Plants That Actually Cool Your Yard – They Act Like Natural Air Conditioning When Temperatures Rise

Use trees, shrubs, and perennials to create a cooler microclimate

A show garden at the Chelsea Flower Show with a pergola, shrubs, and trees to provide shade
(Image credit: Future\Jacky Hobbs)

When temperatures rise in the summer, your garden can provide respite. Carefully choosing the right plants helps make the garden feel cooler in the heat by providing crucial shade and creating a more pleasant microclimate.

Trees, shrubs, and climbers add height and dappled shade, while foliage and ground cover plants reduce the ground's reflection and absorption of heat. Also, all plants have a clever trait and release moisture into the air through transpiration to cool the environment around them.

Homeowners all want to spend more time outdoors during the summer. When you surround seating or dining areas with plants that cool a garden, you can beat the heat. As our climates are warming, adapting your backyard ideas will make a big difference each summer.

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Shade Trees

Sitting in shade in the garden

(Image credit: Getty/Marcus Lindstrom)

Trees cool a garden by providing shade, reflecting sunlight, and transpiration, releasing moisture through their leaves.

Adding shade trees to a space will reduce summer temperatures, as the canopy blocks the rays from reaching the ground and warming it. The continuous release of water into the air as the tree transpires also helps keep temperatures feeling cooler through the garden.

The best trees have attractive, airy foliage that gives dappled garden shade rather than completely blocking light into the garden. The downside: it may take many years for a tree to reach its full size.

Flowering Shrubs

Patio planting ideas

(Image credit: Future)

The benefits of transpiration can further be felt closer to ground level by planting shrubs underneath taller tree canopies.

As the shrubs release moisture, the air temperatures around them cool. By planting flowering shrubs around a deck, patio, or seating area, you can enjoy the fragrant blooms and also relax in the knowledge that the plants are contributing to a cooler microclimate to enjoy.

Choose shrubs that won’t grow any more than 4-8 feet in height, or you can achieve the same by planting ornamental grasses around relaxing areas of the garden.

Flowering Climbers

Outdoor dining table under lush foliage on a pergola

(Image credit: Future)

Growing fast-growing climbers on a pergola, archway, fence, or wall helps reduce the heat building up in a garden and creates a cooling, serene environment – especially if you use fragrant climbers like star jasmine or honeysuckle.

Climbers growing over a pergola, arbor, or arch provide natural, elegant shade over a seating area. The foliage blocks the sun’s rays, creating a cooler environment to enjoy.

When the flowering climbers are allowed to grow up walls or fences, they prevent the sun from hitting bricks or concrete and radiating heat back outwards.

Bare walls absorb heat and radiate this for many hours, and covering them with climbers keeps both the outdoors and indoors cooler.

Foliage Plants

swim spa with tropical plants

(Image credit: Jacky Hobbs)

Large-leaved foliage plants can bring a tropical garden vibe to any space. They create shade, stop the sun from hitting the ground, and transpire through the pores in their foliage to cool the air around them.

You can grow foliage plants in the ground or in containers to create a cooling microclimate on a deck or patio; just ensure you water them regularly to keep the soil moist in summer.

The choices on offer range from large banana plants that will dominate a space and make a stunning talking point to hostas, which might not grab the same attention but can be planted in numbers to smother the ground and release moisture in the air.

Ground Cover Plants

A path edged with ground cover plants

(Image credit: Jon Lovette/Getty Images)

Bare soil absorbs heat during the day and radiates it back to the air once the sun goes down. To prevent the soil from warming up, the most efficient way to keep it cool is to use ground cover plants.

A living carpet will not only look much nicer than open ground, but it will naturally transpire and cool the air, creating a much more comfortable environment than bare soil or stones.

You can get ground cover plants with different colors and foliage shapes. Covering the soil also retains moisture, which reduces how much watering you need to do in the heat.


As our summers are getting hotter, our modern garden ideas need to put the climate front and center. One of the key aspects must be designing a drought-tolerant yard to cope with drier, warmer summers.

Put careful thought into plants that suit your local climate and have low water requirements, and mulch plants to retain whatever moisture there is in the ground for longer.

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Drew Swainston
Content Editor

Drew has worked as a writer since 2008 and was also a professional gardener for many years. As a trained horticulturist, he worked in prestigious historic gardens, including Hanbury Hall and the world-famous Hidcote Manor Garden. He also spent time as a specialist kitchen gardener at Soho Farmhouse and Netherby Hall, where he grew vegetables, fruit, herbs, and cut flowers for restaurants. Drew has written for numerous print and online publications and is an allotment holder and garden blogger. He is shortlisted for the Digital Gardening Writer of the Year at the 2025 Garden Media Guild Awards.