Most people plant in spring, but for trees, shrubs, and perennials fall is quietly the best planting season. Here’s why, and how to do it right.
Why fall beats spring
Warm soil plus cool air tells a plant to pour energy into roots instead of leaves — so it establishes faster with far less heat stress and watering.
What to plant in fall
Trees, shrubs, most perennials, cool-season grass, garlic, and spring bulbs (daffodils, alliums, crocus — all deer-resistant).
Find deer-resistant plants for your zone →
Your 5-step checklist
1. Plant 6–8 weeks before hard frost. 2. Water deeply at planting and weekly until the ground freezes. 3. Mulch 2–3 inches. 4. Skip fertilizer — you want roots. 5. Protect tender young plants from deer.