Collection: Fruit Plants

Discover our range of fruit plants for delicious produce straight from your garden. Whether you’re looking for compact fruit bushes, grape vines, blueberries and strawberries, dwarf and bare root trees or even exotic fruits, you’ll find all your favourites here. Explore new hybrids, heritage varieties and award winners in sizes for every garden, patio or pot.

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South Downs National Park

Meet Danielle

110 years' expertise free with every plant

You simply can’t buy better fruit plants and here’s why. Danielle grows them outdoors, just like our nursery has done since 1908, so they’re more than a match for the UK weather. Danielle only has time for the top performing varieties, meaning that you can be assured of a successful (and blooming tasty) soft fruit crop.

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  What are the best fruit plants for small spaces?

What are the best fruit plants for small spaces?

Limited on space? Not a problem. You can grow soft fruits like blueberries, strawberries, gooseberries and currants in pots on a balcony, in a yard or even in window boxes. It’s easy to grow cherry, apple, pear and nectarine trees in containers on a patio and still get large crops of full sized fruit - just choose a dwarf or cordon variety. Fig trees do better in pots than in the ground, so they’re perfect for small gardens - plant them in a sunny, sheltered spot and water frequently in summer.


  What are the easiest fruit plants to grow?

What are the easiest fruit plants to grow?

Just starting your fruit garden? It’s easy to grow strawberries, blueberries and raspberries. These versatile soft fruit plants can be grown in pots and are very low maintenance. For a first fruit tree, we’d recommend a cherry tree. They need next to no pruning and can be grown in patio pots or small gardens with great results. Apple and plum trees are also easy to grow, with some dwarf varieties producing a large crop in their first year. Our range includes all your favourites as well as hard-to-find heirloom varieties, in sizes suitable for every garden.


  Feeling adventurous?

Feeling adventurous?

If you want to grow fruits that are hard to find in the shops, check out our range of unusual fruit trees and plants. Add some Mediterranean charm to your pergola with a red or white grape vine, or if you have a greenhouse or conservatory, you can go for something a bit more exotic with passionfruit and kiwi vines! Our collection of fig, pomegranate and citrus trees are tough enough for growing in the UK climate, with unusual soft fruit plants including goji berry, honeyberry and lingonberry plants.

Fruit Plants FAQs

What is the easiest fruit plant to grow?

There are lots of fruits that are easy to grow! In terms of fruit trees, figs, apples and pears are amongst the easiest fruit trees to grow, while plum, cherry and peach trees also offer big fruiting rewards for relatively minimal effort. From a soft fruit perspective, blackberry bushes and autumn-fruiting raspberries are up there, while blueberries make an ideal pick for containers, using ericaceous compost. As for fruiting climbing plants, grape vines and hardy kiwi plants would be our top choices.

What fruit to grow in the UK?

The UK has a long and established fruit-growing tradition, with apple orchards being set up as far back as the Roman era. These days, you can grow all kinds of fruit, including hardier versions of plants that might have traditionally struggled with harsh UK conditions (alongside our warming climate). You can grow pomes (apples, pears and quinces), stone fruit (cherries, plums, peaches and apricots), aggregate fruits (raspberries, blackberries and strawberries), citrus fruits (lemons, limes and oranges), true botanical berries (blueberries, currants, gooseberries and grapes) and figs (which are actually a separate type of fruit called a syconium).

What is the fastest-bearing fruit tree in the UK?

For fast results, pome fruits grown on dwarfing rootstocks (like M27 for apples, for instance) are your best friend. Fig trees and citrus plants also begin bearing fruits relatively quickly, with fruits appearing as soon as just one two years after planting.

What month is best to plant fruits?

For fruit trees supplied bare root, late autumn to early spring is the best time to plant, as this is when the tree is dormant (not actively growing). Avoid planting in freezing or waterlogged conditions. For container-supplied fruit plants, both bushes and trees, you can plant these throughout the year, but make sure to avoid especially hot, dry periods and particularly cold or wet conditions.

Which fruit plants can be grown indoors?

The best fruit plants to grow indoors are those that suit container growing and are native to warmer climes (like the Mediterranean) – so, we’re especially talking about figs and citrus trees, which will appreciate a spot in a bright, sunny conservatory. These plants not only can be grown indoors, in colder parts of the country they should be grown indoors to protect them from harsher winters.

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