Dakota Sunspot Potentilla
A Tough Little Shrub With Deep Golden Summer Flowers
Dakota Sunspot Potentilla (Potentilla fruticosa 'Dakota Sunspot') glows with rich, deep golden-yellow flowers from early summer until frost on a compact, mounded shrub with fine green foliage. Bred for the northern plains, it's extremely cold-hardy, drought-tolerant, and deer-resistant, thriving in heat, poor soil, and tough sites while feeding bees. A bright, dependable, long-blooming choice for sunny borders and boulevards in Edina, Woodbury, and Maple Grove.
Dakota Sunspot Potentilla Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Botanical Name | Potentilla fruticosa 'Dakota Sunspot' |
| Mature Size | 2–3 ft. tall, 2–3 ft. wide |
| Hardiness Zone | 2–7 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a — fully hardy) |
| Light | Full sun to light part shade |
| Bloom Time | Early summer until frost |
| Flower Color | Deep golden-yellow |
| Soil | Adaptable — tolerates clay, poor soil, and dry sites |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable well below -40°F — exceptionally hardy |
| Deer Resistance | Rarely browsed by deer |
Landscape Uses in Minnesota
Long-blooming foundation shrub: Its compact size and months-long bloom suit foundations, low hedges, and border fronts. Space 2–3 feet apart.
Tough sites and pollinators: Thrives in hot, dry, lean spots and feeds bees all summer. Pair with catmint, coneflower, and grasses.
Best Time to Plant in Minnesota
Plant in spring (late April–May) or early fall (late August–mid September). Very adaptable; water through establishment.
How to Plant Dakota Sunspot Potentilla
Dig a hole twice the root ball width at the same depth, mixing in compost. Set the crown level, backfill, water well, and mulch 2–3 inches deep. Space 2–3 feet apart.
Watering Dakota Sunspot Potentilla
First year: Water deeply every 2–3 days at first, then weekly. Stop 2–3 weeks before the ground freezes.
After year one: Very drought-tolerant — water only during extended dry spells. Shear lightly in spring to keep it dense.
Q: How long does it bloom?
From early summer until frost — one of the longest-flowering shrubs available.
Q: Will it survive a Minnesota winter?
Easily — bred for the northern plains and reliable to zone 2.
Q: Is it deer-resistant?
Yes — deer rarely browse potentilla.
Q: How do I keep it looking good?
A light spring shear keeps it dense and blooming well.
You May Also Like
Goldfinger Potentilla (Potentilla fruticosa): A large-flowered bright-yellow potentilla.
Catmint (Nepeta): A deer-resistant blue partner for sunny spots.
Coneflower (Echinacea): A native pollinator companion.
How Many Dakota Sunspot Potentilla Do I Need?
For a low hedge or border front, space Dakota Sunspot about 2.5 feet apart — it matures just 2–3 feet wide, so plants knit together into a continuous golden ribbon:
| Run Length | Plants Needed (2.5 ft spacing) |
|---|---|
| 5 ft | 2 |
| 10 ft | 4 |
| 20 ft | 8 |
| 30 ft | 12 |
As an accent, plant in groups of 3–5 spaced 2.5 feet apart at a border front or along a sunny walkway.
Dakota Sunspot Potentilla Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Fine green foliage leafs out; give it a light shear now to keep the mound dense before flower buds set.
- Summer: Deep golden-yellow flowers open in early summer and just keep coming, drawing bees nonstop through the hottest, driest weeks.
- Fall: Bloom continues right up to frost — one of the last shrubs in the yard still flowering in October.
- Winter: Drops its leaves to a fine-twigged tan mound; hardy well below -40°F, so no protection is ever needed.
At a Glance
✔ Pollinator-Friendly ✔ Deer-Resistant ✔ Drought-Tolerant
Plant It With
- Goldfinger Potentilla — its larger, brighter-yellow cousin for a mixed potentilla border.
- Dakota Goldcharm Spirea — another tough northern-plains dwarf with golden foliage and pink blooms.
- Blue Star Juniper — steel-blue evergreen texture that makes the golden flowers pop.
- Karl Foerster Feather Reed Grass — vertical wheat-colored plumes behind the low golden mound.
Is Dakota Sunspot Potentilla Right for Your Yard?
Ideal for full-sun spots with almost any soil — clay, sand, lean boulevard strips, hot driveway edges — where deer pressure is high and watering is an afterthought. Not a fit if your site is mostly shaded (bloom drops off sharply) or if you want winter presence; it's a bare twiggy mound from November to April.