How to design the best layout for your herb garden (2024)

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What design works best for you? - by Rachel Iorfino

If herbs are the next venture for your garden, working out your layout herb garden design is the perfect place to begin!

Watch: Fast Ed's Herb-crusted Snapper With Mango Salad

Herbs are one of the easiest plants to grow, especially when you start straight from the seed. If you’re planning on building out your backyard with the addition of a herb garden, there are many things to consider.

The most important consideration? Where are you going to put them!

From creating an aesthetic herb garden layout to choosing the plants themselves, layout herb garden design can be a challenge for even the most experienced gardener. We’ll guide you through the best choices you can make for your herbs, with sage advice added in along the way!

Choosing the best herbs for your space

Herbs are renowned for how easy they are to grow and maintain. However, while many herbs are similar in their likes and dislikes (sunlight, positioning, etc.) there can be slight differences that can make quite a big difference.

Sun trajectory

Looking at how the sun travels across your space is key to working out what you can plant and where. For most herbs, direct sunlight for a half or full day is preferred, however some can still do well in shady spots. These herbs are chives, coriander, lemon balm, mint and parsley.

When mapping out what goes where in your herb garden, put these plants in the spots that receive less sun and watch them thrive!

Carol Skyring, a gardener from community garden organisation The Happy Hens, explains the importance of taking sun trajectory into account: “Most herbs like around 6 hours of sunlight per day. Be careful with the soft stem herbs as they may be scorched by direct sunlight that’s too hot - shield them by planting them in front of taller plants that will block the strong afternoon sun.”

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Growing herbs in harmony

Carol Skyring explains that there are no herbs that can’t be planted next to each other. However, she gives great insight into the dangers of mint, by saying “Don’t plant anything in the mint family in the ground as they’ll take over and smother other plants - keep them in pots.”

Herbs are the perfect plant to grow in your garden as they do not damage any other plant variety (apart from the smothering nature of mint!), and they harmonise great in any design. Better yet, they bring pollinators when the season comes around, which is great for the preservation of Australian bee species and to keep your plants happy and healthy.

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Utilising colour, texture and height

When designing your herb garden, the layout of each individual plant should be given some thought. When picking plants to go next to each other, it is important to think about:

Height

Not only are you considering how it will look aesthetically, but each plant needs to be in reach for you to harvest and use.

For example, planting rosemary at the front of a garden bed with thyme sitting behind it is not ideal, as rosemary can grow up to 1.5m tall. Thyme is a compact and sometimes ground-covering plant, meaning it will be lost behind the height of a rosemary plant and may be forgotten.

When planting, take a look at each plant's height and plant tallest at the back descending to shortest in the front. If you have a circle pot or garden bed, plant tall herbs in the middle and have them descend outwards in height.

Colour and texture

To make your garden look cohesive, looking at the different colours and textures is a great way to bring everything together. Not only does colour draw in the eye, it also draws in the pollinators!

For colours, you might not group all the bright-green, soft-leaf herbs together. This is especially necessary for coriander and parsley, which tend to look very similar.

This is also prevalent when considering texture- placing thyme and oregano next to each might mean your garden looks flat or lacklustre.

Bright-green herb varieties:

Dark green herbs:

  • Thyme
  • Lemon thyme
  • Oregano

Textured herbs:

Design concepts

Formal herb garden layout design

Whether it’s in raised garden beds or straight in the soil, this design concept is perfect for those that want their herbs to be the centre of attention. Take a look at the layout below for inspiration of what a more traditional herb garden can look like.

Plant Key

Middle plant: bay leaf tree

  1. Rosemary
  2. Sage
  3. Basil
  4. Coriander
  5. Parsley
  6. Oregano
  7. Thyme
  8. Chives or garlic
  9. Mint (preferably kept in a pot or contained area)

When creating a formal herb garden, don’t forget to consider colour, texture and height.

As shown in this layout, each section of the garden is scaled by height; the rosemary plants are situated toward the back or middle of the garden bed (depending on whether the sections are able to be reached on both sides).

As Skyring recommends, “If space is not an issue, plant in a circle, square or rectangle that’s no more than 1.5 metres wide - this allows you to reach into the middle of the bed.”

The bay leaf tree is positioned in the middle of the circular garden bed to act as a beautiful focal point.

Smaller plants line the front of each section, and the coriander and parsley is completely separated. In terms of colour and texture, the rich-green herbs have been separated and dotted around the garden, while the more textured plants provide a great point of convergence to break up the greenery.

Smaller garden layout design

For gardens that don’t have the space for large garden beds or a more formal design, it may be best to consider utilising other areas for growing your herbs.

Using wall space or investing in planting pots are a great option for small backyards, and your herb growing will not be compromised in the slightest. Take a look at the design concepts below for inspiration!

Herb Spiral

A herb spiral looks great as a focal point for your garden, and is perfect for small areas that have lots of sunlight!

Carol Skyring recommends a herb spiral for smaller gardens that do not have enough space.

“A herb spiral works well. If you’re short on space you can build the spiral ‘up’ so that the centre of the spiral is higher than the base. This extends the amount of growing space you have on that spot. You can make a similar arrangement by placing a large pot on the ground & placing successively smaller pots on top of each other.”

This herb spiral has rosemary as its centre point. The mint is placed on the very end, preferably in a pot or contained space so it cannot grow over other plants.

Potted herbs

Again, the taller herbs are placed in the middle of the pot, or to the back if the planting pot is up against a wall. The ground covering plants like thyme can drape over the edge of the pot to increase space for other herbs as well.

While you are more limited to positioning as it is a smaller surface area, pots are great to fill with herbs and make your garden, balcony or outdoor area look lush and full of greenery!

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How to design the best layout for your herb garden (1)
Rachel Iorfino

Rachel Iorfino is a content producer for Better Homes and Gardens who specialises in native gardening and planting. While she loves spending time travelling and trying out new restaurants, you'll most likely find Rachel with her nose in a book.

How to design the best layout for your herb garden (2024)

FAQs

How to design the best layout for your herb garden? ›

Plant short, shade-tolerant plants beneath taller, bushy plants. When you mix sun-loving plants, put tall ones at the north end of the plot and small ones at the south end, so all will get needed sun. Plant herbs throughout the garden, especially basil, mint, sage, and dill. EXCEPTION: Keep dill away from carrots.

What is the best layout for an herb garden? ›

The simplest design would be four beds, each a square yard (or square metre) in size, around a sundial or small round bed containing one tall herb – a Rosemary bush or Bay tree as a permanent feature, or Fennel, which would grow up every year and offer sculptural stems in winter.

How do I arrange herbs in my garden? ›

Space the bedding plants about 18 inches apart to give them room to spread out and grow. Place taller herbs like sage, rosemary and lavender toward the back of the garden, and place parsley and cilantro at the front. Add labels or tags to each of your freshly planted herbs to make them easy to identify.

How do you arrange herbs? ›

Consider each plant's growing habit. Set creeping or trailing herbs to the front and taller herbs to the back or in the middle, with bushier plants in between. Once you're happy with the arrangement, remove the herbs from their pots and place them back onto the potting soil.

What herbs should not be planted together? ›

Some herbs have allelopathic effects, meaning they release chemicals that inhibit the growth of other plants. Examples of herbs that do not grow well together include chamomile and dill, dill and fennel, and basil and rue.

What can you not plant with basil? ›

Basil and rue dislike each other. Perhaps this is because Basil is sweet and rue is very bitter. Fennel is one of the few plants that has mostly bad companions. Most plants dislike Fennel, and it should be planted well away from the vegetable garden.

What month should you start a herb garden? ›

If you plan to grow and maintain your kitchen herb garden indoors, you can start at any time of the year. But if you're thinking about creating a little herb corner in your garden or outdoor planter, then the best time to start planting herbs is spring, once the danger of frost has passed.

Is it better to grow herbs in pots or ground? ›

Level one: grow herbs in pots

Be sure to check on your herbs frequently since the soil in a small pot will dry out much faster than the soil in a raised bed or the ground. I like terra cotta pots because they help regulate the moisture level and come with a nice, big drainage hole.

Do herbs do well in raised beds? ›

Do herbs do well in raised beds? The quick answer is yes; most herbs will do well in raised beds. Many herbs have a relatively shallow root system and are small to medium in size. Generally, a rectangular raised bed with good drainage is the best for growing herbs.

How deep should a garden bed be for herbs? ›

Herbs like basil, cilantro, and other low leafy greens like lettuce will grow and grow with just 6 inches of soil. A 1-foot raised bed is more than enough to accommodate a salad garden box plan. Carrots, radishes and peppers thrive with 12 inches or more.

How deep should an herb garden be? ›

Herbs should be grown in soil that's at least 4 to 5 inches deep, says the National Gardening Association. We built our planter from pressure-treated lumber: four deck posts and some 1x6s and 2×2 balusters. Tom cut the parts on a miter saw, but you can use a portable circular saw or even a handsaw instead.

Do herbs need morning or afternoon sun? ›

Gardeners in areas with 5-6 hours of afternoon sun may be able to grow most vegetables and herbs. However, those with only 3-4 hours of morning sun will have better success with true shade-lovers, and should choose other types of plants as the main focus of their gardens.

Do herbs prefer full sun or shade? ›

Most herbs need a fair amount of sunlight. As long as an herb is growing in a space where it gets at least 4 hours of sunlight a day, it will most likely do well. Most can tolerate much more sunlight, though, with herbs like rosemary, lavender and basil thriving in full sun (6 – 8 hours a day).

What herbs should be planted separately? ›

For example, tansy, catnip, comfrey, horseradish, lemon balm, hops, artemisia, and mint should not be planted together with other herbs because they spread aggressively unless you control them. To keep these herbs from spreading in your garden, it's best to grow them individually in their own containers.

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