• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
the frugal farm girl logo transparent background

The Frugal Farm Girl

Living Simply, Growing Abundantly: Homesteading, Gardening, and Recipes on a Budget!

  • Live Debt Free
    • Frugal Living
    • Get out of Debt
    • Meal Planning
    • Couponing
  • Raise Your Own
    • Chickens
    • Ducks
    • Goats
    • Mini Pigs
    • Rabbits
  • Grow Your Own
    • Canning
    • Gardening
    • Homesteading
    • Recipes
  • Shop
  • Essays
  • About
Deer-resistant full sun perennials in a vibrant garden scene.

The Best Full Sun Deer Resistant Perennials (That Actually Work)

Home » The Best Full Sun Deer Resistant Perennials (That Actually Work)

April 20, 2026
Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Why Deer Avoid Certain Plants
  • Top Full Sun Deer Resistant Perennials
  • Lavender
  • Catmint
  • Russian Sage
  • Yarrow
  • Salvia
  • Coneflower
  • Black-Eyed Susan
  • Agastache
  • Practical Tips for a Deer-Resistant Garden
  • Putting It All Together+−
    • Save this post to your Pinterest garden board!

Plant these once, enjoy them for years — and stop losing your garden to deer every single summer.

If you’ve ever walked out to your garden and found your beautiful flowers mowed down to nothing overnight, you know the kind of heartbreak that comes with living near deer. You planned, you planted, you watered — and a herd of ungrateful freeloaders ate your hard work for dinner.

The good news? You can absolutely have a gorgeous, full sun perennial garden that deer will mostly leave alone. The keyword is mostly, because if a deer is hungry enough, it will eat almost anything.

But the plants on this list are strongly deer-resistant, meaning deer actively dislike them because of their scent, texture, or taste. Plant enough of these, and the deer will find easier pickings elsewhere.

These are also all true perennials, which means they come back year after year. Plant them once, and they reward you for seasons to come.

Vibrant yellow and purple flowers thriving in full sun, deer-resistant perennials perfect for low-ma.
A lush garden scene featuring yellow and purple deer-resistant perennials under bright sunlight, ideal for full sun garden spaces.

Why Deer Avoid Certain Plants

Understanding why deer skip certain plants helps you make smarter choices. Deer rely heavily on smell, and they strongly dislike plants that are:

  • Highly aromatic — lavender, catmint, and salvias smell wonderful to us but overwhelming to deer
  • Fuzzy or rough-textured — deer avoid leaves that feel unpleasant in their mouths
  • Toxic or bitter — plants like foxglove and yarrow contain compounds deer instinctively avoid
  • Thorny or sticky — physical deterrents work just as well as chemical ones

This is why so many herbs and Mediterranean-origin plants top the deer-resistant list. Keep this in mind as you plan your beds — planting strongly aromatic plants around the edges of a bed can help protect less resistant plants in the center.

Top Full Sun Deer Resistant Perennials

All of these thrive in at least 6 hours of direct sun and come back reliably year after year. Most are also drought-tolerant once established — a double win for low-maintenance gardening.

lavendar low maintenance

Lavender

Lavandula angustifolia

The queen of deer-resistant gardening. The intense fragrance that we love is exactly what keeps deer away. Blooms late spring through summer. Extremely drought-tolerant once established.

Zones 5–8Drought hardyPurple blooms

low maintenance perennials

Catmint

Nepeta × faassenii

One of the most reliable deer-resistant perennials you can grow. Soft gray-green leaves and waves of blue-purple flowers from spring into fall. Cut it back after the first flush for a second bloom. If you have barn cats, this is a must-have.

Zones 4–8 Drought hardyBlue-purple

Beautiful purple lavender perennials thriving in full sun garden.
Vibrant lavender perennials add color and fragrance to full sun gardens with low maintenance care.

Russian Sage

Perovskia atriplicifolia

Tall, airy, and silvery — Russian sage brings a cloud of lavender-blue color from midsummer into fall. Deer hate the smell of the silver foliage. Nearly indestructible in well-drained soil.

Zones 5–9Very drought hardy Lavender-blue

Frugal tip: I’ve found the seeds for a lot of these perennials through our Library’s Free Seed program.

Beautiful lavender perennial flowers ideal for easy-care gardens and low maintenance landscaping.
Vibrant lavender perennial flowers perfect for low maintenance gardens, adding color and fragrance effortlessly.

Yarrow

Achillea millefolium

Flat-topped flower clusters in yellow, white, red, and pink. Yarrow’s feathery, aromatic foliage is strongly deer resistant. It spreads freely — perfect for filling space fast and cutting for dried arrangements.

Zones 3–9 Very drought hardy Multi-color

Easy-to-grow purple flowering perennials for low-maintenance gardens.
Beautiful purple perennial flowers thriving in a garden setting, perfect for low-maintenance landscaping.

Salvia

Salvia nemorosa

Perennial salvia (not the annual bedding kind) is a workhorse. Deer dislike its strong scent. ‘May Night’ and ‘Caradonna’ are especially reliable, with deep purple spikes that pollinators adore.

Zones 4–8 Drought tolerant Deep purple

Colorful pink coneflowers blooming in a garden pot outdoor setting.
Beauty of pink coneflowers in a large garden pot during golden hour.

Coneflower

Echinacea purpurea

Native, tough, and somewhat deer resistant due to its coarse, scratchy texture. Not as strongly resistant as aromatic plants, but rarely heavily browsed. Excellent for pollinators and birds love the seedheads.

Zones 3–9 Drought tolerant Pink-purple

Bright yellow Black-Eyed Susan flowers attract pollinators in vegetable gardens.
Vibrant Black-Eyed Susan flowers draw pollinators, enhancing vegetable garden productivity and biodiversity.

Black-Eyed Susan

Rudbeckia fulgida

A cheerful native wildflower with rough, hairy stems and leaves that deer dislike. Blooms prolifically from midsummer until frost. Naturalizes beautifully and self-seeds to fill in bare spots.

Zones 3–9 Drought-tolerant Golden yellow

The Best Full Sun Deer Resistant Perennials (That Actually Work)

Agastache

Agastache foeniculum

Also called hyssop, this mint-family member smells strongly of anise — irresistible to bees and butterflies, but deer won’t touch it. Spikes of orange, pink, or purple blooms from midsummer onward.

Zones 5–10, Very drought hardy, Multi-color

Practical Tips for a Deer-Resistant Garden

Choosing the right plants is step one, but how you design and maintain your garden matters too. These strategies will give you the best results:

  • Plant in masses, not singles — a large drift of lavender or catmint sends a much stronger scent signal than a lone plant tucked into a mixed border
  • Create an aromatic border — line the edges of your beds with strongly scented plants like lavender, catmint, or salvia to form a scent barrier around less resistant plants inside
  • Avoid fertilizing heavily — lush, nitrogen-rich growth is more appealing to deer, so go easy on the fertilizer with these plants (most prefer lean soil anyway)
  • Plant early in the season — well-established plants with stronger stems and scent are less tempting than soft new transplants
  • Protect new plantings — even deer-resistant plants can get nibbled when they’re young and haven’t developed their full defense yet; use temporary fencing for the first season if deer pressure is high
  • Don’t rely on repellent sprays alone — they wear off and need constant reapplication; resistant plants are a permanent, zero-cost solution

Frugal tip: Most of the plants on this list spread or self-seed freely. Start with just a few plants, then divide them in year two or three to multiply your planting for free. Yarrow, catmint, and black-eyed Susan are especially generous self-spreaders.

Deer-resistant full sun perennials in a vibrant garden scene.
A colorful garden featuring deer-resistant perennials thriving in full sun.

Putting It All Together

A full sun deer-resistant border doesn’t have to look sparse or utilitarian. Try pairing the silver foliage of Russian sage or lavender with the golden blooms of yarrow and black-eyed Susan for a classic, meadow-inspired look that peaks in late summer. Add catmint as an edging plant and salvia for vertical interest, and you’ve got a layered, multi-season bed that practically takes care of itself.

The best part? Once these perennials are established — usually in their second year — they need very little from you. Less water, no replanting, no fertilizer, and best of all, no heartbreak when you walk out in the morning.

Plant smart once, and let the deer move on to someone else’s garden.

Deer resistant lavender, yarrow, salvia, and parende perennials for sunny gardens.

Save this post to your Pinterest garden board!

Bookmark it now so you have the full plant list ready when it’s time to head to the nursery. And if you found this helpful, share it with a fellow gardener who’s losing the battle with deer.

Deer-resistant full sun perennials in a vibrant garden scene.
A colorful garden featuring deer-resistant perennials thriving in full sun.
Category: Garden Tips, Gardening
Previous Post:Two people installing a DIY backyard patio with wooden decking and lush garden surroundings.Small Backyard Patio Ideas That Won’t Cost You a Fortune
Next Post:Deer Resistant Landscaping Ideas Your Yard (and Wallet) Will LoveDeer-resistant landscaping ideas featuring lush shrubs and flowers for a beautiful, budget-friendly.

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sidebar

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Pinterest

About Us |  Copyright Inquiry | Privacy Policy | Contact Us

The Best Chicken Planner

Stay organized and learn how to give your flock the best care

Download Now
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Pinterest

Copyright © 2026 · The Frugal Farm Girl · All Rights Reserved · Privacy Policy