North Carolina
Sorts and Filters
Sorts and Filters
Collection Results
Thuja Green Giant
2553 reviewsStarting at $19.95Up to 20% OFFHass Avocado Tree
666 reviewsStarting at $93.95Up to 37% OFFLeyland Cypress Tree
588 reviewsStarting at $24.95Up to 17% OFFDouble Knock Out® Rose
311 reviewsStarting at $24.95Up to 58% OFFPhenomenal™ Lavender Plant
288 reviewsStarting at $24.95Up to 38% OFFEmerald Green Arborvitae
615 reviewsStarting at $24.95Taylor Juniper Tree
98 reviewsStarting at $77.95Up to 13% OFFPink Lemonade Blueberry Bush
142 reviewsStarting at $65.95Up to 12% OFFCold Hardy Avocado Tree
755 reviewsStarting at $149.95Black Knight Butterfly Bush
188 reviewsStarting at $77.95Up to 13% OFFItalian Cypress
247 reviewsStarting at $60.95Up to 28% OFFRed Haven Peach Tree
177 reviewsStarting at $129.95Up to 7% OFFPeaches & Cream Honeysuckle Vine
151 reviewsStarting at $24.95Up to 17% OFFKarl Foerster Grass
44 reviewsStarting at $98.95Pink Muhly Grass
141 reviewsStarting at $69.95Junior Giant Thuja Tree
75 reviewsStarting at $46.95Up to 33% OFFMeyer Lemon Bush
360 reviewsStarting at $57.95Up to 28% OFFFull Speed A Hedge® American Pillar Arborvitae
115 reviewsStarting at $46.95Up to 33% OFFColorado Blue Spruce Tree
175 reviewsStarting at $65.95Reliance Peach Tree
83 reviewsStarting at $159.95Limelight Hydrangea Tree
125 reviewsStarting at $134.95Honeycrisp™ Apple Tree
323 reviewsStarting at $134.95Rainier Cherry Tree
122 reviewsStarting at $159.95Wintergreen Boxwood Shrub
100 reviewsStarting at $41.95Up to 16% OFFNorth Carolina Trees
North Carolinians just love living in the Tar Heel State, though they are often looking for fast-growing trees that will quickly provide them dense shade during the summertime. Which trees you choose to plant in North Carolina will depend on where you live - Coastal Plain, the Piedmont or the Mountains - and the benefits you expect from the tree.
The Best Trees for Planting in North Carolina
Good considerations for tree choices in NC will always include species that are highly adaptable to the unique climate of the North Carolina hardiness zones; trees that can thrive in zones 6, 7 and 8. At fast Growing Trees Nursery, we can help you find trees and shrubs that will easily adapt to your environment.
We know you want fast-growing trees that hardy, and are perhaps even native to North Carolina, consider the customer favorite; Flowering Dogwood. Our many varieties of maple will also give seasonal color to your residential landscape.
If you’re looking for a tree that will grow quickly to provide dense shade, the American Beech is a winner, as are its compatriots the American Sycamore, the American Elm and the Sweetbay Magnolia.
What would your Tar Heel State garden be without a selection of fruit trees? We have the delicious Red Haven Peach; a fast-growing fruit tree with large peaches and the juicy Elberta Peach. That’s not all; we also have Bing and Black Tartarian cherries, Granny Smith and Yellow and Red Delicious apples and Bartlett and Kieffer pears.
To add more shade with a living screen, plant a row of our Thuja Giant or Leyland Cypress evergreens. They both grow quickly to form a uniform, living green wall. They are easy to grow and disease resistant. For small but equally effective boundary screens, consider non-invasive Black Bamboo or the variegated Soft Touch Holly.
A Large Variety of Trees for North Carolina
The North Carolina state tree is the Longleaf Pine. This tree is the legendary Southern Yellow Pine of forest history. This stately tree used to cover around 650 million acres of the southeastern United States Coastal Plain. It takes 100-150 years to mature and can live for more than 300 years. It grows up to 100 feet tall.
Cecil is the state soil of North Carolina. This sandy loam with clay subsoil is found across more than 1,600,000 acres of land throughout the state and covers almost a third of the eastern United State’s Piedmont plateau. This soil is used for crops and forest land and is a great soil for cultivating trees and shrubs.
Gorgeous Tar Heel State landscapes have a wide variety of different types of hardy shade trees and flowering trees that grow well in the southeast. These are complemented by evergreens and fruit trees. Trees that adapt to the soil type in your specific region of North Carolina always make the best choices for a landscape that looks good and is easy to care for.