Pink Bushes for Sale

35 products

35 products

Pink Shrubs and Flowering Bushes

If you want reliable color that comes back season after season, buying pink shrubs online is one of the best investments you can make in a garden. From the soft blush of a camellia in late winter to the hot pink plumes of muhly grass in fall, we grow a full range of bushes with pink flowers here in North Florida; chosen for their beauty, their adaptability across growing zones, and how well they actually perform after shipping. Whether you need a small pink flowering bush for a container or a large specimen shrub to anchor a bed, there is something in this collection for every space and every season.

Best Pink Flowering Shrubs

Not sure where to start? These are some of our most popular shrubs with pink flowers, each one hand-grown at our nursery before it ships to your door.

The George Taber Azalea is one of the showiest pink blossom shrubs we carry — large magenta blooms, a pleasant fragrance, and a reliable habit of drawing butterflies every spring. The Penny Mac Hydrangea is another standout, producing full mophead flowers continuously through summer in blue or pink depending on your soil pH — low maintenance and genuinely beautiful.

For something with a unique texture, the Dwarf Pink Muhly Grass is hard to beat. Its feathery pink plumes emerge in fall when most other shrubs are winding down, giving you color exactly when the rest of the garden needs it most. The Camellia High Fragrance rounds out the collection with evergreen foliage, rose-like pink blooms, and a fragrance strong enough to notice from several feet away.

Looking for a pink flowering bush that blooms early? The Dwarf Pink Flowering Almond Bush opens its delicate light pink flowers in early spring before most shrubs have even leafed out; a great choice if you want color starting in March. And for something that does double duty, the Acerola Barbados Cherry Tree brings small pink flowers alongside fruit that is exceptionally high in vitamin C.

Shrubs With Pink Flowers for Landscaping

Pink flowering bushes work in almost any landscape style because the color reads as both bold and natural depending on what you surround it with. Here are a few approaches that work consistently well.

Make Pink the Focal Point

Plant a larger pink blossom shrub like the Kanjiro Camellia or Formosa Azalea in a prominent spot; flanking an entry, anchoring a corner of the house, or centered in a bed. Surround it with lower plants in softer greens or whites and the pink flowers become the natural centerpiece without competing with anything around them.

Pink Flowering Hedges

Spaced evenly along a property line or fence, pink blooming shrubs make a colorful living hedge that provides privacy while looking far better than a wood fence. Azaleas and camellias are particularly well suited for this since they maintain a full, dense habit and hold their foliage year round in most growing zones.

Hot Pink Flowering Shrubs as Accents

Hot pink flowering shrubs like the Pink Flowering Almond or a drift rose make excellent accent plants at the edges of a bed or along a walkway. Their compact size and intense color draw the eye along a path without overwhelming the rest of the planting. Pair them with white flowering companions for maximum contrast.

Companion Plants for Pink Bushes

Pink pairs naturally with white and soft blue, making either a clean contrast or a gentle complement depending on the shade of pink you are working with. The White Drift Rose Bush is one of our most popular companions for hot pink shrubs — low maintenance, disease resistant, and the crisp white blooms balance vivid pink beautifully. For a soft blue contrast, the Agapanthus Blue brings ruffled bright blue flowers that attract butterflies and bees alongside your pink flowering bushes. The White African Iris is another reliable companion with large elegant blooms that complement pink shrubs without competing for attention.

Small Pink Flowering Bushes

Not every yard has room for a large specimen shrub, and some of the best bushes with pink flowers stay naturally compact. Small pink blooming shrubs like dwarf azaleas, drift roses, and compact camellias work well in containers, along foundations, or tucked into smaller garden beds where a full-sized shrub would overwhelm the space. If you are working in a tight footprint, look for "dwarf" or "compact" varieties in the collection; they bring the same color show in a much smaller package.

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