A native plant finder helps you discover plants that are naturally suited to your region, climate, and soil — reducing maintenance while providing maximum benefit to local wildlife. Native plants support butterflies, native bees, hummingbirds, and songbirds in ways that exotic ornamentals simply cannot, because local wildlife has co-evolved with them over thousands of years.
Filter Native Plants
How to Use the Native Plant Finder
Choosing the right native plants for your region is the single most impactful thing you can do to support local wildlife in your garden. Native plants provide food and habitat for native insects, birds, and other animals that have evolved alongside them. This free tool helps you filter 55+ native species by region, growing conditions, and wildlife benefit.
Step 1: Select Your US Region
Start by selecting your US region. This filters plants to those with a native range that includes your area. Using plants from your specific region ensures they are adapted to your local soils, rainfall patterns, and climate extremes — and that they will attract the native wildlife in your area rather than wildlife from other regions.
Step 2: Set Sun, Soil, and Moisture Conditions
Match plants to your actual site conditions. Measure sun exposure by counting hours of direct sun on a clear day. Identify your soil type — clay soils hold water, sandy soils drain quickly, loam is balanced. Moisture refers to how wet or dry the site typically is, not how much you plan to water. Matching plants to your existing conditions eliminates the need for irrigation and soil amendments.
Step 3: Choose Your Wildlife Goal
Different native plants attract different wildlife. Milkweed is the exclusive larval host plant for monarch butterflies. Black-eyed Susan and purple coneflower attract dozens of native bee species. American beautyberry provides winter berries for birds. Trumpet honeysuckle feeds hummingbirds. Choose your wildlife goal to find the most beneficial plants for your target species.
Step 4: Review Plant Cards
Each plant card shows the common and scientific name, height range, bloom time, native range, soil and sun preferences, and wildlife benefits. Use this information to select 3-5 species that provide seasonal interest across spring, summer, and fall — ensuring continuous bloom for pollinators throughout the growing season.
Tips for Planting Native Plants
Plant natives in the fall when possible — cooler temperatures and rain reduce transplant stress and encourage root development before winter. Water regularly the first season to establish roots, then reduce or eliminate irrigation. Avoid fertilizing established natives — excess nitrogen causes leafy growth over flowers. Leave dead plant stems standing through winter as overwintering habitat for native bees.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this native plant finder free?
Yes, the native plant finder is completely free with no limits. Filter and browse native plants as many times as you like. No signup or account required, and all filtering runs locally in your browser.
Is my data private?
Yes. All filtering happens locally in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No state selections, zone information, or personal data are ever sent to a server. Your data stays completely private.
Why should I plant native plants?
Native plants are adapted to your local climate and soil, requiring less water, fertilizer, and maintenance once established. They provide essential food and habitat for native wildlife — especially butterflies, pollinators, and birds that have co-evolved with these plants. Non-native plants often lack the insect connections that support local food webs.
What does 'native range' mean for plants?
A plant's native range is the geographic area where it evolved and occurs naturally without human introduction. A plant native to the Southeast may not be appropriate for a Pacific Northwest garden, even though both regions have similar climates. For maximum wildlife benefit, choose plants native to your specific region.
Are native plants deer resistant?
Many native plants develop chemical or physical defenses against local herbivores over millennia, making them less palatable to deer. Plants like Eastern Red Columbine, Wild Bergamot, and Black-eyed Susan are often browsed less than exotic ornamentals. However, deer preferences vary by region and population pressure — no plant is guaranteed deer-proof.
How do I know my USDA hardiness zone?
The USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map divides North America into zones based on average annual minimum winter temperature. You can find your zone by entering your zip code at the USDA website. Zones range from 1 (coldest, Alaska interior) to 13 (warmest, Hawaii and south Florida).
Can I use native plants in a formal garden design?
Absolutely. Many native plants are beautiful, well-behaved, and available in cultivated varieties selected for garden performance. Native grasses, coneflowers, black-eyed Susans, and native shrubs like buttonbush can work in formal mixed borders. The key is choosing the right plant for your site conditions — sun, soil, and moisture.
What soil type is best for native plants?
Most native plants are adapted to the native soil of their region. Eastern woodland species prefer rich loam. Prairie natives tolerate clay and drought. Coastal plants handle sandy, well-drained soil. The best approach is to match the plant to your existing soil type rather than amending soil to suit non-adapted plants.