Inside the 5 Most Inspiring Gardens at RHS Chelsea 2026 – and How to Steal Their Best Ideas

Inspiring ideas, smart design details, and emerging trends you can easily recreate at home

Courtyard garden with water pipes flowing into large blue copper pots and lush, cottage-style planting
(Image credit: Josh Kemp-Smith/RHS)

As the RHS Chelsea Flower Show opened it's gilded gates for the 2026 show yesterday, the tone was one of understated, quiet elegance. And I am fully on board.

Overall, a more muted palette ran through the gardens, with gentle, serene swathes of planting in colors that didn't shout, rather, stood resiliently in stiu, reinforcing the ever-poignant messages within the garden designs.

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Retro Balcony Styling at its Very Best

Retro-inspired potting shed shelves with terracotta pots and gardening tools, vintage pots and china

(Image credit: Josh Kemp-Smith/RHS)

The two most important things about a garden design (that tell me instantly whether or not I love it) is how it makes me feel (I want to feel inspired, safe, calm, cocooned in nature), and how easy it is to recreate at home. I need it to be attainable in some way.

A Little Garden of Shared Knowledge, designed by Katerina Kantalis, gave me a sense of nostalgia that I wanted to wrap up in a cozy blanket and carry all the way home with me.

There are so many elements to inspire and emulate from this balcony garden design, from the vintage wicker chairs (I found an elegant dupe at Ikea) to the beautiful, comforting collection of terracotta pots, just like this set of three I found at Amazon.

Balcony garden with wicker chairs, retro styling and large shrubs in brown pots

(Image credit: Josh Kemp-Smith/RHS)

The shelf styling, however, has to be my favorite thing about it. I immediately wanted to create a potting bench with hooks and retro ceramics, covered in potted pelargoniums.

I found a rather quaint retro clock, from Amazon, to start my collection. And this is a lovely pot rack with hooks also from Amazon; I adore this idea for displaying gardening tools in a more aesthetic way.

Despite being designed with a retired couple in mind, this London balcony garden could work for all ages. Anyone with a passion for retro, nostalgic styling, and who wants to create a botanical sanctuary in an urban setting would feel right at home here.

A Little Garden of Shared Knowledge won Gold, and Best Balcony Garden at this year's show.

Unexpected Water Features

Alliums and peonies in foreground of garden, with curving water rill and lush tree foliage in background

(Image credit: Neil Hepworth/RHS)

Within the Parkinson's UK show garden, A Garden for Every Parkinson’s Journey, designed by Arit Anderson, winds a gentle, curving water feature that I could not take my eyes off.

Water features were a prominent theme across many of the Chelsea gardens this year, but in this one it was elevated above the planting, flowing gently from one section of the to another.

The tactile 'hand rill' was designed to give sensory cues to people with Parkinson's to help aid movement. There's no denying the sound of flowing water can help to relax and sooth us in a garden, and this particular feature got me thinking about how we can add water features into our yards at different heights.

I love the idea of this hanging solar bird bath fountain, available from Amazon, which you could hang from a large potted tree on a patio.

The Parkinson's UK garden won a Silver medal at this year's show.

English Courtyard Charm

Courtyard garden with water pipes flowing into large blue copper pots and lush, cottage-style planting

(Image credit: Josh Kemp-Smith/RHS)

The Whittard of Chelsea Garden, designed by Ollie Pike and awarded Gold, is a courtyard garden design with an utterly joyful, romantic feel, packed with comforting scent and sound.

One element I absolutely love in this design are the enormous planters, which are a bold addition in such a small space. It's encouraging me to make more confident choices and go bigger with my patio design.

I found these incredible galvanized metal planters from Wayfair, which would make a statement when planted with bushy roses or dominant evergreen shrubs, such as fatsia japonica, which you can find at Amazon.

In this garden, these eclectic planters are not only used for shrubs and flowers, but also as statement water features, adding to the retreat-style feel.

Earth Tones with Soft, Gentle Planting

Soft, wild planting with lilac and magenta flowers, either side of a red stone path

(Image credit: Neil Hepworth/RHS)

Muted tones and soft planting were a feature throughout this year's show, but nowhere better than within The Lady Garden Foundation, 'Silent No More' garden, designed by Darren Hawkes, and awarded Gold.

Before I read anything about this garden, I could sense that the planting, which sways from pastels and neutrals to more powerful tones of rich apricot and burgundy, was reflective of the power and poignancy this space conveys.

Designed to embody the fearless women's gynaecological health charity, Lady Garden Foundation, the feeling I got when looking into this garden was one of quiet resilience.

Close-up of pathway edging using earth-colored slabs of stone placed vertically

(Image credit: Neil Hepworth/RHS)

The planting combination would be simple to recreate. To get this look and feel, mix bold bearded iris in apricot and burgundy tones, such as the exquisite Iris germanica 'Bernice's Legacy' from Nature Hills, with pastel pink astrantia major, and Nepeta racemosa 'Walker's Low', available from Fast Growing Trees.

Winding paths and intimate seating areas also featured strongly, as spaces to have honest conversations and foster connections.

If you have a larger backyard, consider adding seating within the space, not just at either end of it. Look for curved shapes to create flow and movement, such as this curved, whimsical metal bench from Wayfair, that would fit beautifully around the perimtere of a mature tree.

Moroccan-Inspired Courtyard Idea

Moroccan inspired courtyard garden with blue copper rain chain

(Image credit: Josh Kemp-Smith/RHS)

Having recently been to Morocco, I was eager to find a way to incorporate the beautiful Moorish elements of courtyard design I'd seen there into my own yard.

I was instantly drawn to the Flood Re: Contain the Rain Garden, designed by John Howlett, for the amount of depth created in such a small space.

Inspired by Persian design, this garden transforms a small urban space into a serene retreat, an antidote to modern city life, and a sustainable oasis. The hexagonal planters help to maximise every inch of space here, and the tropical planting creates a lush canopy, which would also help to create shade and keep the space cool during the hottest months of the year.

For tropical monstera plants, look no further than Fast Growing Trees. And Burpee has a beautiful range of ferns for shade and sun.

The copper patina rain chain feature was my favourite style element. You can find a similar rain chain design at Target. I also love this hummingbird rain chain design from Amazon.

The Contain the Rain Garden won Gold at this year's show.


Look out for more Chelsea Flower Show content from our team this week, as we continue to distil our thoughts and verdicts on this year's inspiring designs and plant finds, such as the rare blue kangaroo paw – an amazing, resilient plant you will want to learn more about.

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Rachel Bull
Head of Gardens

Rachel is a gardening editor, floral designer, flower grower and gardener. Her journalism career began on Country Living magazine, sparking a love of container gardening and wild planting. After several years as editor of floral art magazine The Flower Arranger, Rachel became a floral designer and stylist, before joining Homes & Gardens in 2023. She writes and presents the brand's weekly gardening and floristry social series Petals & Roots. An expert in cut flowers, she is particularly interested in sustainable gardening methods and growing flowers and herbs for wellbeing. Last summer, she was invited to Singapore to learn about the nation state's ambitious plan to create a city in nature, discovering a world of tropical planting and visionary urban horticulture.