Grow a Beautiful Herb Garden in Your Backyard
From simple raised beds to elegant herb spirals, a dedicated herb garden feeds your kitchen and delights your senses.
Why it works
A dedicated backyard herb garden is the most productive square footage in any property. Culinary herbs are easy to grow, smell incredible, save money on fresh herbs (among the most expensive per-ounce items at the grocery store), and attract pollinators with their flowers. The design possibilities are rich: formal knot gardens with clipped hedging, rustic raised beds with reclaimed wood, contemporary Corten steel planters, or the classic herb spiral that creates multiple microclimates in a 6-foot diameter.
How to achieve this look
Choose a sunny spot within easy reach of the kitchen door — if harvesting is inconvenient, the herbs will go unused. Build raised beds (12–18 inches tall) or construct a herb spiral from stacked stones. Plant in zones: Mediterranean herbs (rosemary, thyme, oregano, sage) need the best drainage and hottest spot. Leafy herbs (basil, cilantro, parsley, chervil) tolerate more moisture and partial shade. Aggressive spreaders (mint, lemon balm) belong in containers to prevent takeover. Include perennial anchors (rosemary, thyme, chives) that return each year, and annual succession plantings (basil, cilantro, dill) for continuous harvest. Add a small bench or seating nearby — herb gardens are sensory spaces worth lingering in.
Arden lets you preview how raised beds, a herb spiral, or formal herb parterre will look in your backyard. Test different layouts and materials before building to find the design that balances beauty and productivity.
"Finally an app that understands outdoor spaces. Every garden plan turned out beautiful."
-- Priya K.
Domande Frequenti
Q1 What herbs should a beginner grow?
Start with the five most used kitchen herbs: basil, rosemary, thyme, parsley, and chives. All are forgiving, productive, and widely used in cooking. Add cilantro, mint (in a pot), and dill in the second season.
Q2 How much space does a herb garden need?
A single 4x4-foot raised bed or a 6-foot diameter herb spiral provides enough herbs for a family of four. Even a few large pots near the kitchen door count as a herb garden.
Q3 Can herbs grow in partial shade?
Leafy herbs (parsley, cilantro, chervil, mint) tolerate 4 hours of sun. Mediterranean herbs (rosemary, thyme, sage) need 6+ hours. Place sun-lovers in the brightest spot and tuck shade-tolerant herbs behind them.