☀️ Full sun balcony
🌿 Outdoors
☀️ In brief — full sun balcony
South or west exposure: direct sun 6h+ per day · Essentials: Lavender, Olive tree, Rosemary, Star jasmine, Phormium · Watering: daily in July-August for small pots · To avoid: Ferns, Hostas, Hydrangeas — they burn in full sun
A balcony facing due south or due west is a blessing — it is the ideal exposure for Mediterranean plants, flowering climbers, and tropical plants that love heat. This guide helps you choose the best-suited species and care for them throughout the season.
Understanding full sun exposure
A "full sun" balcony receives at least 6 hours of direct sun per day — usually south, southwest, and sometimes west exposures depending on surrounding obstacles. These conditions are ideal for plants of Mediterranean, subtropical, or tropical origin that evolved in bright and warm environments.
Specific challenges
- Accumulated heat — urban balconies accumulate heat (heat island effect + reflection). Pots heat up faster than open ground.
- Drying wind — high balconies are often exposed to wind that speeds up evaporation and stresses plants.
- Fast drying substrates — in full sun, a 20 cm pot may require daily watering in summer.
💡 Choose the right pots
For a full sun balcony, favor large pots (minimum 30 cm) that retain moisture better. Dark pots absorb more heat — prefer light or terracotta pots for the most sensitive species. Surface mulching (pine bark, clay pellets) reduces evaporation by 30 to 40%.
The best plants for sunny balconies
Lavender is the emblem of the sunny Mediterranean balcony — it loves heat, withstands prolonged droughts, and blooms from June to August with an enchanting fragrance. The Hidcote Blue variety is compact and very flowering. It attracts bees and butterflies and naturally repels certain harmful insects.
See the Lavender →
The olive tree in pot is the quintessential Mediterranean balcony plant. Its persistent silvery foliage, twisted trunk, and hardiness make it a decorative plant all year round. It tolerates prolonged droughts once well established. In a pot, it remains compact and can stay outside all year in mild regions.
See the Olive tree →
The rosemary on stem is a Mediterranean plant ideal for a sunny balcony — decorative with its ball-shaped form pruned on stem, it flowers blue in spring and gives off an intense aromatic scent. Extremely resistant to heat and drought once established, it is also useful in cooking. Hardy down to −10 °C.
See the Rosemary →
The star jasmine is the most popular climbing balcony plant — its small soft pink star-shaped flowers give off an intense fragrance in June-July. Moderate growth climber, it quickly covers a railing or trellis. Its variety 'Star of Ibiza' is hardier than classic jasmine and tolerates sunny exposures well.
See the Star Jasmines →
The Strelitzia reginae — bird of paradise — is the most spectacular balcony plant for a sunny exposure. Its orange and blue bird-shaped flowers are absolutely unique. It loves direct sun, tolerates heat, and flowers from spring to autumn in good conditions.
See the Strelitzia →
The Phormium brings a very graphic architectural dimension to a sunny balcony — its long ribbon-like red-burgundy leaves stand upright creating a very modern effect. Extremely resistant to heat, wind, and drought, it stays beautiful all year without special care. Evergreen and hardy down to -10 °C.
See the Phormium →
The lemon tree in pot is one of the most productive citrus for a very sunny balcony. It needs at least 6 hours of direct sun per day to flower and fruit. Its very fragrant white flowers precede the lemons which ripen gradually. Bring indoors as soon as nights drop below 5 °C.
See the Citrus →
Campsis is the climbing plant that flowers the most in full sun — its large bright red-orange trumpets appear abundantly from July to September. A compact version specially selected for pots and balconies, it climbs vigorously along a railing or trellis. Hardy and very heat resistant.
See Campsis →Quick comparison
| Plant | Flowering | Drought resistance | Winter hardiness | Form |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lavender | Jun.–Aug. | Excellent | −15 °C | Compact |
| Olea europaea | Discreet | Excellent | −10 °C | Tree pot |
| Rosmarinus officinalis | Spring | Excellent | −10 °C | Pruned stem |
| Trachelospermum 'Star of Ibiza' | Jun.–Jul. | Good | −10 °C | Climbing |
| Strelitzia reginae | Spring–autumn | Good | +5 °C min. | Upright |
| Phormium 'Rubra Nana' | Discreet | Excellent | −10 °C | Architectural |
| Citrus limon | Spring | Moderate | +5 °C min. | Tree pot |
| Campsis | Jul.–Sept. | Good | −20 °C | Climbing |
Summer care tips
Watering in midsummer
This is the critical point. In July-August with temperatures above 30 °C, small pots (less than 20 cm) may require daily watering. Always water in the evening or early morning — never in the heat of the day. Use the finger test to check the substrate before each watering.
Summer fertilization
Balcony plants in pots quickly use up nutrients — fertilize every 2 weeks from May to September with a liquid fertilizer for flowering plants (rich in potassium to promote flowering). Without fertilization, blooms quickly become sparse.
Prepare for winter
Non-hardy plants like Citrus limon and Strelitzia reginae must be brought indoors before the first frosts. Hardy plants (Phormium 'Rubra Nana', Lavender, Campsis) can stay outside — protect pots from frost by elevating them or wrapping them with a winter veil to prevent the substrate from freezing completely.
- Water in the evening or early morning — never in the heat of the day
- Fertilize every 2 weeks from May to September
- Mulch the surface of pots to reduce evaporation
- Remove faded flowers to encourage flowering
- Bring Citrus limon and Strelitzia reginae indoors before frost
- Protect hardy plants' pots in winter
Verdeia Collection
Plants for full sun balconies
Lavender, Olea europaea, Rosmarinus officinalis, Trachelospermum 'Star of Ibiza' — a selection of plants that love sun and heat.
Frequently asked questions
Lavender, Olea europaea, Trachelospermum 'Star of Ibiza', Strelitzia reginae, Phormium 'Rubra Nana', Citrus limon, Campsis. All love direct sun and heat. Avoid partial shade plants (Ferns, Hostas, Hydrangeas) which burn in full sun. See the full collection.
Rosmarinus officinalis (spring), Strelitzia reginae (spring to autumn), Campsis (July to September), Trachelospermum 'Star of Ibiza' (June to July). For continuous flowering, combine several species with different blooming periods. See also the plants by exposure.
In July-August with high heat, small pots (less than 20 cm) often require daily watering. Large pots (30 cm+) usually last 2 days. Use the finger test: if the substrate is dry 3 cm deep, water. Mediterranean plants (Olea europaea, Lavender, Phormium) tolerate drought better than tropical ones.
Water in the evening or early morning, use large pots that retain moisture better, mulch the surface to limit evaporation. Mediterranean plants (Olea europaea, Lavender, Rosmarinus officinalis) are naturally adapted to high heat. For more sensitive plants, a 30% shade cloth can help on extreme heatwave days.
Verdeia Shop
Transform your sunny balcony
Plants selected to resist heat and flower all summer on your balcony.

