Fruit Trees for Zone 7
58 products
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58 products
Zone 7 might just be the sweet spot for growing fruit & nut trees in the United States. With winter lows between 0 and 10 degrees F and long, warm summers, you've got the chill hours most fruit trees need to produce well and the heat to ripen them right. We've shipped thousands of trees to Zone 7 gardens across Virginia, North Carolina and all the way up to the Pacific North West. The results are always the same; quality trees that produce for years to come.
Zone 7 opens the door to some of the most rewarding fruit trees you can grow. Figs absolutely thrive here and are practically no-fuss once established. Peaches and nectarines produce beautifully with the right variety selection. Apples, pears, persimmons, plums, and cherries all perform well too, and if you're in Zone 7b, you're flirting with some of the cold-hardier citrus options as well. Browse the collection below, or keep reading for tips on what grows best and when to plant.
Zone 7 is generous territory for fruit trees. Some of our top picks for this zone include:
Zone 7a (0 to 5 degrees F average minimum) and Zone 7b (5 to 10 degrees F) give you slightly different options on the edges, but the core lineup above works well across both.
We put our hands on every tree offered in this collection. That means no drop shipping, no middlemen, and no mystery about where your plant has been. Unlike many other online nurseries who simply collect your money, we inspect every plant before it goes in a box to your front door. When your fruit or nut trees ships, it's a healthy, container-grown tree that's been tended by our team. We've been doing this since 1980, and we're still just as particular about what leaves our farm as we were on day one.
Early spring is the classic answer and for good reason. Planting in late February through April gives roots time to establish before summer heat sets in. That said, fall planting from October through early December is equally good in Zone 7 and sometimes better, since the tree gets several months of mild weather to build a root system before it has to cope with summer. Container-grown trees, which is what we ship, give you flexibility that bare-root stock doesn't.
Self-pollinating fruit trees are great when you're working with limited space or just want guaranteed fruit without tracking down a pollination partner. Fig trees are fully self-fertile and one of the easiest fruit trees period. Most peach varieties we offer are also self-pollinating. By far our gardening customers in zone 7 plant Figs and Pear trees the most for self-fertile options.
Yes, and it works better than most people expect. Growing fruit trees in containers is especially popular in Zone 7 for figs, dwarf apple trees, and dwarf stone fruits. The main advantage is mobility: you can bring borderline-hardy plants into a garage or shed during the few nights a year that get dangerously cold.
Absolutely! Dwarf fruit trees are a great option if you're working with a smaller yard, raised beds, or want to keep harvest manageable without a ladder. Fig trees and dwarf Pomegranates like the Parfianka Pomegranate variety are both very popular choices to grow on your patio or deck.
Most Zone 7 locations accumulate somewhere between 400 and 900 chill hours per year, though this varies quite a bit depending on your exact location and elevation. The warmer end of Zone 7b, especially in coastal areas or lower elevations in the South, may see fewer chill hours than inland or higher-elevation Zone 7a locations. When shopping for fruit trees, always check the variety's listed chill hour requirement and try to match it to what your area realistically gets
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