Foxglove (Digitalis spp.) is a classic garden favorite known for its towers of blooms. With many colors to choose from, you’ll have an easy time finding a foxglove to fit your garden.
Most foxglove plants are biennials. The first year they’re grown from seed, the plants form a rosette of foliage at ground level with no blooms. In the second year, they send up beautiful spikes of blooms, (which hummingbirds love). If you cut them back immediately after they’re done blooming, you can encourage a second round of blooms. Foxglove plants die when they finish blooming for the season. Make sure to leave a few spent blooms on the plant so they can produce seeds to grow more seedlings the following year.
A few foxgloves are true perennials, blooming each year. Many of these come in more subdued colors with smaller blossoms, but they are still lovely additions to the perennial garden.
Be careful where you plant foxglove. All parts of the foxglove plant are extremely toxic to humans1 and animals2 and should not be planted near places where children and pets play.
Foxglove Overview
GENUS NAME | Digitalis |
COMMON NAME | Foxglove |
PLANT TYPE | Perennial |
LIGHT | Part Sun, Sun |
HEIGHT | 1 to 3 feet |
WIDTH | 1 to 3 feet |
FLOWER COLOR | Orange, Pink, Purple, White, Yellow |
FOLIAGE COLOR | Blue/Green |
SEASON FEATURES | Spring Bloom, Summer Bloom |
SPECIAL FEATURES | Attracts Birds, Low Maintenance |
ZONES | 10, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 |
PROPAGATION | Seed |
PROBLEM SOLVERS | Deer Resistant |
Where to Plant Foxglove
Plant foxgloves in full sun to partial shade (depending on the area’s summer heat) in well-draining, slightly acidic soil. The tall biennial is perfect for a woodland garden, border, or the back of a garden bed. They are hardy in USDA zones 3–10.
How and When to Plant Foxglove
Foxglove is easy to grow from seed sown in early summer. (If you harvest seed from an existing plant at the end of the growing season, sow it in autumn.) The seeds require light to germinate, so sow them in a prepared garden bed but don’t cover them. Keep the soil moist. They require a temperature of 70°F to 80°F to germinate. After they germinate, thin the seedlings to 18 inches apart.
To start seeds indoors, sow them in a flat with a seed-starting mix eight to 10 weeks before the last frost. Barely cover them with the seed-starting mix—they need light—and keep them moist and warm until they germinate three weeks later. After the last frost, harden off the seedlings by moving them outside to a sheltered space for a week, away from wind and sun. Then plant them in fertile, well-draining garden soil.
Foxglove Care Tips
Foxgloves are easy to grow, and they have few requirements in order to prosper.
Light
Many foxglove plants do best in full sun, but some get by fine in part shade. Some perennial types prefer part shade over full sun, so check which type you have before planting. The full-sun varieties may have more problems with powdery mildew on the foliage when they are planted in shady conditions.
Soil and Water
Ideal conditions for foxglove plants vary depending on the variety and species, but in general, they prefer evenly moist, well-drained soils. They’re not drought tolerant, especially when in bloom, so give them water during long dry periods. They prefer slightly acidic soil; adding amendments may be a good idea, depending on your soil type.
Temperature and Humidity
Foxgloves grow in almost any climate, but temperatures above 90°F may cause them to wilt. They tolerate a wide humidity range.
Fertilizer
Foxglove doesn’t require any fertilizer when planted in organically rich soil. However, applying a 5-10-5 slow-release granular fertilizer in spring before the plant blooms might increase the size and quantity of the blooms. For the amount to use, follow product label directions. Water the fertilizer after applying it and keep it away from the plant’s foliage.
Pruning
Remove any dead or damaged foliage that occurs during the season. Cut back foxglove plants by half in autumn after the plant dies back. Deadhead the flowers any time during the season by cutting back the flower stalks by three-quarters.
Pests and Problems
Aphids and mealybugs are attracted to foxglove plants. They can be treated with a blast of water from a garden hose or an application of insecticidal soap or neem oil.
When grown in areas of high humidity, foxgloves are susceptible to fungal diseases such as leaf spot and powdery mildew. Remove any infected foliage and water the plant early in the day so that the foliage has plenty of time to dry.
How to Propagate Foxglove
Foxglove is easy to grow from seed. It self-seeds prolifically unless the blooms are removed before the seeds form. Gardeners can harvest seed from their plants by leaving a few blooms on the plant until they dry. Seed is also available from local and online nurseries. Because foxgloves are largely seed-grown varieties, research is always being done to improve seed strains and introduce new colors.
Perennial foxglove plants can be divided. Dig up the plant and the entire root ball. Use a sharp spade to cut the root ball and plant into two or three sections. Immediately replant the divisions in the garden.
Types of Foxglove
Common Foxglove
Digitalis purpurea is a short-lived, self-sowing perennial or biennial. It’s a mainstay in cottage gardens. Zones 5-8
Digitalis Grandiflora
A beautiful perennial foxglove, these plants do best in part shade and have light yellow blooms from May to June. Zones 3-8
Woolly Foxglove
Digitalis lanata is an Eastern European native that grows 1 to 2 feet tall and bears bicolor white and brown flowers in June and July. Zones 4-9
Strawberry Foxglove
Digitalis x mertonensis bears strawberry-red bloom spikes up to 3 feet tall. Divide plants every two to three years so that they maintain vigor. Zones 4-8
‘Foxy’ Foxglove
Digitalis purpurea ‘Foxy’ blooms reliably from seed its first year with two- to three-foot-tall spikes of pink, purple, white, or cream with maroon markings. Zones 5-8
Foxglove Companion Plants
Lady’s Mantle
Lady’s mantle is a perennial with scalloped leaves that catch rain or dewdrops, making the plants look spangled with jewels. The chartreuse flowers appear in playful, frothy clusters above the foliage. Lady’s mantle is ideal for softening the edge of a shaded path or creating a groundcover in dappled shade.
Hosta
Perennial hosta is one of the easiest plants to grow as long as you have some shade and ample rainfall. Hostas vary from tiny plants suitable for troughs or rock gardens to massive four-foot clumps with heart-shaped leaves almost 2 feet long that can be puckered, wavy-edged, white, or variegated green, blue-gray, chartreuse, emerald-edged—the variations are virtually endless. Hostas in new sizes and touting new foliage features seem to appear each year. This tough, shade-loving perennial, also known as plantain lily, blooms with white or purplish-lavender funnel-shaped or flared flowers in summer. Some are intensely fragrant. Hostas are a favorite of slugs and deer.
Periwinkle
Periwinkles deliver glossy leaves, stellar blue flowers, and quick coverage in shady gardens. The only flaw is they’re so popular they’ve become under-appreciated. Keep the plants cut back to encourage bushy growth and to keep them within bounds. Periwinkles can become invasive in some areas.