Landscape Your Pool Area Beautifully
Choose pool-friendly plants, smart materials, and resort-style design to create the perfect poolside landscape.
Why it works
Pool areas are one of the trickiest landscaping challenges because they must balance beauty with very specific practical requirements. Chlorinated splash zones, reflected heat and glare, limited root space near pool structures, and the constant battle against falling leaves all constrain plant choices. But a bare pool surround with only concrete and fence is unappealing — good poolside landscaping transforms a functional swimming space into a resort-style retreat that feels like a vacation every day. The key is choosing plants that add beauty without adding maintenance headaches: no aggressive root systems that crack pool coping, no heavy leaf drop that clogs filters, no thorns or berries near bare feet, and no bee-attracting flowers right at the pool edge.
How to achieve this look
Create planting zones: zero-maintenance hardscape within 3 feet of the pool edge (no plants), followed by a clean-foliage zone (3–10 feet), and a screening/feature zone further out. In the clean-foliage zone, use evergreen, non-shedding plants: ornamental grasses (Miscanthus, Pennisetum), agaves, phormium, yucca, and succulents. Avoid deciduous trees, fruit-bearing plants, and anything with needle-like leaves near the pool. For screening, use tall evergreen hedging (Photinia, Oleander in warm climates, Griselinia) or bamboo in containers. Add resort ambiance with outdoor lighting (uplighting on palms or feature plants), large-format pavers or travertine decking, and a row of matching sun loungers. Use drought-tolerant plants — chlorinated splash water is harmful to many species, so keep plantings outside the splash zone.
See it with AI first
Arden lets you preview poolside planting schemes around your actual pool. See how palms, ornamental grasses, or a bamboo screen will look — and avoid choosing plants that will clog your filter or crack your coping.
Questions Fréquentes
What plants should I avoid near a pool?
Avoid deciduous trees (heavy leaf drop), fruit trees (messy fruit attracts bees), thorny plants (roses, bougainvillea near walkways), and plants with invasive roots (bamboo in-ground, willows). Also avoid fine-needled conifers and plants that attract excessive bees right at the pool edge.
What are the best plants for a pool area?
Ornamental grasses (Miscanthus, Pennisetum), agaves, yucca, phormium, bird of paradise, Trachelospermum (star jasmine on a trellis), and dwarf date palms. All are evergreen, non-messy, and add structure without maintenance headaches.
How do I create privacy around a pool?
Use evergreen hedging (Photinia, Griselinia, Oleander) or bamboo in large containers at the boundary. For upper-story views, add tall palms or pleached trees. A pergola with a retractable shade over the lounging area provides both privacy and sun control.
How far should trees be from a pool?
Keep trees at least 15–20 feet from the pool edge to minimize leaf drop and root interference. Palms can be closer (8–10 feet) as they have less invasive roots and minimal leaf drop. Always check mature root spread before planting.
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