If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (2024)

Gardening

Gardening Basics

Insects

By

Shelby Vittek

If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (1)

Shelby Vittek

Shelby Vittek has written about home organization, food, farming, and travel for 12 years. Her work has appeared in Food & Wine, The Kitchn, National Geographic, and more.

Learn more about The Spruce'sEditorial Process

Published on 02/17/24

Trending Videos

If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (2)

Dragonflies are graceful and beautiful to watch, but they also help to reduce other pesky insect populations by preying on mosquitoes and flies. If you want to better defend against mosquitoes, it's a wise idea to make your backyard hospitable to dragonflies. One way to do that is with smart landscaping.

Dragonflies are aquatic insects that need fresh water to breed, so adding a pond to your garden is one way to draw them to your backyard. They tend to like open garden layouts with a wide range of plants—including ones that also attract the insects they prey on.

Here are suggestions for pretty plants that will attract dragonflies to your garden, including a wide range of hardiness zones.

  • 01 of 17

    Black-Eyed Susan

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (3)

    Easy-to-care-for black-eyed Susans have bright yellow (and sometimes orange or red) petals and dark center discs that serve as a great landing platform for many pollinators, including the insects that serve as food for dragonflies.

    • Name: Black-Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-9
    • Light: Full sun
    • Soil: Moist, well-drained
    • Flower Color: Yellow, orange, red
  • 02 of 17

    Coneflower

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (4)

    Coneflowers come in many colors and shapes, and their pretty, pollen-rich blooms attract dragonflies and other beneficial pollinators. They require little maintenance and grow best under full sun. The blossoms grow on stalks that can reach up to three feet tall, and dragonflies like perching on them because of their height.

    • Name: Coneflower (Echinacea)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 4-9
    • Light: Full to partial
    • Soil: Rocky, clay or sandy
    • Flower Color: Pink, yellow, orange, red, white
  • 03 of 17

    Aster

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (5)

    These daisy-like flowers, sometimes referred to as the starwort of frost flower, are native to North America. Asters are perennial plants that thrive around water sources such as marshes and ponds, which also attract dragonflies.

    • Name: Aster (Symphyotrichumspp.)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-8
    • Light: Full to partial
    • Soil: Loamy, well-drained
    • Flower Color: Purple, pink, mauve, blue, white
  • 04 of 17

    Swamp Milkweed

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (6)

    Native to wet landscapes such as swamps, the aptly-named swamp milkweed is an important food source for certain butterfly species, which are eaten by dragonflies. The damp environments where they grow will also attract mosquitoes, another key food source for them.

    • Name: Swamp Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-6
    • Light: Full
    • Soil: Clay, loam
    • Flower Color: Pink, red, white

    Continue to 5 of 17 below

  • 05 of 17

    Water Lily

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (7)

    Like dragonflies, water lilies rely on a water source to survive. These water-loving plants provides dragonflies with a safe location to lay their eggs as well as protect young dragonflies with places to hide. Adult dragonflies love to hover over the colorful blossoms.

    • Name: Nymphaea
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-11
    • Light: Full
    • Soil: Loamy, clay, silt, sandy
    • Flower Color: Blue, white, purple, yellow, red, pink, orange
  • 06 of 17

    Wild Celery

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (8)

    Not to be confused with the domesticated celery that you find in the grocery store, wild celery has thin, wispy stems and long, leafy foliage. Also known as American eelgrass, wild celery tends to grow near marshes, rivers and in tidal areas, and provides a surface for dragonflies to lay their eggs on.

    • Name: Wild Celery (Vallisneria americana)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 4-10
    • Light: Full, partial
    • Soil: Clay, loam, sand
    • Flower Color: White
  • 07 of 17

    Pickerelweed

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (9)

    This aquatic flowering plant grows in a variety of wetlands and typically grows between two to four feet tall. Pickerelweed is often found where pickerel fish live, hence its name, and its tall spikes of white, blue, pink, or purple flowers act as a food source for many pollinator insects.

    • Name: Pickerelweed (Pontederia cordata)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-10
    • Light: Full, partial
    • Soil: Soggy or submerged, muddy, loamy
    • Flower Color: White, blue, purple, pink
  • 08 of 17

    Meadow Sage

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (10)

    Meadow sage, a type of Salvia, produces numerous and dense vibrant purple-blue flowers that attract pollinators like butterflies and hummingbirds as well as dragonflies.

    • Name: Meadow Sage (Salvia pratensis)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 4-8
    • Light: Full
    • Soil: Well-drained, loamy, sandy
    • Flower Color: Purple

    Continue to 9 of 17 below

  • Joe Pye Weed

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (11)

    A pretty perennial plant. Joe Pye weed produces flower clusters boating pink-purple flowers with a sweet vanilla scent that attracts butterflies, dragonflies and other pollinators.

    • Name: Joe Pye Weed (Eutrochium purpureum)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 4-9
    • Light: Full, partial
    • Soil: Moist, well-drained
    • Flower Color: Mauve pink, pink-purple
  • 10 of 17

    Asiatic Lily

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (12)

    Intensely colored and scented, Asiatic lilies bloom in later spring or early summer, and will grow upright between 2-5 feet tall. Their showy height and colors invite dragonflies to perch on the blooms.

    • Name: Asiatic Lily (LiliumAsiatic hybrids (formerlyLilium asiatica))
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 4-9
    • Light: Full, partial
    • Soil: Moist, well-drained
    • Flower Color: Orange, pink, red, yellow, purple, white
  • 11 of 17

    New York Ironweed

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (13)

    A wildflower with dense clusters of vibrant purple flowers, New York ironweed is an eye-catching plant for any insect to land on. It also thrives in moist soil and is tolerant of mild flooding, meaning it's suitable in the same wet environment that dragonflies prefer.

    • Name: New York Ironweed (Vernonia noveborecensis)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 5-9
    • Light: Full
    • Soil: Moist, loamy
    • Flower Color: Purple
  • 12 of 17

    Bearded Iris

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (14)

    Bearded iris is the most popular category of irises, and have sword-like leaves and flowers with drooping lobes. There are many colors of bearded iris, the flowers of which contain abundant nectar to attract dragonflies with.

    • Name: Bearded Iris (Irisgermanica)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-9
    • Light: Full
    • Soil: Well-draining
    • Flower Color: Red, orange, blue, purple, yellow, brown, white, pink, other bicolors

    Continue to 13 of 17 below

  • 13 of 17

    Borage

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (15)

    A fast-growing, annual herb, borage has vivid blue flowers that smell and taste like cucumber. Its star-shaped flowers attract tiny pollinators that also serve as food to dragonflies.

    • Name: Borage (Borago officinalis)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 2-11
    • Light: Full, partial
    • Soil: Well-drained
    • Flower Color: Blue
  • 14 of 17

    Tickseed

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (16)

    This hardy plant produces daisy-like flowers from summer into fall, surviving until the first frost. Low-maintenance tickseed (also known as coreopsis) attracts butterflies, dragonflies, and other pollinators.

    • Name: Tickseed (Coreopsisspp.)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 2-8
    • Light: Full
    • Soil: Well-drained, sandy
    • Flower Color: Yellow, orange, red, pink, white
  • 15 of 17

    Common Cattail

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (17)

    A perennial aquatic plant, common cattails (also known as bulrush) thrive in shallow waters found in boggy marshes and wetland areas. With the right conditions, these plants can grow upright as tall as 10 feet high, providing cover for dragonflies passing through. They're also good for dragonfly eggs and young dragonflies.

    • Name: Common Cattail (Typha latifolia)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-10
    • Light: Full, partial
    • Soil: Moist, loamy
    • Flower Color: Brown
  • 16 of 17

    Yarrow

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (18)

    Because yarrow is an important source of nectar for pollinators, it attracts dragonflies and the insects they eat. The aromatic flowers come in a variety of colors, including white, yellow, and pink.

    • Name: Yarrow (Achillea millefolium)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 3-9
    • Light: Full
    • Soil: Well-drained
    • Flower Color: White, yellow, pink

    Continue to 17 of 17 below

  • 17 of 17

    Pink Muhly Grass

    If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (19)

    Dragonflies love to lay their eggs in this ornamental grass. Pink muhly grass blooms with pale pink flowers in autumn and adds texture and variety to your garden.

    • Name: Pink Muhly Grass (Muhlenbergia capillaris)
    • USDA Hardiness Zones: 6-9
    • Light: Full, partial
    • Soil: Dry, well-drained
    • Flower Color: Pink, pinkish-red

FAQ

  • How do I keep dragonflies in my backyard?

    Dragonflies are aquatic insects that need fresh water to breed, so one of the best ways to attract them to your backyard is to provide a source a fresh water such as a pond. Give them a place to perch and lay their eggs. If you add plants to your garden that attract insects that dragonflies feed on—such as mosquitoes and flies—then dragonflies will be more likely to linger.

  • What smell are dragonflies attracted to?

    There is no scientific evidence that dragonflies are attracted to a certain fragrance. In fact, dragonflies lack the brain infrastructure normally required for a sense of smell. When choosing plants to attract dragonflies to your garden, select ones that their prey like, such as sweet-scented flowers.

All About Pollinators: What They Are and How to Support Them

If You Want to Attract Dragonflies to Your Garden, Start With These 17 Plants (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Frankie Dare

Last Updated:

Views: 6488

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (53 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Frankie Dare

Birthday: 2000-01-27

Address: Suite 313 45115 Caridad Freeway, Port Barabaraville, MS 66713

Phone: +3769542039359

Job: Sales Manager

Hobby: Baton twirling, Stand-up comedy, Leather crafting, Rugby, tabletop games, Jigsaw puzzles, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Frankie Dare, I am a funny, beautiful, proud, fair, pleasant, cheerful, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.