15 Perennial Flowers That Produce Long-Lasting Blooms Year After Year

These perennial plants keep the color coming for entire (if not multiple) seasons.

Garden of multi-colored Perennial Astilbes
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Tatiana Terekhina / GETTY IMAGES

Perennials are a favorite for a reason. Their beautiful colors come back year after year, and many are hardy enough to endure warm summer temperatures. However, some perennials only bloom for a short period of time, which can be disappointing for first-time gardeners.

Fortunately, there are some perennial flowers that last longer than others and will bring a splash of color to your garden throughout the season. Here, we spoke to experts about their favorites that go the distance and will stay bright and vibrant for longer.

01 of 15

Allium 'Drumstick'

Drumstick Allium flowers
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Who wouldn't love a plant that looks like an Easter egg on a stick, especially one with color-changing blooms? Allium 'Drumstick' (Allium sphaerocephalon), an ornamental member of the onion family, is a cute, short little plant, says Blythe Yost, a landscape architect and founder of online design service Tilly. It blooms from late spring to late summer in compact heads that evolve from green to pink to reddish-purple as the days of summer pass. 

  • Bloom time: Late spring to late summer
  • Zones: 4 to 8
  • Size: 12 to 36 inches tall x 12 to 18 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun, with afternoon shade in hot regions; sandy, well-drained soil
02 of 15

Aster

aster flowers
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Blooming from late summer into fall, asters provide important food for monarch butterflies and birds migrating southward, says Derek McKay, a horticulturist with Ted Lare Design Build & Garden Center in Des Moines, Iowa. "Most bloom right in time to help them make their journeys out," he says. Their daisy-like flowers come in white, pink, purple, lavender, and blue.

  • Bloom time: Late summer through fall
  • Zones: 3 to 9
  • Size: 12 to 72 inches tall x 12 to 48 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun to part shade; moist, well-drained soil
03 of 15

Astilbe

Pink Astilbe
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Astilbe's feathery clusters of teeny white, pink, purple, or red blooms add a bit of fantasy to your garden, and it's among the rarer flowering perennials that like shade. While the blooming period is just two to three weeks, different Astilbe species flower at varying times from spring through fall, so picking out a couple of different astilbes to use in your garden can be a great move.

  • Bloom time: Spring through fall (if you plant multiple varieties)
  • Zones: 4 to 8
  • Size: 12 to 36 inches tall x 18 to 30 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Prefers partial shade; rich, moist, well-drained soil
04 of 15

Butterfly Bush 'Blue Chip'

Butterfly Bush - "Blue Chip"
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Part of a new miniature butterfly bush (Buddleja) series, 'Blue Chip' produces spikes of blue-lavender flowers that bloom continuously from spring to fall. And unlike many butterfly bush varieties, which seed so prolifically that some states have declared them noxious, this one produces few seeds—so it's not likely to get out of hand. 

  • Bloom time: Spring to fall
  • Zones: 5 to 9
  • Size: 12 to 24 inches tall x 12 to 24 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; average, medium-moisture, well-drained soil
05 of 15

Catmint

Catmint purple flowers in garden
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RYosha / GETTY IMAGES

Catmint (Nepeta) thrives in almost any soil, and spring blooms last as long as six weeks. Cut it back as it becomes leggy to encourage a second flush of blooms in late summer. In addition to lavender hues, blooms can be pink, white, or yellow.

  • Bloom time: Late spring to early fall
  • Zones: 3 to 9
  • Size: 6 to 12 inches tall x 12 to 36 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Part to full sun; any well-drained soil
06 of 15

Purple Coneflower

Purple coneflower
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Purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) can take a few years to produce blooms, but once this prairie perennial plant is established, you'll have abundant flowers from mid to late summer and again in the fall if you remove spent blooms. Hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees love its nectar, and overwintering birds gather sustenance from the flower heads' seeds.

  • Bloom time: Summer to fall
  • Zones: 3 to 9
  • Size: 12 to 36 inches tall x 12 to 24 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; well-drained soil
07 of 15

Whorled Tickseeds

Threadleaf flowers
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Barry Winiker / GETTY IMAGES

Whorled tickseed (Coreopsis verticillata) produces small flowers that begin in early summer and continue all season long if you pinch off old blooms. Create a sunshiny mix by planting pale yellow 'Moonbeam' alongside the richer, more golden 'Zagreb,' Yost says.

  • Bloom time: All summer (if deadheaded)
  • Zones: 3 to 9
  • Size: 12 to 48 inches tall x 12 to 36 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; slightly dry, well-drained soil
08 of 15

Daylily 'Stella d'Oro'

Daylily "Stella d'Oro" flowers
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Disease-resistant daylilies produce trumpet-shaped blossoms that fall off daily, but a steady succession of new ones keeps the color coming. While most daylily varieties bloom for just one to three weeks, the popular 'Stella d'Oro' (Hemerocallis 'Stella D'Oro') variety serves up golden-yellow blossoms from May to September or even October, depending on where you live. 

  • Bloom time: Spring to early fall
  • Zones: 3 to 10
  • Size: 9 to 12 inches tall x 10 to 12 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; moist, well-drained soil
09 of 15

Ironweed

ironweed flowers
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Ironweed (Veronica) is a drought-tolerant perennial that blooms for a month to six weeks. "It's native to the continental U.S., so it's very hardy," says McKay, who also likes its deep purple flowers that are almost an electric purple. Pollinators, including long-tongue bees, monarchs, and swallowtails, love its nectar, and it's also a food source for caterpillar moths.

  • Bloom time: Mid-summer to mid-fall
  • Zones: 4 to 8
  • Size: 12 to 36 inches tall x 24 to 36 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; rich, moist soil
10 of 15

Lady's Mantle

Lady's mantle plant blooms
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brytta / GETTY IMAGES

Lady's mantle (Alchemilla mollis) spills onto paths in Martha's perennial garden in Bedford, N.Y. Its dainty yellow-green flowers bloom in masses similar to baby's breath from late spring to early summer. Yost loves this plant's fuzzy blue-green foliage that beads up with jewel-like droplets after it rains. 

  • Bloom time: Late spring to early summer
  • Zones: 3 to 8
  • Size: 12 to 36 inches tall x 12 to 24 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Prefers part shade but tolerates sun; any soil
11 of 15

Knock Out Roses

knockout rose
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Diana Rever / GETTY IMAGES

Knock Out roses are the ultimate long-lasting perennial, says Yost, whose Pearl River, N.Y., garden blooms with her favorite hue, Blushing Pink, from May to October. This variety is also available with vibrant hot pink and buttery yellow blooms, among others. There's also a petite variety for balconies and small spaces. Boost bloom quantities by planting in a spot that gets eight hours of direct sun daily, and go easy on nitrogen fertilizer, which pumps up foliage over flowers.

  • Bloom time: Spring to fall (depending on variety)
  • Zones: 4 to 11
  • Size: 36 to 48 inches tall x 36 to 48 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; well-drained soil
12 of 15

Russian Sage

Russian Sage purple plant
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Russian sage (Perovskia atriplicifolia) has silver foliage and long, thin clusters (known as panicles) of tiny lavender-blue flowers that bloom from mid to late summer through fall. The flowers will last longer if you pinch off spent blooms to encourage a second flush. It is a tough plant that takes drought conditions well. "The original was a little floppy, but there's a good one called 'Little Spire' that's more compact," says Yost.

  • Bloom time: Mid to late summer through fall (if spent flowers are pinched off)
  • Zones: 4 to 9
  • Size: 36 to 48 inches tall x 36 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; rocky or medium to dry, well-drained soil
13 of 15

St. John's Wort

St. John's Wort yellow buds
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Plant St. John's Wort (Hypericum perforatum) in full sun and prune it in early spring to encourage its star-shaped flowers to proliferate later. Its showy, golden-yellow blooms start in midsummer and keep on coming for almost six weeks.

  • Bloom time: Summer to early fall
  • Zones: 3 to 8
  • Size: 12 to 36 inches tall x 12 to 48 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Part shade to full sun; prefers well-drained, medium-moist soil
14 of 15

Salvia

Salvia purple flowers
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herreid / GETTY IMAGES

Most salvia species can be counted on for a relatively long blooming period starting in spring and extending into late summer or early fall. They tolerate drought well, but providing plenty of water will encourage longer blooming or even a second flush.

Yost's favorite: Caradonna, which produces tall, dark purple stems topped with blue-violet flower spires. McKay likes 'Back to the Fuchsia,' which adds two-toned pink accents to his Des Moines garden between what he calls peony season and iris season, which can be a hard season to find blooms for.

  • Bloom time: Spring through early fall
  • Zones: 5 to 10
  • Size: 12 to 60 inches tall x 12 to 48 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun to partial shade; prefers well-drained soil
15 of 15

Yarrow

Yarrow plant
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Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) is a native perennial that can successfully choke out weeds when planted in groups. It produces dainty blooms that come in a range of colors. It puts on a show from early spring to late fall depending on your zone.

  • Bloom time: Spring to fall
  • Zones: 3 to 8
  • Size: 36 inches tall x 36 inches wide
  • Care requirements: Full sun; well-draining soil
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