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When to Plant Hydrangeas in Florida

Hydrangeas (Hydrangea spp.) are among the most spectacular summer-blooming shrubs, with large mophead, lacecap, or panicle flower clusters lasting weeks in the garden and drying beautifully for arrangements. Native to Asia and North America alike, the genus spans several garden species with different hardiness and blooming habits. Panicle hydrangeas (H. paniculata, e.g., Limelight) are the most cold-hardy (Zone 3) and most reliable bloomers; smooth hydrangeas (H. arborescens, e.g., Annabelle) are equally tough. Bigleaf hydrangeas (H. macrophylla) are prized for blue/pink color-shifting blooms but require reliable snow cover or winter protection in Zones 5–6. Flower color in macrophylla types is determined by soil pH (acidic = blue, alkaline = pink).

Florida spans USDA hardiness zones 8b, 9a (with planting data available), so planting dates vary by your location within the state. Click your zone below for the most accurate dates.

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Click your county for exact Hydrangeas planting dates based on your local frost dates.

Hydrangeas Planting Calendar for Florida

Zone 8b ~276 day growing season · Full guide →

Last frost: February 25 · First frost: November 28 · 276 day season

Activity When Date Range
Start Indoors December 24 Dec 24 – Jan 7
Transplant Outdoors February 18 Feb 18 – Mar 4
Bloom April 29 Apr 29 – Sep 2
Zone 9a ~303 day growing season · Full guide →

Last frost: February 10 · First frost: December 10 · 303 day season

Activity When Date Range
Start Indoors December 16 Dec 16 – Dec 30
Transplant Outdoors January 27 Jan 27 – Feb 10
Bloom April 7 Apr 7 – Jul 28

Growing Tips for Florida

Plant container-grown specimens in spring or fall, spacing at least 3–5 feet apart to allow for mature shrub spread. Most hydrangeas prefer morning sun with afternoon shade, especially in Zones 7+. Keep consistently moist — the name derives from the Greek for water vessel. Prune panicle and smooth types in late winter/early spring (they bloom on new wood). Prune bigleaf types only lightly after bloom; cutting stems in fall removes next year's buds. In Zone 5–6, protect bigleaf varieties with burlap or wire cages filled with leaves over winter. Fall planting (Zones 5+) gives excellent root establishment before summer heat. Year 2+ plants reach full size and bloom.

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Frequently Asked Questions

When should I plant Hydrangeas in Florida?

Planting dates for Hydrangeas in Florida depend on your USDA zone. Florida spans zones 8b, 9a. Check the planting calendar above for your specific zone's frost dates and planting windows.

What zone is Florida for planting?

Florida contains USDA hardiness zones 8b, 9a. Your specific zone depends on your location within the state — northern and higher-elevation areas are in colder zones, while southern and coastal areas are warmer.

Data sources: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023), NOAA 30-Year Climate Normals, University Cooperative Extension planting guides. Last updated: June 2026.