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South Carolina · Zones 7–9

Native Ornamental Grasses in South Carolina

Native grasses and sedges that bring movement, winter structure, and bird seed — the matrix that ties a planting together. South Carolina sits in a landscape of Sandhills, Piedmont & Lowcountry, and the natives that thrive here are the ones built for its humid subtropical character. The list below — led by Pink Muhly Grass and Switchgrass — is filtered to species genuinely native to South Carolina and the wider flora of the Southeast and hardy through zones 7–9. Native grasses are the connective tissue of a natural planting, weaving between the flowers, holding the soil, and standing handsome through the whole winter. Warm-season grasses want full sun and lean soil and green up late, so don't give up on them in May. Cut everything back to a hand's height in late winter, just before new growth, and that's the entire job.

The plants

6 native species for South Carolina

Each one native to your region and hardy in zones 7–9 · see this collection in other states.

Ornamental grass

Pink Muhly Grass

Muhlenbergia capillaris

Across South Carolina and the Southeast, catches the low autumn light, turning cotton-candy pink and standing 2–3 ft tall right through the snow.

  • Full sun
  • Dry–average
  • 2–3 ft
  • Blooms Sep–Oct
Ornamental grass

Switchgrass

Panicum virgatum

Across South Carolina and the Southeast, warm-season grass turning airy pink-gold panicles in fall and holding its form all winter, happy in sand, clay, and loam soil.

  • Full–part sun
  • Dry to wet
  • 3–6 ft
  • Fall color
Ornamental grass

Indian Grass

Sorghastrum nutans

Across South Carolina and the Southeast, a grass that earns its keep in fall and winter — bronze-gold plumes color, 4–7 ft tall, seed for the birds.

  • Full sun
  • Dry–average
  • 4–7 ft
  • Fall color
Sedge

Pennsylvania Sedge

Carex pensylvanica

Across South Carolina and the Southeast, fills the gaps between the flowers with fine 6–12 in-tall texture, 6–12 in tall.

  • Part shade
  • Dry–average
  • 6–12 in
  • Foliage
Ornamental grass

Big Bluestem

Andropogon gerardii

Across South Carolina and the Southeast, a grass for structure and bird seed, turning bronze-purple seed heads and standing 4–7 ft tall through the cold.

  • Full sun
  • Dry to wet
  • 4–7 ft
  • Fall color
Ornamental grass

Little Bluestem

Schizachyrium scoparium

Across South Carolina and the Southeast, movement in summer, blue-green to copper color in fall — a native grass that holds all winter, 1.5–2 ft wide.

  • Full sun
  • Dry–average
  • 2–4 ft
  • Fall color
Sourcing

Where to find these in South Carolina

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.