You want color from June through September without a part-time job in the garden. That is a perfectly reasonable ask, and these five shrubs deliver exactly that. Each one is genuinely low maintenance, meaning drought tolerant once established, resistant to common pests and diseases, and not fussy about soil. Plant them in the right spot, water them through the first season, and they will reward you with months of blooms for years to come.

What "Low Maintenance" Actually Means
Let's set expectations. No plant is zero maintenance. "Low maintenance" in the garden means:
- Drought tolerant once established (after the first growing season)
- Resistant to major pest and disease problems
- Minimal pruning required (once a year at most, and the plant still looks good if you skip it)
- No deadheading required for continuous bloom (though it may help)
Every shrub on this list meets all four criteria.
1. Butterfly Bush (Buddleia)

Zones 5-9 | Mature Size: 4-8 ft. tall, 4-6 ft. wide | Bloom: June - Frost
Nothing attracts butterflies and hummingbirds like a Buddleia in full bloom. Miss Molly Butterfly Bush produces richly saturated sangria-red flower spikes from early summer until hard frost, and it does it without deadheading. The Proven Winners variety is field-tested as non-invasive, putting older concerns about Buddleia to rest.
Why it works: Butterfly Bush thrives in full sun and average to poor soil. It is one of the most drought-tolerant flowering shrubs you can plant. In zone 5-6, it may die back to the ground in winter and regrow from the crown in spring, which is totally normal. Just cut back the dead stems in late winter and it comes roaring back.
Best companion: Plant with Coneflowers and Black-Eyed Susans for a full-season pollinator garden.
Browse the full Butterfly Bushes collection for more color options.
2. Rose of Sharon (Hibiscus syriacus)

Zones 5-9 | Mature Size: 8-12 ft. tall, 4-6 ft. wide | Bloom: July - September
Rose of Sharon picks up right where spring-blooming shrubs leave off, delivering tropical-looking hibiscus flowers from midsummer through fall. Blue Chiffon Rose of Sharon produces stunning lavender-blue semi-double blooms with wine-red eyes that stop people in their tracks. Modern varieties like the Chiffon series produce very few seeds, so self-seeding is not a concern.
Why it works: Tolerates heat, drought, poor soil, salt spray, and even periodic neglect. It blooms on new wood, so a late-winter pruning is all it needs. Deer tend to leave it alone. It can be grown as a shrub or trained into a small multi-stem tree.
Best companion: Pairs beautifully with ornamental grasses and late-summer perennials like Sedum and Russian Sage.
Explore the full Rose of Sharon collection.
3. Knock Out Roses

Zones 5-9 | Mature Size: 3-4 ft. tall, 3-4 ft. wide | Bloom: Spring - Hard Frost
Knock Out Roses changed what people expect from roses. They bloom continuously from spring until a hard frost, they are resistant to black spot (the bane of traditional roses), and they never need deadheading. You can literally plant them and walk away. One hard pruning in late winter to about 12 inches keeps them tidy. That is the entire care routine.
Why it works: Knock Outs are self-cleaning, disease-resistant, and drought-tolerant. They bloom on new wood, so even if they are cut back hard, they recover and flower within weeks. Available in red, pink, coral, yellow, and white.
Best companion: Mass-plant in a bed for a continuous carpet of color, or use as a low hedge along a walkway.
Shop the Knock Out Roses collection.
4. Spirea

Zones 3-8 | Mature Size: 2-5 ft. tall, 2-5 ft. wide | Bloom: Spring - Midsummer (rebloom with deadheading)
If "plant it and forget it" had a poster child, it would be Spirea. Double Play Big Bang Spirea delivers oversized pink flower clusters against foliage that transitions from orange to gold to green through the seasons. Cold-hardy to zone 3, drought tolerant, deer resistant, and compact enough for foundation plantings, borders, and containers.
Why it works: Spirea tolerates almost any soil type, handles full sun to part shade, and bounces back from hard pruning. It is one of the toughest ornamental shrubs in cultivation. Deadheading spent blooms encourages a second flush of flowers.
Best companion: Stunning planted in drifts with other Spirea varieties for waves of color, or mixed into a perennial border.
Browse the full Spirea Bushes collection.
5. Reblooming Hydrangeas

Zones 4-9 | Mature Size: 3-5 ft. tall, 3-5 ft. wide | Bloom: June - September
Traditional hydrangeas bloom once in summer on last year's wood, which means a late freeze or an overzealous pruning can wipe out an entire season of flowers. Reblooming varieties like the Endless Summer series changed the game by flowering on both old and new wood. That means reliable blooms even in cooler climates where spring frosts are common.
Why it works: Reblooming hydrangeas produce waves of flowers from early summer through fall. They handle morning sun with afternoon shade, which makes them more versatile than full-sun-only shrubs. Regular moisture is their only real demand. Once you nail the watering, they are remarkably carefree.
Best companion: Underplant with Hostas and Astilbe for a layered shade-garden look, or pair with Boxwood for a more formal setting.
Explore the Endless Summer Hydrangeas and the broader Hydrangea Shrubs collection.
#ProPlantTip: Right Plant, Right Place
"Right plant, right place" is the most valuable piece of gardening advice that exists. A sun-loving shrub planted in shade will not bloom well no matter how much you feed it. A moisture-loving hydrangea baked in afternoon sun will scorch no matter how much you water it.
Before you buy, check two things:
- The sun exposure at the planting site (morning vs. afternoon sun matters)
- The drainage (does water pool there after rain?)
Match those two conditions to the plant requirements listed on the product page and you will eliminate 90% of the problems gardeners face. The best "low maintenance" trick is not choosing tough plants. It is choosing the right plant for the conditions you already have.
Shop Flowering Shrubs
Ready to add all-summer color to your yard? Browse the full Flowering Shrubs collection at Nature Hills. Every plant ships container-grown with an established root system, ready to bloom this season.