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Massachusetts · Zones 5–7

Native Flowering Shrubs in Massachusetts

Native shrubs that flower for pollinators, fruit for birds, and give the garden its year-round backbone and structure. For Massachusetts, the right natives are shaped by Northeastern Coastal Forest & Cape and a cool, humid continental climate. Every species below, from Smooth Hydrangea and Arrowwood Viburnum to the rest of the list, is genuinely native to Massachusetts and the wider flora of the Northeast and hardy through zones 5–7. Shrubs are the bones of a garden — they hold their shape through winter, screen what you would rather not see, and pack flowers, berries, and fall color into a single long-lived plant. Give them room to reach full size rather than shearing them into boxes, plant in fall for the best root establishment, and choose species suited to your light and moisture so they thrive on near-zero care.

The plants

12 native species for Massachusetts

Each one native to your region and hardy in zones 5–7 · see this collection in other states.

Shrub

Smooth Hydrangea

Hydrangea arborescens

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, long-lived woody structure with flowers for pollinators and fruit for birds, 3–5 ft tall and 3–5 ft wide — it blooms Jun through Aug.

  • Part shade
  • Average
  • 3–5 ft
  • Blooms Jun–Aug
Shrub

Arrowwood Viburnum

Viburnum dentatum

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, long-lived woody structure with flowers for pollinators and fruit for birds, 6–10 ft tall and happy in clay and loam soil, flowering as it flowers in May and Jun.

  • Sun to shade
  • Average–wet
  • 6–10 ft
  • Blooms May–Jun
Shrub

Buttonbush

Cephalanthus occidentalis

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, flowers, then berries for the birds, on a long-lived native shrub, good through zone 9 and 4–8 ft wide, and it blooms Jun through Aug.

  • Full–part sun
  • Average–wet
  • 5–10 ft
  • Blooms Jun–Aug
Small tree

Serviceberry

Amelanchier canadensis

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, long-lived woody structure with flowers for pollinators and fruit for birds, 10–20 ft wide and reaching 15–25 ft; it flowers in Apr and May.

  • Full–part sun
  • Average–wet
  • 15–25 ft
  • Blooms Apr–May
Shrub

Winterberry

Ilex verticillata

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, a four-season shrub — bloom, fruit, and winter form — reaching 5–10 ft and cold-hardy to zone 3, and it flowers in Jun and Jul.

  • Full–part sun
  • Average–wet
  • 5–10 ft
  • Blooms Jun–Jul
Shrub

Ninebark

Physocarpus opulifolius

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, long-lived woody structure with flowers for pollinators and fruit for birds, 5–10 ft wide and white to pink flowers — it flowers in May and Jun.

  • Full–part sun
  • Dry to wet
  • 5–10 ft
  • Blooms May–Jun
Shrub

New Jersey Tea

Ceanothus americanus

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, the kind of native shrub a border is built around, happy in sand, rocky, and loam soil and good through zone 8, and it blooms May through Jul.

  • Full–part sun
  • Dry
  • 2–3.5 ft
  • Blooms May–Jul
Shrub

Red-Twig Dogwood

Cornus sericea

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, a shrub that gives the border its bones, spreading 6–10 ft and white, white berries flowers, and it flowers in May and Jun.

  • Full–part sun
  • Average–wet
  • 6–9 ft
  • Blooms May–Jun
Shrub

Spicebush

Lindera benzoin

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, structure year-round and flowers in season — a native shrub, 6–12 ft wide and cold-hardy to zone 4; it flowers in Mar and Apr.

  • Part shade
  • Average–wet
  • 6–12 ft
  • Blooms Mar–Apr
Shrub

Fragrant Sumac

Rhus aromatica

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, a woody native that holds its shape through winter and flowers in season, yellow catkins flowers and good through zone 9 — it flowers in Mar and Apr.

  • Full–part sun
  • Dry
  • 2–6 ft
  • Blooms Mar–Apr
Evergreen shrub

Inkberry Holly

Ilex glabra

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, shrub-scale presence for screening and structure, with seasonal bloom — happy in sand, clay, and loam soil and spreading 4–8 ft — it flowers in May and Jun.

  • Full–part sun
  • Average–wet
  • 4–8 ft
  • Blooms May–Jun
Shrub

American Elderberry

Sambucus canadensis

Where Massachusetts meets the Northeast, a flowering native shrub for the garden's backbone, 6–12 ft tall and spreading 6–12 ft, flowering as it flowers in Jun and Jul.

  • Full–part sun
  • Average–wet
  • 6–12 ft
  • Blooms Jun–Jul
Sourcing

Where to find these in Massachusetts

Seeds & live plants on Amazon

Seed packets, plugs, and starter plants for many of these species ship to your door.

Browse on Amazon

Some links here are affiliate links — we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. The surest source of locally-adapted stock is a native-plant nursery or a native plant society sale in your area.