7 Strategies For Keeping Deer Out Of Your Garden
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Feb 7, 2014 · Revised on Oct 10, 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 Feb 7, 2014 · Revised on Oct 10, 2025
By David Salman, Chief Horticulturist and Founder of High Country Gardens
Updated 3/18/25
Browsing animals and new transplants are a bad combination. Nothing is more disappointing than going out the morning after a day’s labor of planting, only to find all your plants bitten off at the soil line! Gardeners have a few different options to protect their landscapes. For best results, use a combination of different techniques to gain the upper hand. Read on for help keeping deer out of your garden.
One of the most effective ways to protect your yard is to install fencing. This is also the largest investment of the seven strategies outlined here. Deer fences need to be at least 7 to 8 feet tall to thwart the deer who can easily clear lower heights. A deer fence can be very inconspicuous when using a thin-mesh fencing wire and small diameter posts to minimize its visual impact. Sometimes when deer pressure is simply overwhelming at all times of the year, a deer-proof fence is the gardener’s last resort.
Experience has shown me that deer-resistant plants generally do not come that way from the nursery. Most plants that depend on aromatic oils and bitter compounds to repel animals need time to build up their natural defenses. After a few months of growing in your garden, transplants will accumulate these deer-resistant compounds in their leaves and stems, and their deer resistance increases greatly. I strongly recommend creating a strategy to deter deer while your plants establish to protect young transplants from being eaten.
Tips for using deer repellent:
In times of drought and a lack of natural forage, additional measures may need to be taken, because browsing animals are simply too hungry to be put off by unpleasant tastes and odors that repellents. Physical barriers may be necessary. They'll help prevent other critters from nibbling, can be affordable and reusable, and are easy to use.
It's also important to remember that the plants deer don't like to eat will vary somewhat from region to region. I always recommend checking in with local Agricultural Extension offices and Master Gardener organizations to verify that the plants on your deer-resistant list are not being eaten in your area.
An essential deterrent is choosing plants that are unpalatable to hungry deer. Using deer-resistant plants as companion plants to more vulnerable varieties is another strategy. Fortunately, we offer a wide variety of deer-resistant plants, so you can plant a garden that's both beautiful and worry-free.
Learn More: Top Deer Resistant Plants For Waterwise Gardens
Companion planting deer-resistant plants with other non-resistant plants is also a good strategy. Deer smell the aromatic plants and leave the whole planting alone. I once attended a lecture given by an inspired gardener who is a rose specialist and loved to grow Roses and Clematis in Spokane, Washington, but apparently, deer are a constant hazard in that area and love to eat roses. She would always plant lavender in the planting hole with her roses, and this works quite well for her. Though not guaranteed, planting strongly aromatic plants alongside other more palatable ones can be an effective and beautiful way to prevent deer damage.