Dwarf European Viburnum
A Tidy Dwarf Viburnum for Low Hedges and Edging
Dwarf European Viburnum (Viburnum opulus 'Nanum') is a naturally compact, dense little shrub grown for its fine-textured, maple-like green foliage and neat, mounded form. Rarely flowering, it's valued instead as a low, formal-looking hedge or edging plant that needs little pruning to stay tidy. Tough, adaptable, and deer-resistant, it brings clean structure to foundations and borders in Edina, Maple Grove, and Woodbury, with reddish fall tints as a bonus.
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Botanical Name | Viburnum opulus 'Nanum' |
| Mature Size | 2–3 ft tall and wide (dwarf) |
| Hardiness Zone | Zone 3–8 (fully hardy across Minnesota) |
| Light | Full sun to part shade |
| Habit | Dense, mounded, fine-textured |
| Fall Color | Reddish tints |
| Soil | Adaptable; tolerates moist and average soils |
Landscape Uses
Use Dwarf European Viburnum as a low hedge, edging, or tidy filler in foundation beds and formal plantings. Its dense, fine texture takes light shearing well and provides reliable structure with minimal care.
Best Time to Plant
Plant in spring or early fall, when cooler weather and steady moisture help roots establish.
How to Plant
Dig a hole twice as wide as the root ball and just as deep. Set the crown level with the soil, backfill, water in well, and mulch 2–3 inches deep, keeping mulch off the stems.
Watering
First Year: Water deeply 2–3 times per week to establish the roots.
After Year One: Water during dry spells; it prefers average to moist soil.
Drip Irrigation: A drip line keeps the root zone evenly moist.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does it flower?
It rarely flowers; it's grown for its dense, fine-textured foliage and tidy form rather than bloom.
How big does it get?
It stays a compact 2–3 feet, ideal for low hedges and edging.
Is it hardy in Minnesota?
Yes, hardy to Zone 3 and reliable statewide.
Is it deer resistant?
Yes, viburnums are generally deer-resistant.
You May Also Like
Pair Dwarf European Viburnum with boxwood and other compact shrubs for tidy, low-care structure and edging.
How Many Dwarf European Viburnum Do I Need?
At a tidy 2–3 feet tall and wide, this is a classic low-hedge and edging plant. Space about 2 feet on center for a continuous, formal-looking line that knits together in 2–3 seasons.
| Edge / low hedge length | Plants needed (2 ft spacing) |
|---|---|
| 5 feet | 3 plants |
| 10 feet | 5 plants |
| 20 feet | 10 plants |
| 30 feet | 15 plants |
For a standalone filler in a foundation bed, use groups of 3 spaced 2½ feet apart.
Dwarf European Viburnum Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Fine-textured, maple-like leaves emerge fresh green, quickly rebuilding the dense mound. Flowers are rare — this one is all about foliage.
- Summer: A neat, dense green cushion that takes light shearing well and holds its formal shape with almost no attention.
- Fall: Foliage picks up reddish tints before dropping — a quiet but pleasant finish to the season.
- Winter: Bare but densely twiggy, the low mounded outline still reads as structure along a walk or foundation, hardy to zone 3 without protection.
At a Glance
✔ Deer-Resistant ✔ Shade-Tolerant
Plant It With
- Compact European Viburnum — the bigger 4–5 ft version, for stepping the hedge up in height behind it.
- Blue Muffin Viburnum — adds the spring flowers and blue berries this dwarf doesn't produce.
- Common Snowball Viburnum — a showy white-flowered cousin as a backdrop specimen.
- Compact American Cranberrybush Viburnum — a native mid-size viburnum with berries and wildlife value for the same bed.
Is Dwarf European Viburnum Right for Your Yard?
Choose it if you want a low, formal-looking hedge or bed edging that stays 2–3 feet on its own — in sun or part shade, average or moist soil, and deer country. It's one of the easiest tidy-structure plants you can grow in the Twin Cities. It's not a fit if you're after flowers, berries, or pollinator value: 'Nanum' rarely blooms, so pick Blue Muffin or the American cranberrybush types when wildlife interest matters.