Best plants for the Colorado Front Range
Quick answer
Looking for the best plants for the Colorado Front Range? These curated guides group our recommended trees, shrubs, groundcovers, and perennials by what you actually need here, low water, native, privacy screening, deer resistance, shade, fall color, and pet safety, all judged against our alkaline clay, low precipitation, hail, and zone 4–6 winters.
Water-wise & xeriscape
Our driest-adapted picks for Colorado's 12–17" of annual precipitation, low-water once established, no thirsty lawn required.
Native & pollinator
Colorado natives and pollinator magnets that are adapted to our soils and feed local bees, butterflies, and birds.
Privacy, screening & windbreaks
Dense, fast, and evergreen choices for blocking views and buffering the wind on exposed Front Range lots.
Shade, size & seasonal
Shade trees sized to your yard, plus the best fall color and ground-level cover for tough dry shade under existing trees.
Tough sites & problem-solving
For the hard spots, deer pressure, de-icing salt, the Palmer Divide hail corridor, and gaps between flagstones.
Pet safety
Know what to keep out of a dog's reach before you plant.
Frequently asked questions
- What are the best low-water plants for the Colorado Front Range?
- Our water-wise and xeriscape guides collect the most drought-tolerant trees, shrubs, groundcovers, and perennials for the Front Range, plants rated low or low-to-medium water that thrive on our 12 to 17 inches of annual precipitation once established.
- What can I plant under a tree on the Front Range?
- See the groundcovers-for-under-trees guide: shade-tolerant, low-water groundcovers that handle dry shade and root competition, which is the toughest planting spot in most Colorado yards.
- Which of these plants are safe for dogs?
- Start with the plants-toxic-to-dogs guide, which lists species to avoid. Anything not on that list is a safer starting point, but always confirm a specific plant with your veterinarian before planting.
- What should I not plant on the Colorado Front Range?
- Several popular trees struggle here, pin oak and silver maple yellow with iron chlorosis in our alkaline clay, and all ash are off the table because of emerald ash borer. Choosing from these regionally vetted guides steers you to plants proven to do well instead.
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