Have you heard of a botanical bento box? Small-scale and highly considered – experts say this will be the most innovative garden design approach of 2026

Discover 3 easy ways to get ahead of the garden bento trend

Garden bento box design trend
(Image credit: Future)

The Garden Media Group has released its 2026 Garden Trends Report and there's one trend standing out as the most satisfying idea for our backyards: botanical bento.

It's the concept of creating a garden bento box: neat, compact garden design with everything you need in reaching distance to bring a backyard idea to life. 'Everything is distilled into smaller, smarter, and more intentional formats, from communication to content to consumer products,' the 2026 Garden Trends Report states. 'The rise of the bento design literally means curated spatial compartments. Each item has purpose and contributes visually to overall harmony,' it continues.

You don't need a small garden to partake in this trend either, as you can apply it to specific sections of your yard. It's about each element of garden design serving its purpose in the bigger picture; just like a bento box, where each item is perfectly laid out in front of you in just the right volume. We dive into this concept further, and look at how to incorporate it into your yard.

Everything has its place in a garden bento box design

small balcony garden with bench, throw, coffee cup, book and planting

(Image credit: Jacky Hobbs/Future)

As the Garden Media Group reports: 'A bento box isn’t just a container – it’s a concept.

'Thoughtful, convenient, aesthetically pleasing, and emotionally generous. Everything has its place. Every element is curated.'

The idea of a garden bento box is therefore the opposite to the likes of chaos gardening and wild gardening. Rather, each plant is carefully chosen, companion planting is made use of, the perfect planters are selected to serve function and form, and garden rooms are vital to maximizing your outdoor space.

'Not just 'little treats,' but lovely moments made accessible. It’s not random. It’s art,' the trends report continues.

It's a trend to please container gardeners, as well as those with a larger yard looking for some order in quiet corners. Think capsule gardening and organized garden design, where every detail has been carefully selected and placed to make the use of your outdoor space personal and convenient.

3 ways to incorporate bento gardening to your yard

Intrigued to start your own garden bento box? There are lots of ways to get this satisfying design in your yard, whether you're working with lots of space or something more limited:

1. Create a seasonal bento container

colorful flowers in pots

(Image credit: sagarmanis / iStock / Getty Images Plus / Getty Images)

Containers are the easiest place to start when it comes to embracing garden bento design. They provide the perfect vessel to incorporate a few select plants, and making seasonal choices will allow them to truly thrive and brighten up corners of your yard.

'Curate seasonal 'garden bento' boxes – beautifully packaged, compact, and coordinated by pollinator type,' the Garden Media Group suggests.

There are plenty of spring planter ideas to embrace, and you can spruce up your spring containers for summer before incorporating fall flowers for pots.

Choose container plants for pollinators to bring some buzz to your bento design. As the report suggests, you could even have a dedicated pot for each pollinator – try coneflowers (seeds from Amazon) for bees and butterflies, for example.

The thriller, spiller, filler container planting method also offers this bento satisfaction, with each element being fundamental to the impact of the display.

2. Divide your garden into different sections

Walled garden

(Image credit: Chuck Place via Alamy)

This one is a slightly bigger project, but you can also turn your garden into a large-scale bento box. Use hedges and natural arches to create doorways and walls that create different compartments in your yard.

Much like a walled garden design, each space in your yard can be dedicated to a particular purpose. It could be that you have a kitchen garden in one corner, a cottage garden to escape to in another, and maybe even a memory garden to pay tribute to loved ones: everything you look for in a garden, neatly organized in your yard.

You can use garden privacy ideas to create screening between each space. Think clean lines, garden paths linking each section, and functional design that allows you to use your outdoor space to the fullest.

3. Grow an experience garden

Large garden borders in summer, with purple lupins, copper-purple beech hedging and lush, green perennial planting

(Image credit: Future/Allan Pollok-Morris)

Another way the Garden Media Group suggests incorporating a garden bento is by creating a garden that serves an interactive experience.

This could be anything from a garden to grow your own herbal tea (with these herbal tea plant seeds from Amazon), to a dye garden, or even a cut flower garden for floristry. It may even be an indoor herb garden on your kitchen windowsill.

This requires growing the particular plants needed for the desired experience; it's treating planting as ingredients and tools.

But it isn't just about the plants. Your experience garden may need additional features, like a potting bench or a tool shed, equipped with a garden belt (from Amazon) and pruners (from Amazon), for example. It's essential to have everything you need within easy access for this garden bento idea to work.


This isn't the only garden trend to emerge from the Garden Media Group's 2026 Garden Trends Report. They also revealed 'faded petal' as color of the year in the garden, and it's good news for indoor gardeners as collectible houseplants are taking center stage next year.

Shop beautiful containers for your garden bento

Tenielle Jordison
Gardens Content Editor

Tenielle is a Gardens Content Editor at Homes & Gardens. She holds a qualification in MA Magazine Journalism and has over six years of journalistic experience. Before coming to Homes & Gardens, Tenielle was in the editorial department at the Royal Horticultural Society and worked on The Garden magazine. As our in-house houseplant expert, Tenielle writes on a range of solutions to houseplant problems, as well as other 'how to' guides, inspiring garden projects, and the latest gardening news. When she isn't writing, Tenielle can be found propagating her ever-growing collection of indoor plants, helping others overcome common houseplant pests and diseases, volunteering at a local gardening club, and attending gardening workshops, like a composting masterclass.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.