When to sow and plant
Hardy Annuals are plants that complete their life cycle in one growing season. They are generally easy to grow from seed or can be bought as young plants from garden centres. Annuals are ideal for growing in summer containers and filling gaps in borders. Some examples of annuals include sunflowers, cosmos, sweet peas and zinnia.
annuals can be sown or planted outside in spring or autumn, as they can survive frost. Autumn sowings will flower earlier.
Half-hardy or tender annuals, which can’t tolerate cold weather, are mostly sown indoors in spring, to be planted outside after the last frost. Those which flower quickly from seed, are also successful when sown outdoors in early summer.
Hardy Biennials are plants that complete their life cycle over the course of two years. In the first year, biennials typically produce leaves and roots but no flowers. In the second year, they flower and produce seeds before dying. Some common biennials include foxgloves (Digitalis), honesty (Lunaria annua) and viper's bugloss (Echium vulgare).
biennials are usually sown in summer. Young plants can be planted outside in autumn or spring.
Where to plant
Most annuals, biennials and bedding like a fairly sunny spot, although a few will tolerate some shade. See our shade plants guide.
They can also be planted in summer containers, including large patio pots, hanging baskets and windowboxes.
How to sow annuals and biennials
Prepare your soil
When sowing directly into a border, clear the area of weeds, then rake the surface to a fine, crumbly texture.
How to sow
Hardy annuals are easy to grow from seed, and are usually sown outdoors in spring or autumn – see our sowing guide for full details. To find out which hardy annuals to sow when, see our spring sowing guide and autumn sowing guide.
You can also sow annual wildflowers in a meadow-style planting – see our guide to creating a wildflower meadow and our step-by-step mini-meadow.
Half-hardy and tender annuals, and most bedding, won’t survive frost, so are usually sown indoors in spring, to be planted outdoors after the last frost. See our guide to sowing indoors.
If you don’t have space indoors, you can sow fast-growing types outside in early summer, but they will flower later than spring-sown plants. See our guide to sowing half-hardy annuals outdoors.
Biennials are hardy usually sown in summer – and planted out into their flowering positions in autumn.
If you don’t have the time or space to sow seeds, all of these can also be bought as young plants, usually in spring.
They can also all be planted in containers – see our guide to planting up containers and how to plant a hanging basket.