The Best Fall-Planted Bulbs for Dry Areas
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Sep 11, 2015 · Revised on Sep 18, 2025
Knowing your location helps us recommend plants that will thrive in your climate, based on your Growing Zone.
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Sep 11, 2015 · Revised on Sep 18, 2025
By David Salman, Chief Horticulturist
Spring-flowering bulbs are a unique group of pollinator-friendly flowers that have been a staple of gardening in Europe and the U.S. for many years. These fall-planted, flowering plants are easy additions to our landscapes. They light up the spring garden before many other plants wake up and come into flower, providing essential early season nectar for bees and other pollinators.

Spring-flowering bulbs depend on two climatic factors to do well in our landscapes:
Many gardeners want to know if spring-blooming bulbs are good waterwise (xeric or drought resistant) plants for drier growing conditions. The answer depends on where you are in the U.S:
Mulching is an essential technique for growing bulbs in drier climates. A nice 1-2" deep blanket of coarse compost, composted bark, or other non-gravel material applied in late fall will conserve soil moisture, and enrich the soil as it decomposes.
When fall-planted bulbs receive sufficient moisture and cold temperatures over the winter and during early spring months, there is little else we need to do to keep them happy. They only need nutrients and space to grow. Here are a few long-term maintenance tips for growing spring flowering bulbs:

With sufficient extra irrigation: most fall bulbs will do well in drier climates. Large flowered Tulips, Daffodils, Scilla, Hyacinths, and most other fall-planted bulbs are good to plant.
For landscapes that have limited water available for irrigation: The spring flowering bulbs listed below are the most tolerant of dry soil. In areas that get 15-20" or less of annual precipitation, even these more xeric bulbs will need supplemental spring watering of 2" or more per month once the soil thaws.