Native Plants & Pollinator-Friendly Garden Design for Ireland 2026 — A Realistic Plant List
A true Irish native garden uses plants that grew here before human introduction — supporting wild bees, hoverflies, butterflies and birds that have co-evolved with these species. This honest 2026 guide identifies the 8 confirmed Irish native species stocked at PlantGift, the framework set out by the All-Ireland Pollinator Plan, and how to combine natives with carefully chosen pollinator-friendly supplementary plants for a garden that's both beautiful and biodiversity-positive. Featured plants from €48.95 with free delivery across Ireland and 24 EU countries.
One in three Irish wild bee species is at risk of extinction (National Biodiversity Data Centre, 2025). The single most impactful garden-scale intervention is planting native species: Irish bees, hoverflies and butterflies have co-evolved with native Irish flora over thousands of years and many species cannot complete their life cycle without specific native plants. The All-Ireland Pollinator Plan (AIPP) is the framework — a 30-organisation initiative led by the National Biodiversity Data Centre that publishes plant lists ranked by pollinator value.
What does "native to Ireland" actually mean?
A plant is classified as "native to Ireland" if it was present here before significant human introduction. The authoritative source is the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland (BSBI) Atlas, which tracks the distribution and native status of every plant species recorded on the island. The BSBI distinguishes between:
- Native — species present in Ireland naturally (e.g. Hawthorn, Foxglove, Irish Ivy, Wild Thyme)
- Archaeophyte — introduced by humans before AD 1500 and now naturalised (e.g. some Wild Garlic populations, Sweet Cicely)
- Neophyte — introduced after AD 1500 (e.g. Lavender, Buddleia, most garden perennials)
This article only describes plants in the first category as "native" — that distinction matters because Irish pollinators have evolved alongside native species over millennia. Many garden classics commonly called "Irish plants" (Lavender, Wisteria, most Clematis, Hebe, Pieris, etc.) are actually neophytes — they support general pollinators but don't sustain native specialist species.
The 8 confirmed Irish native species stocked at PlantGift
Each of these is independently confirmed as native to Ireland by the BSBI Atlas. Each plays a specific role in Irish ecosystems — particularly for pollinators, where their flowering periods cover gaps that non-native garden plants leave open.
1. Hedera hibernica — Irish Ivy
Eidhneán in Irish. The TRUE native ivy of Ireland (distinct from the more common European Hedera helix, which is also present but not as biodiversity-valuable). Irish Ivy flowers in September-November — making it one of the last nectar sources of the year for Irish bees before winter dormancy. The black berries that follow in winter feed birds. Evergreen year-round wildlife shelter.
Role in garden: Native climbing plant for walls, fences, north-facing aspects, dry shade — the most adaptable native climber in Ireland. Also serves as ground cover where soil is dry and shaded.
24x Irish Ivy (Hedera Hibernica) — Native Climber & Ground Cover
2. Digitalis purpurea — Foxglove
Lus Mór in Irish ("great herb"). One of the most iconic native Irish wildflowers — tall purple-pink spikes growing wild in woodland edges, hedgerow banks, and rough ground from May to August. Specialist bumblebee plant — short-tongued bee species can't easily access the deep tubular flowers, making Foxglove an essential resource for long-tongued bumblebees like Bombus hortorum (Garden Bumblebee).
Role in garden: Biennial — grows leaves year 1, flowers and self-seeds year 2. Plant once and it perpetuates naturally in semi-shaded borders. Reaches 1.2-1.8m tall.
Warning: All parts are toxic if ingested. Plant where children and pets cannot reach the leaves and seeds.
6x Digitalis purpurea — Native Foxglove
3-5. The native fern trio — Polystichum, Polypodium, Asplenium scolopendrium
Three native Irish ferns that thrive in different microhabitats. Ferns don't directly feed pollinators (they reproduce via spores, not flowers) but they provide essential habitat structure: shelter for invertebrates, leaf litter for ground-feeding birds, and damp microclimate that supports the broader food chain underpinning pollinator populations.
Polystichum setiferum — Soft Shield Fern
Evergreen woodland fern of damp shaded ground. Glossy dark green fronds 30-60cm long. Native across Ireland in deciduous woodland, ravines, and shaded riverbanks. Tolerant of dry shade once established (rare among ferns).
6x Polystichum setiferum — Native Soft Shield Fern
Polypodium vulgare — Common Polypody
The native epiphytic fern of Ireland — grows on tree branches, mossy walls and rocks. Smaller (15-30cm) than the Soft Shield Fern, with deeply lobed fronds. Indicator species of clean air. Perfect for a shaded stone wall, north-facing rockery, or under deciduous trees.
Asplenium scolopendrium — Hart's Tongue Fern
Native of damp shaded crevices and old stone walls. Distinctive strap-shaped (rather than divided) fronds — unique among Irish ferns. Evergreen, reaches 40-60cm. The classic fern of west-of-Ireland limestone walls and damp lane banks.
6x Asplenium scolopendrium — Native Hart's Tongue Fern
6. Persicaria bistorta — Common Bistort
Native wildflower of damp meadows, riverside grasslands and old pastures. Tall pink "bottlebrush" flower spikes (30-60cm) from May to September. High pollinator value — visited by bumblebees, hoverflies, and many butterfly species including the Common Blue and Meadow Brown.
Role in garden: Damp meadow or moist border ground cover. Tolerates seasonal waterlogging. Spreads gently by rhizomes to form colonies.
24x Persicaria bistorta — Native Common Bistort
7. Ajuga reptans — Bugle
Native ground-cover wildflower of damp woodland margins and old grassland. Forms a 10-20cm tall mat with blue flower spikes April-June. Early-season nectar source — among the first plants flowering when bumblebee queens emerge from hibernation, making it disproportionately valuable to early-flying bee species.
Note: 'Catlin's Giant' is a vigorous cultivar of the native species — same wildlife value, larger habit (25-30cm tall). 'Burgundy Glow' and other coloured cultivars are equivalent.
24x Ajuga reptans 'Catlin's Giant' — Native Bugle (Cultivar)
8. Thymus serpyllum — Wild Thyme
Native to the dry grasslands and rocky places of Ireland — recorded across the country in the BSBI Atlas, particularly on limestone and sandy soils. Forms 5-10cm low fragrant mats with purple flowers June-August. Bee and butterfly magnet — Wild Thyme is one of the highest-rated nectar plants per square metre on the AIPP recommended-plants list.
Role in garden: Drought-tolerant ground cover for sunny well-drained areas. Excellent between paving, in gravel gardens, and at front of borders.
Pollinator-friendly supplementary plants (per the All-Ireland Pollinator Plan)
The AIPP framework explicitly endorses non-native plants on the AIPP recommended-plant list as legitimate components of a pollinator-friendly Irish garden — provided they're not invasive. These five extend the flowering season and add habitat diversity without displacing native species. All are on the AIPP recommended pollinator list and are stocked at PlantGift.
Lavandula angustifolia (English Lavender)
Non-native (Mediterranean origin), but the most heavily-visited pollinator plant in Irish gardens. Bees, hoverflies and butterflies visit lavender more than almost any other garden plant. Flowering June-August fills a key mid-summer nectar gap.
Lavandula angustifolia 6 Pack — AIPP Pollinator
Echinacea, Verbena bonariensis, Agastache, Geranium Rozanne
The four pollinator workhorses for the August-October period when most native flowers are finished. Echinacea (American native — Coneflower) is a butterfly magnet from July-October. Verbena bonariensis (South American native) is the single most-visited late-summer plant in Irish gardens — flowering July-November, often the last nectar source standing. Agastache 'Black Adder' (American native genus, English bred) is a bumblebee specialist. Geranium Rozanne (Geranium cultivar) flowers May-November non-stop and is heavily visited by small bees.
How to design a native + pollinator-friendly Irish garden
A biodiverse garden has four layers — each layer serves a different pollinator and wildlife function. Don't try to do all four in a small garden; pick the two most relevant to your space and aspect.
Layer 1: The native hedgerow (back boundary)
The single most impactful biodiversity feature for any Irish garden. A traditional native hedgerow combines Hawthorn, Blackthorn, Hazel, Holly, Rowan in a double-staggered row, with Hedera hibernica climbing through it. Hedgerows provide nesting sites for birds, larval food plants for moths and butterflies, autumn berries for thrushes, blackthorn flowers for early-spring bumblebees, and shelter from wind. Plant bare-root whips November-March at 4-5 per metre.
PlantGift currently stocks Irish Ivy for the climbing element. For the woody hedge backbone (Hawthorn, Blackthorn, Hazel, Holly, Rowan), source bare-root whips from specialist Irish nurseries — see the source list at the end.
Layer 2: The woodland edge (semi-shade)
Mimics the structure of native Irish woodland margins. Native ferns at the base (Polystichum, Polypodium, Asplenium scolopendrium), Foxgloves rising 1.2m above them, Bugle as the ground-cover layer, Common Bistort in any damper spots. Ideal for shaded north or east-facing borders, under deciduous trees, or alongside walls.
Layer 3: The meadow front (sun)
A sunny, well-drained area transitioning from lawn to border. Wild Thyme as the lowest layer, Common Bistort or Ajuga for the mid layer, then any combination of pollinator-friendly perennials (Lavender, Geranium Rozanne, Echinacea, Verbena). Consider letting a corner of the lawn grow long — "No Mow May" through August adds enormous pollinator value for almost zero effort.
Layer 4: The damp corner
Most gardens have one — a low corner where water gathers. Don't fight it: plant Common Bistort, native ferns, and consider a tiny shallow pond. Wet areas support some of the highest densities of native insect life and are disproportionately valuable to pollinators (mud-puddling butterflies, hoverflies whose larvae need damp conditions).
Sample planting plans
| Garden size | Recommended natives + pollinator-friendly mix | Approx cost |
|---|---|---|
| Small (3m × 2m border) | 6x Foxglove + 6x Wild Thyme + 6x Soft Shield Fern + 1 Lavender pack + 6x Geranium Rozanne | €340 |
| Medium (6m × 2m border + path edge) | 24x Ajuga + 24x Persicaria bistorta + 6x Hart's Tongue Fern + 24x Echinacea + 24x Verbena + 24x Irish Ivy | €640 |
| Large (12m + hedge backbone) | 24x Irish Ivy on hedge + 60x Persicaria + 6x of each native fern (3 species) + Pollinator perennial mix (Echinacea + Verbena + Agastache + Geranium) | €900-1,200 + bare-root hedge plants from specialist supplier |
Where to source what we don't stock
Building a truly comprehensive native Irish garden requires sourcing from specialist nurseries who hold seed stock and native bare-root plants that fall outside our current product range. We recommend (we have no commercial relationship with any of these — they're listed for the reader's benefit):
- Design by Nature (Sandro Cafolla) — Carlow-based, Ireland's leading native wildflower seed specialist. Native wildflower meadow mixes, individual species seed, and bespoke seed for restoration projects.
- Wildflowers.ie — Cork-based native wildflower seed and plug plants.
- None So Hardy / Future Forests — Bare-root native trees and hedging (Hawthorn, Blackthorn, Hazel, Holly, Rowan, Yew). November-March bare-root season.
- Irish Seed Savers Association — Heritage native fruit varieties (apple, pear, native bramble).
- National Biodiversity Data Centre — Free pollinator plant lists, garden actions, and identification resources at pollinators.ie.
Frequently asked questions
Explore more guides
- Best Ground Cover Plants for Irish & European Gardens — wider ground cover comparison
- Hedging & Perennial Borders Ireland 2026 — structural backbone of the garden
- Best Climbing Plants for Your Garden — broader climbing plant comparison
- Wisteria Care & Creeping Plants Guide 2026 — climbing & creeping plant deep-dive
- Best Ornamental Grasses for Irish Gardens — movement & texture
- Landscaping Plants Collection — full hedging & perennial range
- Ground Cover Plants Collection — 173 weed-suppressing perennials
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