Pines, firs and spruces aside, there are plenty of outdoor Christmas plants you can add to your garden this season.

That’s right – Christmas houseplants do a brilliant job of brightening up the inside of the home, but there are so many shrubs and flowers you can plant outside to keep your garden looking lively over the holidays, too.

I’ve rounded up some favourites and a few expert suggestions to give you a little festive planting inspiration.

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1. Christmas box

Sarcococca confusa (sweet box or Christmas box) growing in garden

(Image credit: Getty Images / Tom Meaker)

The clue is in the name with this one: Christmas box is one of *the* best outdoor Christmas plants for the garden. It produces sweetly scented blooms during the winter and stays interesting with glossy evergreen foliage throughout the year.

‘Christmas box is low-growing with glossy leaves and highly scented white flowers, perfect for borders, entrances, or containers in smaller spaces,’ says Emma Fell, head of horticulture at Hillier Garden Centres.

There are plenty of other sweet box varieties that make great outdoor Christmas plants, too. ‘Sarcococca hookeriana ‘Winter Gem’ is brilliant in shade and emits a lovely scent in mid-winter,’ suggests gardening expert and author Sarah Raven.

Where to buy Christmas box:

2. Dogwood

Cornus alba 'Sibirica' or red twig dogwood growing in garden

(Image credit: Getty Images / pcturner71)

It might not sound very festive, but many dogwood varieties provide stunning colour in the garden over the colder months. Red twig dogwood, in particular, is one of the best outdoor Christmas plants you can grow for vibrant winter colour.

‘Cornus alba ‘Sibirica’ has brilliant red stems that glow against snow or a pale backdrop,’ says Emma. ‘Prune older growth to encourage vivid new stems each year.’

As long as you know how to prune dogwood properly, you’ll be rewarded with intense, eye-catching displays every year.

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Where to buy dogwood:

3. Hellebores

Pink hellebores covered in snow

(Image credit: Getty Images/Nik Cain)

I recently gushed over hellebores as one of the best Christmas plants for a front porch, but they feel right at home in garden beds and borders, too. They’re timeless winter flowers, and learning how to grow hellebores is pretty easy, too.

‘Hellebores are hardy perennials that flower from winter into spring, providing early nectar for pollinators and long-lasting garden colour,’ says Emma.

Where to buy hellebores:

4. Mahonia

Closeup of Mahonia aquifolium plant

(Image credit: Getty Images /)

Mahonia is another winter favourite; a list of the best outdoor Christmas plants simply wouldn’t be complete without it!

Its bright blooms provide much-needed refreshment when the rest of the garden is asleep, and because it’s one of the best evergreen plants for borders, its foliage stays put all year round. The flowers of most varieties are scented, too.

‘Mahonia eurybracteata ‘Sweet Winter’ is a wonderful late-winter bloomer that brightens up the garden when little else is performing,’ says Sarah Raven.

Where to buy mahonia:

5. Witch hazel

Closeup of yellow winter flowering Chinese witch hazel shrub

(Image credit: Getty Images/srekapi)

You’re probably more familiar with witch hazel on the ingredients lists of skin care products (I know I was), but it’s actually a winter-flowering shrub that makes a brilliant outdoor Christmas plant.

‘Hamamelis (witch hazel) produces vibrant red, orange or yellow flowers on bare branches in late winter, adding an uplifting focal point when little else is in bloom,’ says Emma.

Where to buy witch hazel:

6. Winter heath

Winter heather growing in garden

(Image credit: Getty Images / Denise Hasse)

Heathers are some of my favourite plants for adding colour and texture to the garden (it’s used alongside ornamental cabbage in this winter pot display), and for that reason, winter heath is among the very best outdoor Christmas plants. It’ll keep its colour right through to spring, too.

‘Winter heath is low-growing and long-flowering, with delicate pink or white blooms that bring continuous colour from late winter to early spring,’ says Emma.

Where to buy winter heath:

There are plenty more cold-loving plants you can get planted for January and February, too!

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