Zone 3 Plants

Browse live plants selected for USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 3, built for cold winters and a shorter growing season. This collection includes Zone 3 perennials, Zone 3 trees, and Zone 3 shrubs and bushes, along with herbs and annuals chosen for reliable establishment in cold-climate landscapes.

127 products

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Sweet Sunrise Golden Orange Bell Pepper
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Gomphrena 'Sequin'
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Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomato
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Arctic Fire® Red Twig Dogwood
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Cherokee Purple Tomato
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Globe Amaranth 'QIS™ Pink'
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Scabiosa 'Fire King'
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Valentine® Bleeding Heart
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Celosia ‘Flamingo Feather’
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Dwarf Goat's Beard
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California Wonder Bell Pepper
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Caribbean Red Habanero Pepper
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White Bleeding Heart
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Yellow Leaf Bleeding Heart
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Marsh Marigold
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Lucky Star® Lipstick Pentas
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Ganjyu Bitter Melon
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Fenugreek
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Dukat Dill
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Cumin
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Creeping Jenny (Moneywort)
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Celosia 'Forest Fire'
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Catnip
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Beefsteak Tomato
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Basil 'Italian Large Leaf'
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Ageratum 'Red Flint'
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Globe Amaranth 'Atomic Purple'
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Thuja 'Nigra'
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Hetz Midget Arborvitae
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Zinnia 'Profusion Red'
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Limelight Prime® Panicle Hydrangea
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Growing Plants in USDA Zone 3 – FAQs

What grows well in USDA Zone 3?


USDA Zone 3 supports cold-hardy landscape plants suited to very long winters and shorter growing seasons.

With winter lows typically ranging from -40°F to -30°F, carefully selected perennials, shrubs, and trees can overwinter reliably, while annuals and herbs perform during the limited but productive growing months.

Are all plants in this collection winter-hardy in Zone 3?

Not all of them. The collection includes fully hardy plants that overwinter at -40°F to -30°F alongside seasonal plants grown during the active months.

Hardy perennials and woody plants form the permanent landscape, while annuals and herbs are planted after frost risk passes and harvested or removed before winter. Both categories are grouped here because this reflects how cold-climate gardens actually work.

What are some of the best plants for growing in USDA Zone 3?

USDA Zone 3 is defined by long, cold winters and a shorter growing season, so the most successful plants are those rated for exceptional cold tolerance and dependable spring return.

Hardy perennials such as peony, coneflower, sedum, and many daylily varieties reliably rebound after winter dormancy. Shrubs including panicle hydrangea, spirea, and certain viburnum selections provide dependable structure, while resilient trees like crabapple and serviceberry are valued for durability and seasonal interest.

When gardening in Zone 3, selecting plants specifically rated for this climate and planting in well-drained soil helps ensure strong establishment and consistent long-term performance.

What is the best time to plant in Zone 3?

In Zone 3, the planting window is narrow. Most gardeners have roughly 90 to 120 frost-free days, so timing matters more here than in any zone south of it.

Late May through early June is typically the safest window for getting plants in the ground after the last hard frost. Hardy trees, shrubs, and perennials can also be planted in early fall—usually September—to allow some root establishment before freeze-up, but the window is tight and snow can arrive early. Annuals and herbs should only go out after frost risk has fully passed, as there is little room to recover from a late-season setback.

What's some good advice on designing my landscape in grow zone 3?

Zone 3 garden design balances winter durability with the intensity of a short summer growing season.

Anchor the landscape with proven cold-hardy trees and shrubs that provide winter structure—then layer in perennials and summer annuals for concentrated seasonal color. Siting matters: south-facing beds warm earlier in spring, sheltered corners protect borderline-hardy plants, and raised beds improve drainage in areas with heavy frost heave.

What if I live near the border of Zone 2 or Zone 4?


If your property falls near a Zone 3 boundary, microclimates can influence plant performance more than the USDA map alone.

Wind exposure, snow insulation, elevation, and soil drainage can create slightly colder or warmer growing conditions. Reviewing plants suited for Zone 2 or Zone 4 can provide useful comparison when planning for long-term landscape success.