If you have ever stood under a wisteria in full bloom, you know why so many gardeners want one. Long, fragrant racemes the color of a spring sky, dripping over a pergola or arbor. The trouble starts when you begin shopping. Two of the most popular blue-flowered options, Blue Moon Wisteria and Blue Chinese Wisteria, look similar at the garden center but behave very differently in the landscape. One is a tough, native-leaning vine that politely climbs an arbor in even the coldest zones. The other is an old-world showstopper with a serious behavior problem in much of the country. This guide walks you through how they compare, where each one shines, and how to pick the right wisteria for your yard.

Quick Comparison at a Glance
Here is the cheat sheet before we dig into the details.
| Feature | Blue Moon Wisteria | Blue Chinese Wisteria |
|---|---|---|
| Botanical name | Wisteria macrostachya 'Blue Moon' | Wisteria sinensis |
| Hardiness | USDA Zone 3 to 9 | USDA Zone 5 to 9 |
| Bloom time | Late spring (May to June), often reblooms 2 to 3 times | Mid to late spring, single heavy flush |
| Flower length | 6 to 12 inch racemes | 8 to 20 inch racemes |
| Fragrance | Light, sweet | Strong, classic wisteria perfume |
| Native to | Eastern North America (Kentucky Wisteria selection) | China |
| Aggressiveness | Manageable, slower growth | Highly vigorous, can engulf structures and trees |
| Invasive risk | Low | HIGH, listed as invasive or restricted in multiple states |
Blue Moon Wisteria: The Native-Leaning Choice

Blue Moon is a selection of Wisteria macrostachya, often called Kentucky Wisteria. This is the cold-hardy, North American cousin of the showier Asian wisterias, and it has quietly become the go-to pick for gardeners who want big blooms without big regret.
It is rated all the way down to USDA Zone 3, which is rare for a wisteria. That means it holds up in northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, upstate New York, and the chilly corners of New England where Asian wisterias often die back or refuse to bloom. The flowers are silvery lavender-blue, six to twelve inches long, and lightly fragrant. The headline feature is reblooming. After the main spring show, Blue Moon often pushes a second and even a third flush of flowers through summer when conditions are good.
Growth is more polite than its Asian relatives. Expect a mature size of 15 to 25 feet on a sturdy arbor, pergola, or split-rail fence, with woody trunks that can be trained as the centerpiece of a courtyard. Pollinators love it. Native bees, bumblebees, hummingbirds, and butterflies all work the racemes during peak bloom, which makes it a strong fit alongside other selections from our Butterfly and Pollinator Plants collection.
Best for: Cold-climate gardeners (Zones 3 to 6), pollinator gardens, smaller yards, anyone who wants more than one bloom show per year, and gardeners who want to avoid invasive species concerns.
Blue Chinese Wisteria: The Showstopper With a Catch

Now for the famous one. Wisteria sinensis, or Chinese Wisteria, is the plant most people picture when they hear the word wisteria. The racemes are longer, the fragrance is stronger, and the spring display is jaw-dropping. The Blue Chinese Wisteria Tree is a top-grafted, tree-form version that solves part of the management problem by giving you a structural lollipop of bloom rather than a ground-level vine looking for something to climb.
It is hardy in Zones 5 to 9, blooms with eight to twenty inch lavender-blue racemes, and carries that classic, heady wisteria perfume that scents an entire patio. It is fast, dramatic, and unforgettable.
Now for the catch.
Responsible disclosure: Chinese Wisteria can be invasive
Wisteria sinensis is listed as invasive, restricted, or a species of concern in a number of US states, particularly across the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast. That includes states such as Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, and Mississippi, with additional advisory listings elsewhere. In the wild, it climbs and strangles native trees, escapes garden plantings through runners and seed, and forms dense thickets that crowd out native understory.
Before you plant, please check your state's invasive plant list or call your local cooperative extension office. If Chinese Wisteria is regulated where you live, choose Blue Moon Wisteria or Amethyst Falls instead. If it is allowed in your area and you still want it, the tree-form version is easier to keep in bounds, deadhead spent racemes to limit seed set, and never plant near woodlots or natural areas where it can escape.
Best for: Zone 5 through 9 gardeners outside the regulated states, large landscapes with room for a statement piece, and gardeners who can commit to twice-a-year pruning and seed pod cleanup.
How to Choose Between Them
Run through this short decision framework before you click Add to Cart.
- Climate. If you are in Zone 3 or 4, Blue Moon is the only realistic choice between these two. Below Zone 5, Chinese Wisteria struggles.
- Local regulations. If you live in a state that lists Wisteria sinensis as invasive or restricted, choose Blue Moon or Amethyst Falls. Full stop.
- Garden size. Have a small yard, a townhome courtyard, or a single arbor? Blue Moon is far easier to keep in scale. A large rural property with a heavy timber pergola can host either.
- Pollinator goals. Both are visited by pollinators, but native and near-native species like Blue Moon and Amethyst Falls support local bees more reliably.
- Bloom frequency. Want one giant spring show? Blue Chinese delivers. Want repeat performances all season? Blue Moon reblooms.
Bonus Pick: Amethyst Falls American Wisteria

If the invasive question worries you and you also want a true native, look at Amethyst Falls Wisteria. It is a cultivar of Wisteria frutescens, the American Wisteria, which is native to the southeastern US and considered non-invasive. It is hardy in Zones 5 to 9, blooms in late spring on new wood (which means fewer bloom-skipping years), and stays the most compact of the three at roughly 15 to 20 feet. The racemes are shorter and the fragrance is mild, but the flowers are a beautiful purple-blue and the plant is well behaved on a fence or trellis. For many home gardeners, it is the easiest wisteria to live with.
Care Tips for Both

Wisterias share the same basic care once they are in the ground. Get these four things right and you will be rewarded.
- Sun. Plant in full sun, six to eight hours minimum. Shade equals leaves and no flowers.
- Soil. Average, well-drained garden soil. Wisteria does not need rich soil and tolerates a wide pH range. Heavy clay should be amended at planting.
- Support structure. Both vines get woody and heavy with age. Use a substantial pergola, arbor, or steel cable system. Skip flimsy lattice.
- Pruning. Prune twice. Once in mid to late summer (cut current year's whippy growth back to five or six leaves) and again in late winter (shorten those same shoots to two or three buds). This is what triggers heavy bloom the following spring.
- Fertilizer. Go easy. High-nitrogen feed pushes leaves at the expense of flowers. A spring application of a balanced or phosphorus-leaning fertilizer is plenty.
If wisteria is not the right fit for your spot, consider browsing related vines such as clematis, honeysuckle vines, or climbing roses. They cover a similar role on an arbor without the same long-term management.
Frequently Asked Questions

Is wisteria invasive?
It depends on the species. Chinese Wisteria (Wisteria sinensis) and Japanese Wisteria (Wisteria floribunda) are listed as invasive in multiple US states. Native species like American Wisteria (Wisteria frutescens, including Amethyst Falls) and Kentucky Wisteria (Wisteria macrostachya, including Blue Moon) are not considered invasive. Always check your state's invasive plant list before planting.
How do I keep wisteria from taking over?
Three habits keep wisteria in bounds. Prune twice a year (summer and late winter), train it to a single defined structure rather than letting it sprawl, and remove any sucker shoots that pop up at the base or root run. Keeping it off nearby trees and structures is the most important step.
Why won't my wisteria bloom?
The four most common reasons are too much shade, too much nitrogen fertilizer, no pruning (or pruning at the wrong time), and a young plant that is still establishing. Most wisterias bloom by year three to five from a nursery-sized vine, sooner with consistent pruning and full sun.
Can I grow wisteria in Zone 5?
Yes. Blue Moon Wisteria is hardy to Zone 3, so it sails through Zone 5 winters. Blue Chinese Wisteria is rated to Zone 5 but performs best from Zone 6 south. Amethyst Falls is a strong Zone 5 performer as well.
How do I prune Blue Moon Wisteria?
Prune twice. In mid to late summer, cut the long whippy new growth back to about five or six leaves from the main framework. In late winter, shorten those same side shoots further to two or three buds. This concentrates the plant's energy into flower buds for the next bloom cycle.
What kind of support does wisteria need?
A mature wisteria can weigh hundreds of pounds. Plan for a heavy timber pergola, a metal arbor, a sturdy fence, or galvanized cable trained against masonry. Wood lattice and lightweight trellises will eventually fail. Install the support before you plant, not after.
Does wisteria attract bees and hummingbirds?
Yes. All wisterias are pollinator magnets during bloom, and native species like Blue Moon and Amethyst Falls are especially valuable for native bees. Hummingbirds visit the racemes for nectar, and the dense vine cover offers nesting habitat for songbirds.
Ready to pick the right one for your garden? Browse the full Wisteria collection at Nature Hills, or explore more options in our Flowering Vines collection. Every order ships at the right time for your zone, backed by our Plant Sentry compliance and Growing and Glowing Guarantee.
Happy planting.