5 Easy Care Native Plants
Here are 5 of the easiest, lowest-effort native plants out there. These are as close to “set it and forget it” as gardening gets:
1. Black-eyed Susan (rudbeckia hirta)
Why it’s easy:
- Thrives in poor soil
- Handles drought well
- Self-seeds (comes back on its own)
What you’ll like:
Bright yellow flowers that make your yard look intentional—even if you barely touched it.
2. Switchgrass (panicum virgatum)
Why it’s easy:
- Extremely adaptable (wet OR dry soil)
- No need to fertilize
- Stays upright (no flopping drama)
What you’ll like:
Adds structure and movement without constant trimming.
3. Purple Coneflower (echinacea purpurea)
Why it’s easy:
- Drought-tolerant once established
- Attracts pollinators (less pest issues)
- Comes back every year
What you’ll like:
Pretty, recognizable flowers + supports wildlife with almost no effort.
4. Wild Bergamot (monarda fistulosa) AKA Beebalm
Why it’s easy:
- Spreads on its own (fills space for you)
- Tolerates different soil types
- Pollinator magnet
What you’ll like:
Soft lavender blooms + your garden starts feeling “alive” without extra work.
5. Little Bluestem (schizachyrium scoparium)
Why it’s easy:
- Loves being left alone
- Thrives in dry, sandy soil
- No watering once established
What you’ll like:
Beautiful color changes (blue → copper → orange in fall)
6. BONUS Butterflyweed (asclepias tuberosa)
Why it’s easy:
- Thrives in dry, sandy soil
- Can survive in sidewalk (hellstrip) plantings
- Spreads itself via rhizomes and seeds but is easy to control
What you’ll like:
Provides food and habitat for a variety of insects; supports the lifecycle of the Monarch Butterfly
Realistic tip:
Even “easy” plants will struggle if:
- they’re in the wrong light
- the soil is completely wrong for that plant (moist, dry, sandy, clay, etc)
- they’re overcrowded
So the real low-effort strategy is:
Right plant + right spot = almost no work


