Growing Hellebores: How to Care for Hellebore Flowers

Hellebore flowers
Photo Credit
Shutterstock
Botanical Name
Helleborus
Plant Type
Bloom Time
Hardiness Zone
Special Features
Subhead

Enjoy Critter-Resistant, Early-Blooming, Shade-Loving Hellebore

Print Friendly and PDF
Almanac Garden Planner

The Almanac Garden Planner - Use It Free for 7 Days!

Plan your 2025 garden with our award-winning Garden Planner.

Try Now

Hellebores, also called Lenten Roses, are often the first blooms of the year! These winter-flowering perennials (yes, winter!) steal the show as they poke through the snow. Learn more about growing long-lived, deer-resistant hellebores.

About Hellebores

Hellebores bear glossy, evergreen leaves and rose-like flowers which bloom in winter or early spring. Though they are commonly called a “rose,” they are not in the rose family! Actually, they are more closely related to buttercups since both belong to the Ranunculus family. 

Aristocrats of woodland gardens in Europe, hellebores enjoy a shady or partial-shade location. They also make a great ground cover for well-draining soil under the shade of trees.

Importantly, hellebores are resistant to deer and voles!

I grow mine near the back porch so that I can keep a close eye on the progress of these eagerly awaited blossoms. The flowers make up for their lack of fragrance by being long-lived, remaining on the plant into early summer.

At a time of year when every blossom is precious, you’ll find that there is nothing boring about hellebores!

white and yellow hellebores
Hellebores flowers. Photo: Robin Sweetser

Planting

Hellebores like the same conditions as many other early bloomers—cool, dappled shade and moist but well-draining, humusy soil. Take care to amend the soil with plenty of organic matter, such as well-aged leaf mold and/or compost. 

They look great as understory plants with rhododendrons and azaleas, planted along a woodland path or in a shady mixed border.

Hellebore buds emerge in the spring
Tiny new buds emerge early in the spring as soon as they can break through the soil.
Photo: Robin Sweetser

Growing

Slow to become established, hellebores take a few years to settle in before they bloom, so you need to be patient. Like peonies, hellebores are long-lived and will eventually develop into large clumps with extensive root systems. 

Cold hardy to Zone 4, they are more susceptible to loss if grown in a hot, humid environment. They are not heavy feeders; a yearly application of well-rotted manure or compost early in the spring will keep them satisfied.

pink hellebore/ lenten rose
Close up of a lenten rose. Photo: Robin Sweetser
Gardening Products

Wit and Wisdom

About The Author

Robin Sweetser

Robin has been a contributor to The Old Farmer’s Almanac and the All-Seasons Garden Guide for many years. Read More from Robin Sweetser