90 Landscaping Ideas to Get Your Yard Ready for Spring 2025


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ToggleBackyard Court

If a rolling lawn isn’t your desired backyard, think outside the box. For this home, Richardson & Associates Landscape Architecture worked to add BOTH a pickleball and tennis court to the sprawling acreage. For better joint comfort, the concrete courts were topped with Pro-Cushion. The green-painted surfaces help it blend in with the evergreen landscaping. Photometric testing was also used to ensure the court lights didn’t reach neighboring properties.
“Natural” Pool

To honor the upstate New York landscape of woods and beautiful views, designer Melissa Anderson of OAD Interiors looked to build a “natural” pool that melded perfectly with the home’s surroundings. Native landscaping and Adirondack-style chairs give this area rustic charm. “We kept everything very simple on the exterior to allow nature to be center stage,” Anderson says.
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Intentional Zones

Break up a large backyard by using different hardscaping surfaces to landscape your different zones. Here, RTA Outdoor Living and HGTV star Mike Pyle opted for brick pavers to separate the outdoor kitchen from the rest of the large paver slabs on the patio.
Pool Pavilion

The circus-meets-sophisticated pool pavilion, designed by Amber Lewis and Curtis & Windham Architects, can comfortably seat 10 guests. Inspired by hotel design and the homeowners’ love of entertaining, Lewis crafted an outdoor space in Martha’s Vineyard meant for large gatherings.
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Updated Exteriors

Design couple French & French designed a custom gate to welcome guests to their midcentury, Territorial Revival–style home in Santa Fe. The wide slats allow the beautiful garden to be seen from the street while the color coordinates with the home’s porch architecture.
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Lavender Field

Nothing channels the French countryside like a lavender field—especially one that leads to a stone flower-arranging studio. Wendy Owen wanted her Sonoma, California, property to feel like a laid-back, rustic French village. She channeled that atmosphere with landscaping ideas like lovely stone pavilions, stand-alone sheds for gardening, and outdoor cooking areas.
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Quaint Fencing

Emily Janak’s Wyoming mountain house strikes the perfect balance between quaint and polished. A well-kept lawn contrasts with wild lavender within the garden’s wooden fence, and a canoe suspended under the upper-level extension brings dimension and character.
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Life-Size Chess

Tiered infinity pools might seem over the top, but the raised design can be a practical way to connect a spa and swimming pool. Even better if yours is overlooking a cool landscape feature, like the life-size chess board in this backyard designed by Ken Fulk. Yard games are always a win, especially if revelers who would rather lounge in the pool can hang nearby.
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Structured Greenery

Stone Partition

A partial stone wall props up a pergola for shade, while a garden door beyond makes the cozy fireplace zone feel extra private and serene. To keep the outdoor space of this 1950s ranch in Kansas City feeling open and green, Jeffrey Dungan’s team designed it to extend only halfway up past the sitting area.
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Blooming Flower Border

Rows of hydrangeas and hedges offer a beautiful alternative to typical garden fences. The soft pastel colors are especially stunning and a natural fit for summer cottages, like this one in East Hampton designed by Robert Stilin.
Strategic Paint Colors

Add more vertical greenery to a hardscaped patio by painting your fence or trellis Go Away Green. The paint color is popular among designers in outdoor areas for its magical camouflaging abilities! Here, Mimi McMakin used a mossy color on the chairs too.
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Gravel Ground

Instead of a hard-to-maintain lawn, opt for gravel and bring in greenery with lush pots and topiaries scattered around the perimeter of the yard. If you love hosting, an outdoor table is essential—on her Nashville patio, seen here, Gen Sohr anchors one with two wicker end chairs and cozies it up with special throws and cushions.
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Window Boxes

When you don’t have a front yard or even a sizeable porch, call on your windows for a beautiful landscaping idea, as Sarah Bartholomew did here. A copper lantern lights the way home, picking up on copper flashed windows and gutters, and window boxes are enlivened with pretty white florals and greenery.
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Native Plantings

Landscape architecture design studio Terremoto populated the garden of this Bel Air, California, home with native species wherever possible and created “a gradient of wildness” on the steep hillside. The lush canopy of low-water, low-maintenance plants includes native grasses, sages and lilacs, and redbud trees.
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Faux Plant Wall

Designer Alison Victoria brought her small urban backyard to life with a clever landscaping idea. The trick to maintaining a low-maintenance garden wall that adds greenery? It’s faux! She removed the glass from an antique pier mirror that was formerly in the entryway of an old home and then nailed faux fir panels directly into the fence.
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Hammock With a View

At a Seattle home by Studio DIAA that literally floats on water, the occupants hung a hammock for a truly restful backyard experience. They also like to place an essential oil diffuser on the cedar deck to really max out the spa vibes.
Floral Driveway

No front yard? No problem. Beautify your driveway instead. Bay Area designer Dan Carlson combined succulents and herbs for this low-to-the-ground garden-meets-driveway flanked by permeable pavers.
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Alfresco Bar

For this Palm Beach vacation house, Caroline Rafferty decked out a small bar prep zone (conveniently located right by the cabana) in saturated colors and stripes, then optimized the space with a ceiling fan and hidden remote-controlled hurricane shutters for the off-season. A home bar made of wicker makes it even more inviting.
Olive and Cypress Trees

Landscape designer Marcello Villano incorporated olive and cypress trees in this Palm Springs courtyard as a nod to the homeowner’s Italian heritage.
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