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Home - Garden Plants

Latest Updated: Mar 16, 2026 by Fresh Admin

Ground Cover Plants: Low-Growing Varieties That Spread

Bare soil under trees, steep banks that wash out every spring, gaps between stepping stones - these are the spots where ground cover plants earn their keep. A well-chosen ground cover outcompetes weeds, controls erosion, and asks almost nothing from you once it settles in.

Ground Cover Plants That Actually Perform Well

Quick Summary

The best low-maintenance ground covers spread reliably, tolerate your specific conditions (shade, dry soil, foot traffic), and stay put without escaping into neighboring beds.

This list covers 12 field-proven perennial options from sun-baked rock gardens to dense woodland shade, with spacing, zone, and spread habits included.

Items Covered12 perennial ground covers
Zone RangeUSDA 3–9
Spacing Range6–18 inches apart
Bottom LineMatch the plant to your conditions first — zone, sun, and soil — and you'll rarely need to replant.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • How to Choose the Right Ground Cover?
  • Ground Covers for Shade and Partial Shade
    • Ajuga reptans (Common Bugle) Zone 3-9 Easy
    • Vinca minor (Periwinkle) Zone 4-9 Easy
    • Pachysandra terminalis (Japanese Spurge) Zone 4-8 Medium
    • Galium odoratum (Sweet Woodruff) Zone 4-8 Easy
    • Carex oshimensis 'Evergold' (Japanese Sedge) Zone 5-9 Medium
  • Ground Covers for Full Sun and Dry Conditions
    • Thymus serpyllum (Creeping Thyme) Zone 4-9 Easy
    • Sedum spurium (Dragon's Blood Sedum) Zone 3-9 Easy
    • Thymus pseudolanuginosus (Woolly Thyme) Zone 5-9 Easy
    • Veronica repens (Creeping Speedwell) Zone 5-9 Easy
  • Ground Covers for Moist or Tricky Spots
    • Lysimachia nummularia 'Aurea' (Creeping Jenny) Zone 3-9 Easy
    • Mazus reptans Zone 4-8 Easy
    • Sagina subulata (Irish Moss) Zone 4-8 Medium
  • Side-by-Side: Top 5 Ground Covers Compared
  • Planting Ground Covers the Right Way
  • Controlling Spread Before It Becomes a Problem
  • Which Ground Cover Fits Your Situation?
  • Frequently Asked Questions

How to Choose the Right Ground Cover?

Before picking a plant, answer three questions: How much sun does the area get? Does water pool there or drain fast?

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Will anyone walk on it? Those answers eliminate most of the wrong choices immediately.

Spacing matters more than most guides admit. Plant too far apart and weeds fill the gaps for two or three seasons.

Too close and you waste money on plants that would have spread on their own. General rule: fast spreaders like Ajuga reptans go 12 inches apart; slow clumpers like Carex oshimensis need 18 inches or more.

  • Sun exposure: Full-sun covers like creeping thyme fail quickly in shade. Shade-adapted plants like pachysandra scorch in afternoon sun.
  • Soil moisture: Sedum and woolly thyme want lean, dry soil. Sweet woodruff and creeping Jenny need consistent moisture to stay attractive.
  • Foot traffic: Only a handful of ground covers - creeping thyme, mazus, and veronica - tolerate regular stepping. Most others thin out quickly under feet.
  • Spread speed: Fast spreaders cover ground in one season but may need annual edging. Slow spreaders require more patience up front but rarely escape their borders.

Watch Out

Creeping Jenny (Lysimachia nummularia) and vinca are listed as invasive in several states, including parts of the Midwest and Pacific Northwest. Check your local extension service before planting either near natural areas or waterways.

Ground Covers for Shade and Partial Shade

Shaded yards are where most lawn grasses give up. These plants cover challenging low-light areas without the annual reseeding battle that shade-tolerant turf requires.

Ajuga reptans (Common Bugle) Zone 3–9 Easy

Ajuga is arguably the fastest-establishing shade ground cover you can plant. Glossy rosettes in bronze, burgundy, or green spread by surface runners, and 6-10 inch purple flower spikes appear in mid-spring, attracting early pollinators.

  • Spacing: 12 inches apart; fills in within one full growing season under good conditions.
  • Soil tolerance: Adapts to clay, loam, and dry shade - one of the broadest tolerances on this list.
  • Caution: Can develop crown rot in poorly drained spots; avoid low-lying areas that hold water after rain.

Vinca minor (Periwinkle) Zone 4–9 Easy

Evergreen trailing stems root wherever they touch soil, giving vinca a steady, low-effort spread across dry shade - exactly where little else performs. Pale blue to white flowers appear in spring and rebloom sporadically through summer.

  • Spacing: 12-18 inches; fills in by year two in average conditions.
  • Dry shade: More drought-tolerant once established than most shade ground covers.
  • Invasive risk: Spreads aggressively near woodland edges; edge twice per year to contain it.

Pachysandra terminalis (Japanese Spurge) Zone 4–8 Medium

The classic under-tree solution in zones 4-8. Pachysandra terminalis builds a dense 6-12 inch evergreen carpet with glossy, whorled leaves that block weeds almost completely once established - but "once established" takes patience.

  • First year: Spreads slowly; expect gaps through year one and sometimes year two.
  • Disease watch: Volutella leaf blight hits plants in wet, poorly drained soils; improve drainage before planting.
  • Spacing: 12 inches apart in amended soil; 6-8 inches if you want faster coverage.

Galium odoratum (Sweet Woodruff) Zone 4–8 Easy

Few ground covers smell as good as sweet woodruff in spring. Whorled star-shaped leaves release a fresh hay scent when brushed, and white star flowers blanket the plant in April and May.

  • Heat limit: Dies back in summer in zones 7-8 unless shaded and kept consistently moist.
  • Best use: Under deciduous trees or shrubs where it gets spring sun then summer shade.
  • Spacing: 12 inches apart; self-seeds modestly to fill gaps over time.

Carex oshimensis 'Evergold' (Japanese Sedge) Zone 5–9 Medium

Where most ground covers hug the ground, 'Evergold' adds a foot of arching gold-striped texture. It spreads by short rhizomes rather than runners, so it fills space gradually without becoming a nuisance.

  • Height: 12-18 inches - taller than others here, giving layered depth to shade beds.
  • Spread rate: Slow; space 18 inches apart and fill gaps with annuals for the first two seasons.
  • Pairing: Works well under Japanese maples and other structural shade trees.

Good to Know

Pachysandra and vinca both prefer acidic to neutral soil (pH 5.5–7.0). If your soil is alkaline, amend with sulfur or pine bark before planting, or yellowing foliage will appear within the first season.

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Ground Covers for Full Sun and Dry Conditions

Sunny, dry slopes and gravel paths need plants built for lean conditions. These selections handle drought, compaction, and reflected heat that would kill most ornamental plants.

Several also make credible low-maintenance alternatives to turfgrass in high-sun areas.

Thymus serpyllum (Creeping Thyme) Zone 4–9 Easy

At half an inch to two inches tall, creeping thyme is one of the flattest ground covers available. It blooms in dense pink-to-purple mats in early summer and releases a mild herbal scent underfoot - genuinely pleasant between stepping stones.

  • Foot traffic: Handles light-to-moderate stepping better than almost any other option here.
  • Deer resistance: Reliably avoided by deer, making it useful near browse-prone borders.
  • Spacing: 9-12 inches in lean, well-drained soil; sandy or gravelly soil gives best results.

Sedum spurium (Dragon's Blood Sedum) Zone 3–9 Easy

Red-tinged succulent rosettes turn deep burgundy in fall sun, and flat clusters of summer flowers attract bees reliably. Sedum spurium shrugs off frost heaving better than most low sedums, making it a solid pick in zones 3-5.

  • Soil need: Lean, rocky, or sandy soil is ideal - rich soil causes floppy growth and rot.
  • Drought: Among the most drought-tolerant covers here; skip watering after the first season entirely in zones 4-7.
  • Spacing: 12 inches apart; establishes quickly and fills in by end of year one.

Thymus pseudolanuginosus (Woolly Thyme) Zone 5–9 Easy

Silvery-gray, densely hairy foliage gives woolly thyme a soft, almost felt-like texture that looks different from anything else in a rock garden or path edge. It spreads more slowly than creeping thyme but forms a tighter, neater cushion.

  • Height: Only 0.5-1 inch - the flattest cover in this entire list.
  • Fire resistance: Notably low flammability compared to dry ornamental grasses; worth noting for fire-prone zones.
  • Spacing: 9-12 inches; expect two seasons to achieve full coverage.

Veronica repens (Creeping Speedwell) Zone 5–9 Easy

A versatile bridge plant - handles both dry shade and full sun, which few covers manage well. Small blue flowers appear in spring, and the evergreen mat recovers from light foot traffic faster than most non-thyme options.

  • Adaptability: Works between pavers in sun or as an edging filler in partial shade.
  • Spacing: 8-12 inches apart; spreads by creeping stems that root at nodes.
  • Water needs: If you're looking at surviving summer dry spells, this outperforms vinca in drier spots.

Ground Covers for Moist or Tricky Spots

Wet edges, pond margins, and consistently moist soil present their own challenges. These covers fill those niches without rotting out.

Lysimachia nummularia 'Aurea' (Creeping Jenny) Zone 3–9 Easy

Chartreuse coin-shaped leaves brighten dark corners faster than almost anything else. In full sun, the color turns a vivid gold; in shade, it softens to lime green.

Both are attractive, but the spread rate demands respect.

  • Moisture: Excels at wet pond edges and rain garden margins where other plants drown.
  • Invasive caution: Spreads aggressively in moist soil near natural waterways; contain with edging barriers.
  • Spacing: 12-18 inches, but it will fill gaps in weeks under moist summer conditions.

Mazus reptans Zone 4–8 Easy

Two-inch stems covered in purple-and-white flowers in early spring make mazus one of the showiest low ground covers available. It also tolerates more foot traffic than its delicate look suggests.

  • Soil: Prefers moist, well-drained soil; tolerates brief waterlogging better than thyme or sedum.
  • Establishment: Fills gaps quickly after planting - often visible spreading within six weeks of transplanting.
  • Spacing: 6-8 inches for fast coverage; low-growing perennial flowers like mazus combine well with spring bulbs.

Sagina subulata (Irish Moss) Zone 4–8 Medium

At a quarter-inch tall, Irish moss forms the finest-textured carpet on this list. Tiny white flowers appear in late spring, and the cushion-like mounds look elegant between flagstones in cool-summer climates.

  • Climate limit: Fails in hot, dry summers - zones 7-8 need afternoon shade and consistent moisture to keep it looking good.
  • Soil pH: Prefers slightly acidic to neutral soil; alkaline soil causes yellowing within one season.
  • Spacing: 6 inches apart; grows slowly but stays extremely tidy once established.

Pro Tip

For path gaps and stepping stone edges, mix creeping thyme and woolly thyme side by side. The texture contrast — wiry versus fuzzy — looks intentional and both handle dry conditions equally well.

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Side-by-Side: Top 5 Ground Covers Compared

Choosing between the most popular options is easier with the key specs lined up. This comparison focuses on the five covers most frequently used as lawn alternatives or large-area fills.

Top 5 Ground Cover Plants at a Glance
PlantZoneSunHeightFoot TrafficBest Use
Creeping Thyme4–9Full sun0.5–2 inYesPath edges, lawn swap
Ajuga3–9Part–full shade3–6 inLight onlyShade banks, tree circles
Vinca minor4–9Part–full shade2–4 inNoDry shade, slopes
Pachysandra4–8Full–part shade6–12 inNoDense shade under trees
Dragon's Blood Sedum3–9Full sun2–4 inNoDry slopes, rock gardens

Creeping thyme wins on versatility for sunny spots; pachysandra wins on weed suppression in deep shade. For zones 3-5 specifically, ajuga and sedum are the safest bets for harsh-winter reliability.

Planting Ground Covers the Right Way

Most ground cover failures happen at planting time, not years later. Get the first steps right and these plants largely take care of themselves.

The approach is similar whether you're filling a raised bed or planting in-ground.

Clear and prep the area
Remove existing weeds by hand or smother with cardboard for 4–6 weeks before planting. Ground covers can't outcompete established perennial weeds in year one.
Amend soil minimally
Most covers — especially thyme, sedum, and vinca — prefer average to lean soil. Over-amending with compost encourages floppy, disease-prone growth. Only heavy clay benefits from organic matter addition.
Space correctly from the start
Use the spacing guidelines for each plant — not the smallest pot size as a reference. Too-close planting causes crowding and fungal issues within two seasons.
Water weekly for the first 6 weeks
Even drought-tolerant covers like thyme and sedum need consistent moisture to root into new soil. Water deeply once a week rather than lightly every day.
Mulch between plants temporarily
Apply 1–2 inches of shredded bark between new transplants to suppress weeds while the plants fill in. Pull it back once plants touch each other.

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Controlling Spread Before It Becomes a Problem

Fast-spreading ground covers are a gift and a liability. Vinca, ajuga, and creeping Jenny all send stems beyond their intended borders without much warning.

Edging twice per season - once in spring, once in early fall - keeps most of them in check.

For slopes or naturalized areas where spread is welcome, these same plants are a genuine asset. A steep bank covered in garden-proven perennials like ajuga or vinca needs almost no maintenance after year two and controls erosion far better than mulch alone.

  • Physical edging: A plastic or steel edging strip buried 3-4 inches deep stops most surface-rooting spreaders. It won't stop underground rhizomes.
  • Annual trimming: Cut back vinca and pachysandra hard every 2-3 years in early spring to refresh growth and prevent a woody, bare-center problem.
  • Rhizome spreaders: Creeping Jenny and sweet woodruff spread underground as well as above - hand-pull escapees promptly before they establish new colonies.

Zone Note

In zones 3–4, creeping Jenny and sweet woodruff may die back to the ground each winter but reliably return in spring. In zones 8–9, pachysandra struggles in summer heat — swap it for ajuga or vinca for better persistence.

Which Ground Cover Fits Your Situation?

The right pick depends on conditions more than preference. These scenarios match common problem areas with the covers most likely to succeed there.

If you're cross-referencing with other low-effort perennials, these all rank well on the maintenance scale.

  • Dense shade under mature trees: Pachysandra or sweet woodruff. Both handle root competition and deep shade where grass never takes hold.
  • Sunny slope with erosion risk: Dragon's blood sedum or creeping thyme. Both root quickly, tolerate dry soil, and spread laterally to bind loose soil.
  • Between stepping stones with occasional foot traffic: Creeping thyme or mazus. Woolly thyme works too but fills in more slowly.
  • Wet area or pond edge: Creeping Jenny. Nothing else on this list handles standing moisture as well.
  • Large shaded area, want fast results: Ajuga. Spreads the fastest of all the shade options and establishes reliably in zones 3-9.
  • Formal look with neat edges: Irish moss or 'Evergold' sedge. Both stay tidy and look intentional rather than wild.
  • Deer pressure is heavy: Creeping thyme. Strong aromatics deter deer reliably; pair it with other deer-avoided plants for a fully resistant border.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Pachysandra terminalis, Ajuga reptans, and Vinca minor are the three most reliable shade ground covers, performing well in zones 4–9 with minimal supplemental care after year two.

Spacing ranges from 6 inches for slow spreaders like Irish moss to 18 inches for vinca and pachysandra; fast spreaders like ajuga fill in at 12 inches within one growing season.

Creeping thyme (Thymus serpyllum), mazus reptans, and creeping speedwell (Veronica repens) handle light-to-moderate foot traffic; only creeping thyme reliably recovers from regular stepping between pavers.

Fast spreaders like ajuga and creeping Jenny fill in within one season when spaced 12 inches apart; slow growers like pachysandra and woolly thyme typically need two to three seasons for complete coverage.

Creeping thyme is the strongest lawn substitute — it handles light foot traffic, stays under 2 inches tall, and blooms in early summer; it works best in zones 4–9 on well-drained, sunny sites.


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