime tree in Summer
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £2.99
Rootballed Yew Hedge Plants Bigger Rootballed Yew Hedge Plants 100/125cm tall
Rootballed Yew, Large Hedge Plants
Taxus baccata - rootballs
from £29.99
European Larch Cones European Larch Leaves in Autumn
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.99
Field Rose Flowers Field Rose Flowers
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.72
Mature pollarded Scarlet Willow trees Scarlet Willow tree bark
Scarlet Willow Sapling Trees
Salix alba 'Britzensis'
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.99
Mature Blue Spruce trees Blue Spruce Leaves
Blue Spruce Sapling Trees
Picea pungens glauca
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £2.99
Common Ivy Leaves Common Ivy growing on a wall
Sold as:
Potted
from £3.99
Downy Birch autumn leaves Downy Birch tree catkin
Downy Birch Sapling Trees
Betula pubescens
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £2.89
Japanese Larch Leaves Japanese Larch Leaves in Autumn
Japanese Larch Tree
Larix leptolepis
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.99
Cornelian Cherry Fruit Cornelian Cherry Tree Flowers
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.96
Black Poplar New Spring Leaves Mature Black Poplar trees
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.18
Green Beech Instant Hedge Trough Modelled by Local Hearthrob Rodney Green Beech Instant Hedge Troughs
Sold as:
Trough
Bareroot
from £10.99
Mature Black Walnut tree Ripe Black Walnuts
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £4.89
Stand of Aspen Poplar Trees with yellow Autumn leaves Aspen Poplar leaves
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.72
Wild Bramble Blackberry Bushes Wild Bramble Blackberry Bushes
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £2.99
Newly Planted & Fenced BN11 Mixed Native Hedging
Countryside Stewardship Grant Native Hedge Mix
Mix of 2 or more Species, Bundles of 50 Plants
from £69.95
Wild Lilac Flowers
Common Lilac Hedge Plants
Syringa vulgaris
Sold as:
Bareroot
from £3.99
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About Hedging Plants

Hedge Plants and Sapling Trees

Buy Potted Plants & Hedge Troughs Now For October Delivery

Pre-Order Bareroot Plants For 2025/26 Winter Planting Season

Browse hedge plants and sapling trees for garden and field boundaries, tall privacy screening, and wildlife habitat.

Available bareroot (November-March delivery) or potted year-round.

Popular Choices:

What is so good about bareroot hedging?

The majority of hedging and sapling trees planted in the UK is bareroot. Buying plants with no soil around the roots doesn't sound ideal the first time you hear it, but it really does mean better plants that are cheaper and easier to work with than pot grown.

The strong, field grown stock transplants so well because it's sleeping in winter, minimising stress.

While out of the ground, plants are kept in ideal cold, humid conditions until picked, quality-checked, and sent by next-day delivery.

Bareroot hedge plants are, compared to pot grown equivalents:

  • Cheaper
  • Stronger, field grown plants
  • Faster growing & better establishing
  • Weigh much less = easier to handle and plant
  • More eco-friendly, plastic free cultivation
  • Wider selection available
  • Only delivered November-March

Some plants or larger sizes only come in pots. Some popular species are sold bareroot in winter and potted the rest of the year.

Where you have a choice, bareroot is better.

  • When your order is ready: your mail order hedge plants are delivered by next working day courier (not the next working day after ordering!)
  • Friendly support: if there is anything wrong with your plants when you inspect them, Contact Us within 5 working days

All bareroot plants are covered by our Refund Guarantee, so you can give them a whirl with complete confidence.

To add interest to a new hedge or woodland, you cannot beat a range of garden bulbs .

What are the cheapest hedge plants?

Bareroot is always cheaper than pot grown. Small sizes are better value than large.

Top 4 cheapest deciduous:

Top 4 cheapest evergreen:

For larger projects, mixed hedge packs offer the best value per plant.

Choosing Which Size Hedge Plants to Order

The most popular species are delivered in sizes ranging from little 40/60cm tall unbranched 'whips', up to over 1.5m, feathered with side branches.

  • If you are in a hurry for privacy and need instant impact, then pick the biggest size that fits your budget
  • Otherwise, we recommend planting smaller plants, which require less maintenance to reliably produce a satisfyingly dense mature hedge
  • If you are filling gaps in an existing hedge, large replacements are usually better, but small plants can slide into tough soil full of roots, and require less water.

Smaller plants have several advantages

  • Cheaper
  • Easier to plant
  • Establish well because they are dug up with most of their roots intact
  • Need less water in their first summer (but watering is still essential in dry weather)
  • Can be clipped attentively to ensure a bushy base & dense growth

So Which Size Hedging Should I Order?

  • Farmers and other large scale hedge or forestry projects prefer 40/60cm tall: it's the minimum required size for Countryside Stewardship hedging , and has the best success rate in field conditions.
  • Bareroot conifers typically have to be sold a bit smaller, e.g. 20/40cm tall for a Sitka Spruce .
  • Many people choose 60/80cm tall as a great compromise between price, size, and waiting time until you get a mature hedge.
  • Plants over 80cm tall are good for creating privacy ASAP, or filling gaps in mature hedges. Popular choice for short, housefront hedges that are only a few metres long.
  • Remember, big plants need more water in their first year to thrive.
  • Rootballed Yew is the biggest hedging we deliver, along with Instant Hedge Troughs .

Choose the Best Hedging for Me

Most people plant evergreen hedges or beech / hornbeam around their homes for privacy and year round interest, and rugged, deciduous native plants everywhere else.

Most popular hedge plants lists:

More Useful Hedge Plant Lists:

What plants can't I use in a hedge?

Trees like Birch, Oak, Sycamore, Rowan, and Wild Cherries on their own don't produce unsatisfying hedges, especially in winter when bare branches provide little screening. But you will spot them here and there in mixed country hedges, looking fine surrounded by solid hedge plants like Hawthorn and Blackthorn.

They are sold as hedge-sized saplings called tree whips for any garden or forestry purpose, and they are often planted in country hedges to grow as hedgerow standard trees above the hedge line, not clipped with it.

If growing mixed native hedging with hedgerow trees, use tree guards so their tops aren't trimmed with the hedge.

When and how do I plant hedging?

Bareroot: November to March. Pot grown: any time except frozen soil.

See our step-by-step guides:

How many hedge plants per metre?

Standard spacing for most hedging:

  • Single row garden hedge: 3 plants per metre, 33cm apart
  • Double row stockproof, grant compliant: 6 plants per metre, 33cm apart along each row, rows 40cm apart
  • Interior garden hedges: 2 per metre
  • Beech & Hornbeam double row: 4 plants per metre, 50cm apart along each row, rows 35-50cm apart
  • Box - Buxus: 5 plants per metre (20cm apart)

For detailed spacing by plant type and purpose, see our complete hedge spacing guide .

Aftercare

New hedges need watering and weeding in their first year to establish, and mulch is recommended. Read more about new hedge aftercare .

Hedge Trimming

Trimming is essential for dense hedges. Best timing: autumn to early spring (avoid pruning during nesting season, March-August).

For detailed trimming instructions by hedge type: