Gardening Ideas Outdoor Plants Shrubs & Bushes 18 Best Evergreen Azaleas For Year-Round Beauty Depending on the type, evergreen azaleas can bloom from late winter into early fall and provide gorgeous green texture to your garden year-round. By Steve Bender Steve Bender Steve Bender, also known as The Grumpy Gardener, is an award-winning author, editor, columnist, and speaker with nearly 40 years experience as Garden Editor, Senior Writer, and Editor-at-Large for Southern Living. Southern Living's editorial guidelines Updated on April 19, 2024 Close Photo: Renate Frost / EyeEm / Getty Images No plant has shaped the Southern garden more than an evergreen shrub known as the azalea—particularly the Indica azalea which found its way to the South via Japan and got its name because, at the time it was discovered, Asia was known as the East Indies. Making its Southern debut in the late mid-1800s, the Indica stunned onlookers with its statuesque size and mind-boggling blossoms of red, pink, white, purple, and salmon, and the azalea quickly became a staple of every Southern garden. Today, there are more than a dozen groups of evergreen azaleas (all part of the Rhododendron family), and an increasing number of hybrids have such mixed parentage that they don't fit conveniently into any category. The list below includes some of the most popular groups and varieties we love. All parts of azaleas are toxic to humans and pets if ingested. Evergreen Azalea Care Botanical Name: Rhododendron spp.Sun Exposure: Partial sun, varies per varietySoil Type: Moist, well-drainedSoil pH: Acidic Like deciduous azaleas, most evergreen varieties like acidic, well-drained soil that includes high organic matter and filtered shade, especially in hot climates. They like east- and north-facing locations, as too much sun can burn their leaves. They have shallow roots so they can dry out easily. Water the leaves and root area, but don’t let the soil stay soggy. Except as noted, the bloom season for all of the hybrids we've included is late winter or spring. Plants grown in greenhouses can be forced for winter bloom. Size varies considerably, but most of these slow-growing plants reach 2–5 feet high and at least as wide. Read on for evergreen azaleas to add to your garden. Aromi Hybrids Like their better-known deciduous counterparts, the evergreen Aromi hybrids were bred to tolerate the heat in the South. Developed by Dr. Eugene Aromi, an education professor at the University of South Alabama and prolific azalea hybridizer, the hybrids listed below thrive in the Mid-South and Lower South climates and feature stunning blooms in vibrant colors. Before his death in 2004, he produced more than 1,000 crosses and over 100,000 seedlings although only 1% of those were ever named. In 2015, the Mobile Botanical Gardens dedicated an area in their azalea collection to Aromi's hybrids. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Amelia Rose' 6 feet high Purplish red USDA 7–9 'Hallie' 4 to 6 feet high Purplish pink USDA 7–9 'Michaele Lux' 4 feet high Purplish pink with purplish red blotch USDA 7–9 Belgian Indica Hybrids These hybrids were originally developed for greenhouse forcing. Where winter lows don't dip below 20°F, many of them serve well as landscape plants. They are profuse bloomers with lush, thick foliage and typically semi-double or double blooms 2 to 3 inches big. If you're planning for hanging baskets, there are three Belgian Indica choices with pendant growth: 'Red Poppy,' 'Violetta,' and 'William Van Orange.' Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'California Sunset' 3 to 4 feet high salmon-pink with white border USDA 9–11 'Chimes' 3 feet high dark red USDA 9–11 'Mardi Gras' 3 to 4 feet high salmon with white border USDA 9–11 'Mission Bells' 4 feet high red USDA 9–11 'Mme Alfred Sanders' 4 feet high cherry-red USDA 9–11 'Orange Sanders' 4 feet high salmon-orange USDA 9–11 'Orchidiflora' 4 feet high orchid-pink USDA 9–11 'Paul Schame' 4 feet high salmon USDA 9–11 'Red Poppy' 4 feet high red USDA 9–11 'Violetta' 4 feet high deep purple USDA 9–11 'William Van Orange' 4 feet high orange-red USDA 9–11 Beltsville Hybrids In 1939, Guy Yerkes and Robert Pryor, working together at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Research Station in Beltsville, Maryland, started an azalea breeding program to create plants suitable for greenhouse forcing but also hardy enough to grow outdoors (zone 7). When Yerkes retired, Pryor continued azalea breeding at the USDA Plant Introduction Station in Glenn Dale, Maryland. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Guy Yerkes' 2 to 3 feet high pink USDA 6–9 'H. H. Hume' 3 to 4 feet high white with a yellowish throat USDA 6–9 'Polar Bear' 3 to 4 feet high white USDA 6–9 Bloom-A-Thon Hybrids If you want your garden decked out in flowers most of the year, a Bloom-a-Thon azalea is the perfect pick. Bred in Seneca, South Carolina, by Bob Head, Bloom-a-Thon hybrids bloom multiple times a year: spring, summer, and fall. Their maker promises they will bloom for six weeks in spring and another 12 to 16 weeks in summer and fall! Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Lavender' 3 ½ to 4 ½ feet high lavender USDA 7–9 'White' 2 ½ to 3 feet high white USDA 7–9 'Red' 3 to 4 feet high white USDA 7–9 'Pink Double' 3 to 4 feet high pink USDA 7–9 Carla Hybrids During the 1960s, Dr. Richard J. Stadtherr and Dr. Fred Cochran, professors at North Carolina State University, initiated an azalea breeding program called Carla. Dr. Stadtherr left to work at Louisiana State University but continued the program, so trials were conducted in both states. They introduced 14 double-flowering plants that are highly floriferous (many blooms at once), superior greenhouse forcing types yet hardy to zones 7 and 8. Of these, the last to be introduced, 'Fred Cochran,' is highly resistant to phytophthora, a root rot that can affect azaleas. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Adelaide Pope' 5 feet high deep rose-pink USDA 7–9 'Carror' 3 to 4 feet high pink USDA 7–9 'Elaine' 3 to 4 feet high light pink USDA 7–9 'Emily' 3 to 4 feet high deep rose-pink USDA 7–9 'Sunglow' 4 to 6 feet high deep rose-pink USDA 7–9 'Wolf-pack Red' 2 to 3 feet high bright red USDA 7–9 Encore Hybrids Bred by Buddy Lee of Franklinton, Louisiana, and introduced by Flowerwood Nursery in Mobile, Alabama, these azaleas bloom most heavily in fall and then again in spring. Unlike other azaleas, they can take full sun. This relatively new group of azaleas was developed in the 1980s by crossing traditional spring-blooming plants with a rare Taiwanese summer-blooming azalea, Rhododendron oldhamii. The offspring boasts blooms in springtime and then an encore in late summer and fall. Although Encore azaleas don't offer a profusion of flowers like the common spring bloomers, they make up for it with a much longer blooming period. "What's amazing is the duration of the total flowering period," says Jim Berry, general manager of Plant Development Services, Inc. (PDSI), in Loxley, Alabama. "We've had reports of nine months of flowering in the Coastal South," he says. PDSI owns the patent to propagate Encore azaleas, and they've been working overtime to keep up with the demand. The 'Autumn Bonfire' azalea, one of the newest hybrids in this group, is one of our faves. It blooms in spring, summer, and fall in a scarlet red shade so pretty you'll never have to give up curb appeal again. The Encore 'Autumn Bonfire' is a low-maintenance, fast-growing dwarf shrub that holds deep green foliage all year and vibrant true red blooms for almost that long. It offers all of the color and pizzazz of a flowering shrub at a manageable size and upkeep. Music to the ears of all gardeners who don't have the detail gene and those who do, too. A flowering shrub of the people! Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Autumn Amethyst' 4 feet high soft purple USDA 6–10 'Autumn Bonfire' 3 feet high scarlet red USDA 6–10 'Autumn Cheer' 3 feet high deep pink USDA 6–10 'Autumn Coral' 3 feet high salmon-pink USDA 6–10 'Autumn Embers' 3 feet high orange-red USDA 6–10 'Autumn Rouge' 4 feet high vivid pink USDA 6–10 'Autumn Royalty' 4 to 4 ½ feet high purple USDA 6–10 Gable Hybrids Bred in Pennsylvania to produce cold-hardy azaleas of Kurume type, Gable hybrids may lose some leaves during winter in the Upper South. They bloom heavily in midseason. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Caroline Gable' 3 feet high pink USDA 6–9 'Louise Gable' 3 feet high pink USDA 6–9 'Pioneer' 3 feet high pink USDA 6–9 'Rosebud' 3 feet high pink USDA 6–9 'Herbert' 3 feet high purple USDA 6–9 'Purple Splendor' 4 feet high purple USDA 6–9 'Rose Greeley' 4 feet high white USDA 6–9 'Stewartstonian' 4 feet high orange-red USDA 6–9 Girard Hybrids The Girard hybrids are handsome-foliaged plants bred for extra cold hardiness. They originated from Gable crosses and many of the Girard azaleas have vibrant fall foliage. 'Girard's Crimson,' with its bright crimson-red blooms, sports maroon fall foliage, and orange-blossomed 'Girard's Hot Shot' flaunts beautiful orange-red fall and winter foliage. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Girard's Crimson' 3 feet high bright crimson-red USDA 6–8 'Girard's Fuchsia' 2 to 4 feet high reddish purple USDA 6–8 'Girard's Hot Shot' 2 to 4 feet high orange-red USDA 6–8 'Girard's National Beauty' 2 to 4 feet high rose-pink USDA 6–8 'Girard's Roberta' 2 to 4 feet high pink USDA 6–8 'Girard's Rose' 2 to 4 feet high deep rose USDA 6–8 Glenn Dale Hybrids Bred by Benjamin Y. Morrison at the National Arboretum, these azaleas were developed primarily for hardiness, though they do drop some leaves in cold winters. These hybrids have a range of characteristics. Some are tall and rangy while others are low and compact, growth rate varies from slow to rapid, and some have small leaves like Kurume hybrids while others have large leaves. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Anchorite' 4 feet high orange USDA 6–9 'Aphrodite' 5 feet high pale pink USDA 6–9 'Buccaneer' 5 feet high orange-red USDA 6–9 'Copperman' 5 to 6 feet high orange-red USDA 6–9 'Fashion' 2 to 4 feet high orange-red USDA 6–9 'Everest' 3 to 4 feet high white USDA 6–9 'Glacier' 5 to 6 feet high white USDA 6–9 'Geisha' 4 feet high white with red stripes USDA 6–9 'Martha Hitchcock' 3 to 4 feet high magenta-crimson with a white center USDA 6–9 'Treasure' 5 to 6 feet high white edged with a hint of pink USDA 6–9 Harris Hybrids Bred in Lawrenceville, Georgia, by James Harris beginning in 1970, the Harris hybrids are a family of heat-tolerant, big-bloomed azaleas. Their ability to stand up to our humid summers has made them popular in the South. The 'Pink Cascade'—one of his earliest hybrids—is much loved for its beautiful cascading form. More recently, his work on repeat bloom has been marketed in the Bloom N' Again series, marked by bright colors. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Coronado Red' 3 to 4 feet high clear red USDA 7–9 'Midnight Flare' 3 to 5 feet high dark red USDA 7–9 'Pink Cascade' 1 to 2 feet, cascading pink center with red border USDA 7–9 'Fascination' 3 to 4 feet high pink center with red border USDA 7–9 Kaempferi Hybrids From R. kaempferi, the torch azalea, a cold-hardy plant with orange-red flowers, these hybrids are hardier than Kurume hybrids (to –15°F), with a taller, more open habit. They will lose nearly all their leaves below 0°F. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Fedora' 4 feet high salmon-rose USDA 6–8 'Holland' 2 to 4 feet high red USDA 6–8 'John Cairns' 5 feet high orange-red USDA 6–8 Kurume Hybrids Compact, twiggy plants densely clothed in small, glossy leaves, Kurume hybrids also produce profuse amounts of small flowers. Plants have a mounded or tiered form and look handsome even out of bloom. They are widely used in foundation plantings—to the point of cliché. Of the many available selections, the ones below are among the most widely sold. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Coral Bells' 2 to 4 feet high pink USDA 6–8 'Hexe' 5 feet high crimson USDA 6–8 'Hershey's Red' 4 to 6 feet high bright red USDA 6–8 'Hino-crimson' 2 to 4 feet high bright red USDA 6–8 'Hino-degiri' 3 to 4 feet high cerise-red USDA 6–8 'Sherwood Red' 2 to 4 feet high orange-red USDA 6–8 'Snow' 3 to 5 feet high white USDA 6–8 North Tisbury Hybrids Most of these hybrids reflect the characteristics of a common prostrate-growing ancestor, R. nakaharai, which has low-growing branches that hug the ground rather than extending upward. Their dwarf, spreading habit and very late bloom (into midsummer) make them naturals for hanging baskets and ground covers. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Alexander' 1 to 2 feet high red-orange USDA 6–8 'Pink Cascade' 1 to 2 feet high pink USDA 6–8 'Red Fountain' 1 to 2 feet high dark red-orange USDA 6–8 Pericat Hybrids These hybrids were originally developed for greenhouse forcing but are about as hardy as Kurume hybrids and look much the same—though flowers tend to be somewhat larger. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Hampton Beauty' 3 feet high rose-pink USDA 6–8 'Mme Pericat' 3 feet high light pink USDA 6–8 'Sweetheart Supreme' 3 feet high blush pink USDA 6–8 'Twenty Grand' 3 feet high rose-pink USDA 6–8 ReBloom Hybrids A second line of repeat-blooming azaleas from Bob Head, these have a good color range from pastels into more vivid hues, blooming again in summer as well as fall. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Bush Elegance' 1 to 1 ½ feet high pink USDA 7–9 'Cherry Pink Prestige' 1 to 1 ½ feet high pink USDA 7–9 'Coral Amazement'' 2 to 2 ½ feet high vivid coral USDA 7–9 'Firebrick Fame' 2 to 2 ½ feet high red-orange USDA 7–9 'Fuchsia Extravagance' 1 to 2 feet high violet-purple USDA 7–9 'Pink Adoration' 2 to 2 ½ feet high pink USDA 7–9 'Purple Spectacular' 1 to 2 feet high purple USDA 7–9 'White Nobility' 3 feet high white USDA 7–9 Robin Hill Hybrids This large group of hybrids with typically large flowers was bred in the 1950s and '60s by Robert Gartrell of Wycoff, New Jersey—ironic due to their popularity among gardeners in the Lower and Coastal South. Most are 3-4 feet tall and wide; some are shorter or taller. They are known to bloom for two to three months, in fall as well as spring. There are so many good ones (several with "Robin Hill" in their names) that it's difficult to single out only a few. The newest is 'Freddy,' a popular white sport of 'Watchet' that was found and introduced by Margie Jenkins of Amite, Louisiana. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Betty Ann Voss' 1 to 2 feet high pink USDA 7–9 'Conversation Piece' 2 feet high pink with light center USDA 7–9 'Dorothy Rees' 2 feet high white USDA 7–9 'Nancy of Robin Hill' 2 feet high pink with red blotch USDA 7–9 'Robin Hill Gillie' 2 feet high red-orange USDA 7–9 'Hilda Niblett' 1 to 2 feet high combination of light pink, deep pink, and white USDA 7–9 'Watchet' 2 feet high light pink USDA 7–9 Satsuki Hybrids This group includes azaleas sometimes referred to as 'Gumpo' and 'Macrantha' hybrids. Hardy to 5°F, these low-growing plants can make nice ground covers. They bloom late, bearing large flowers in tight-growing mounds of late-spring color. However, due to their compact form, they can be plagued by Rhizoctonia, a blight that is usually fatal. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Gumpo' 1 to 2 feet high white USDA 7–9 'Gumpo Pink' 1 to 2 feet high rose-pink USDA 7–9 'Aikoku' 1 to 2 feet high orange USDA 7–9 'Amagasa' 2 feet high deep pink to coral-red USDA 7–9 'Johga' 2 feet high white to light pink with dark pink blotch USDA 7–9 'Gyokushin' 2 feet high white with fuchsia blotch USDA 7–9 'Momo no Haru' 1 to 2 feet high purple-lavender USDA 7–9 'Chinzan' 1 to 2 feet high warm pink USDA 7–9 'Wakebisu' 1 to 2 feet high salmon-pink USDA 7–9 Southern Indica Hybrids Selected from Belgian Indica hybrids for vigor and sun tolerance, most of these Southern Indica hybrids take temperatures of 10–20°F, but some are damaged even at the upper end of that range. They generally grow faster, more vigorously, and taller than other kinds of evergreen azaleas. They range from 4 to 12 feet tall and almost as wide, depending on the selection, age, and culture. Flowers are large, usually 2–3 inches across. They are used for massing and as specimens—as shrubs, standards, and espaliers. Name Plant Size Bloom Color Zones 'Brilliant' 6 to 8 feet high carmine-red USDA 7–9 'Duc de Rohan' 4 feet high salmon-pink USDA 7–9 'Fielder's White' 4 to 6 feet high white USDA 7–9 'Formosa' 4 to 6 feet high brilliant rose-purple USDA 7–9 'George Lindley Taber' 4 to 6 feet high light pink USDA 7–9 'Imperial Princess' 4 to 6 feet high rich pink USDA 7–9 'Imperial Queen' 4 to 6 feet high double pink USDA 7–9 'Iveryana' 3 feet high white with orchard streaks USDA 7–9 'Judge Solomon' 6 to 8 feet high clear pink USDA 7–9 'Mrs. G. G. Gerbing' 6 to 8 feet high white USDA 7–9 'Orange Pride' 6 to 8 feet high bright orange USDA 7–9 'President Claeys' 6 to 8 feet high orange-red USDA 7–9 'Pride of Dorking' 4 to 5 feet high brilliant red USDA 7–9 'Pride of Mobile' 4-6 feet high deep rose-pink USDA 7–9 'Red Formosa' 6 to 8 feet high reddish purple USDA 7–9 'Southern Charm' 6 to 8 feet high watermelon-pink USDA 7–9 Frequently Asked Questions How do you tell if an azalea is evergreen? Generally, evergreen azaleas mound during growth and have smaller star-shaped or round flowers. Deciduous varieties grow more open and upright and feature long, tubular flowers. They lose their leaves in winter and are often called wild honeysuckle because of their sweet fragrance. Where is the best place to plant evergreen azaleas? Plant evergreen azaleas in east- or north-facing beds. In areas where the soil is alkaline, amend the soil or plant azaleas in raised beds. Do azaleas lose their leaves in winter? In colder climates, evergreen azaleas may drop their leaves in winter. They grow two sets of leaves, during spring and summer. Those leaves drop in fall and winter. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! 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