Best Shrubs & Hedges to Grow in Oklahoma

Oklahoma spans USDA Zones 6–8, typically Zone 7. We've broken out 47 shrub varieties by zone — pick your zone below or find the right varieties for your specific part of the state.

Varieties

47

for Oklahoma

🌱

USDA

Zones 6–8

180–240 days season

🗺️

Beginner

27

easy to grow

👍

Heirloom

19

heritage varieties

🏛️
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Growing Shrubs & Hedges in Oklahoma

Zone 7 gardeners hit the sweet spot for shrub diversity, enjoying a 210-day growing season that supports everything from delicate Japanese Pieris to hardy Forsythia. This zone's moderate winters rarely drop below 0°F, opening doors to borderline-hardy beauties like Camellia Japonica and French Lavender that struggle in colder regions. The challenge lies in those occasional late spring freezes that can nip emerging buds, and summer heat stress that tests moisture-loving varieties like Endless Summer Hydrangea. Your success depends on choosing shrubs that can handle both winter's bite and summer's intensity while taking advantage of the extended growing season. The varieties I've selected here have proven themselves in Zone 7's variable conditions, from the reliable workhorses like Knock Out Roses and Common Boxwood to the showstoppers like Smokebush Purple and Weigela Wine and Roses. These picks balance beauty with resilience, giving you months of interest without constant coddling through weather extremes.

Zone 7 Shrubs & Hedges for Oklahoma★ Most of OK

47 varieties · Last frost April 1 · 210-day season

View all Zone 7 shrubs & hedges

+ 41 more Zone 7 shrubs & hedges

Zone 6 Shrubs & Hedges for Oklahoma

46 varieties · Last frost April 15 · 180-day season

View all Zone 6 shrubs & hedges

+ 40 more Zone 6 shrubs & hedges

Zone 8 Shrubs & Hedges for Oklahoma

42 varieties · Last frost March 15 · 240-day season

View all Zone 8 shrubs & hedges

+ 36 more Zone 8 shrubs & hedges

Zone 7 Growing Tips for Oklahoma

Plant bare-root shrubs in late March through early April, about two weeks before your average last frost of April 1st - the soil is workable but cool enough to minimize transplant shock. Container-grown shrubs can go in later, from mid-April through May, once soil temperatures stabilize above 50°F. For fall planting, aim for mid-September through early October, giving roots 6-8 weeks to establish before your first frost around October 30th. Zone 7's unpredictable late freezes are your biggest enemy - protect newly planted shrubs with frost cloth when temperatures threaten to drop below 32°F after buds break. Summer heat stress hits hardest in July and August, so maintain consistent moisture for the first full growing season and apply 2-3 inches of mulch to keep roots cool. The extended growing season means you can push borderline varieties like French Lavender by planting them in protected microclimates near south-facing walls or in raised beds that drain quickly in winter.