Stop Wasting Your Shady Garden Space: 18 Herbs That Want to Grow There

March 30, 2026 | Source: AOL | by Katy Willis

Most of my herb garden gets full sun, and I’ve always been grateful for that. But there’s a long, awkward strip down the north side of my house that gets almost nothing — a couple of hours of weak morning light and that’s it. For years I treated it as a lost cause and let it go to weeds. Then I started paying attention to what actually wants to grow in the shade, and now that strip is one of the most productive patches I have.

If you’ve got a shady garden — or even just a corner, a fence line, or a spot under a big tree that never quite gets enough sun — you’re not stuck with a bare patch and a feeling of defeat. Herbs don’t all want the same thing. A surprising number of them actively prefer cooler, shadier conditions. Some of them sulk and bolt the moment you put them in direct sun. Others are woodland plants by nature and genuinely do better in dappled light than in full exposure.

What counts as “shade” in the herb garden?

Before you start moving plants around, it’s worth knowing what kind of shade you’re actually dealing with. There’s a big difference between the dappled light under a deciduous tree (which changes through the season), the deep shade of a north-facing fence, and the dry shade under an overhanging roof or dense conifer. Most herbs that tolerate shade are really tolerating partial shade — they still want some light, just not baking midday sun.