Royal Raindrops Crabapple
The Magenta Crabapple With One-of-a-Kind Cut-Leaf Foliage
Royal Raindrops Crabapple (Malus 'JFS-KW5') is one of the most distinctive flowering trees you can plant — brilliant magenta-pink blossoms blanket the branches in mid-spring, then give way to deeply lobed, cut-leaf purple foliage unlike any other crabapple on the market. The lacy leaves hold their rich color all summer and finish bronze-purple in fall, while tiny dark-red fruit feeds the birds. Disease-resistant and hardy to zone 4, it stays clean and striking with little fuss. Whether you're planting a bold specimen in Edina, a colorful boulevard tree in St. Paul, or a magenta showpiece in Woodbury, Royal Raindrops turns heads in every season.
Royal Raindrops Crabapple Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
| Scientific Name | Malus 'JFS-KW5' (Royal Raindrops) |
| Common Names | Royal Raindrops Crabapple, Cutleaf Flowering Crabapple |
| Mature Height | About 20 feet |
| Mature Width | About 15 feet — upright spreading |
| Growth Rate | Moderate |
| Sun | Full sun (6+ hours) — needed for the richest foliage color and best bloom |
| Water | Moderate. Tolerant of dry spells once established; appreciates consistent moisture while young. |
| USDA Zones | 4–8 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a) — hardy across the metro |
| Soil | Highly adaptable. Tolerates Minnesota clay-loam, urban soil, and road salt. |
| Flowers | Brilliant magenta-pink single flowers in mid-spring |
| Fruit | Tiny dark-red persistent fruit — ornamental and good for birds |
| Foliage | Deciduous — deeply lobed cut-leaf purple foliage all summer, bronze-purple in fall |
| Disease Resistance | Excellent — resists apple scab and other common crabapple diseases |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to -30°F once established |
| Deer Resistance | Low to moderate — protect young trees in high-pressure yards |
Royal Raindrops Crabapple Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Bold Magenta Flowering Specimen
The intense magenta-pink spring bloom is among the showiest of any crabapple, making Royal Raindrops a knockout focal point on a front lawn or by an entry in Edina or Plymouth. Its upright-spreading form fills the role of a mid-size ornamental tree.
Unique Cut-Leaf Purple Foliage
What truly sets it apart is the deeply lobed, lacy purple foliage — finer-textured than any other purple crab — that holds its color through summer for season-long contrast against green lawns and lighter plantings.
Tough Tree, Bird Food, and Apple Pollinator
Disease-resistant and salt-tolerant, it performs well on boulevards; the tiny dark-red fruit feeds birds into winter; and as a flowering crab it makes an excellent pollination partner for eating apples like Honeycrisp and Haralson.
Best Time to Plant Royal Raindrops Crabapple in Minnesota
Crabapples are deciduous, so you have two good planting windows in the Twin Cities:
Spring (late April–May), once the ground has thawed, is excellent — the tree gets the full growing season to establish before its first winter.
Fall (September–mid-October) also works well. Plant at least six weeks before the ground freezes so roots can settle in. Avoid mid-summer planting when heat stress is highest, and never plant into frozen ground.
How to Plant Royal Raindrops Crabapple
- Dig wide, not deep — the hole should be 2–3 times the root ball width but only as deep as the ball itself. In heavy clay, dig even wider.
- Check drainage — if water pools in the hole, break through clay hardpan or mound-plant slightly to keep roots out of standing water.
- Backfill with the native soil mixed with 20–30% compost. Don't create a pure-compost "container" in clay.
- Set the tree so the top of the root ball sits at or just above grade. Allow room for the 15 foot mature spread.
- Build a 3–4 inch water basin around the root zone to direct water to the roots; flatten it before winter.
- Mulch with 2–3 inches of shredded bark or wood chips, kept 2 inches from the trunk, and wrap the young trunk to deter rabbits and deer.
Watering Royal Raindrops Crabapple in Minnesota
First Year Watering Schedule
Weeks 1–2: water every 1–2 days, deep and slow. Month 1–2: every 3–4 days. Month 3 through fall: every 5–7 days during active growth, less when rainfall is adequate. Stop watering 2–3 weeks before the ground freezes in late October so the tree can harden off for winter.
After Year One
Established Royal Raindrops Crabapple is fairly tough and drought-tolerant, needing supplemental water mainly during extended dry spells (2+ weeks with no rain). Water deeply to 6–8 inches every 7–14 days during drought, and let natural rainfall do most of the work.
Will Royal Raindrops Crabapple survive a Minnesota winter? Yes — it's hardy to about -30°F and well adapted to the Twin Cities.
What makes the foliage unique? Royal Raindrops has deeply lobed, cut-leaf purple foliage — far lacier and finer-textured than any other purple-leaf crabapple — giving it a distinctive look all season.
Does it resist disease? Yes — it has excellent resistance to apple scab and other crabapple diseases, staying clean through Minnesota's humid summers with little or no spraying.
Can it pollinate my apple tree? Yes — like other flowering crabs, it's an excellent pollinator for eating apples that bloom at the same time, such as Honeycrisp and Haralson.
You May Also Like
- Prairiefire Crabapple — a disease-resistant crab with deep pink-red flowers and dark fruit.
- Ruby Dayze Crabapple — a ruby-pink crab with bronze-purple foliage and dark-red fruit.
- Velvet Pillar Crabapple — a narrow columnar purple-leaf crab for tight spaces.
- Adirondack Crabapple — an upright, exceptionally disease-resistant crab with orange-red fruit.
How Many Royal Raindrops Crabapples Do I Need?
Royal Raindrops is a specimen tree — one delivers the show. Give a single tree about 15–16 feet of clear width so the upright-spreading crown develops evenly. For a staggered ornamental row along a long driveway or property line, space trees 14–16 feet on center; for an informal group of 3 on a larger lawn, set them 13–15 feet apart so the magenta canopies just touch at maturity.
Royal Raindrops Crabapple Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Brilliant magenta-pink single flowers smother the branches in mid-May — one of the most intense bloom displays of any crabapple — buzzing with bees.
- Summer: The signature deeply lobed, cut-leaf purple foliage holds rich, lacy color all season without fading to muddy green like older purple crabs.
- Fall: Leaves shift to glowing bronze-purple while tiny dark-red fruit colors up along the stems.
- Winter: Persistent small fruit dots the upright-spreading frame, feeding finches and waxwings against the snow.
At a Glance
✔ Pollinator-Friendly ✔ Salt-Tolerant ✔ Drought-Tolerant ✔ Four-Season Interest
Plant It With
- Prairiefire Crabapple — deep pink-red bloom a shade darker than Royal Raindrops for a layered crab planting.
- Ruby Dayze Crabapple — ruby-pink flowers and bronze-purple foliage that echo the same color family.
- Velvet Pillar Crabapple — carries the purple-leaf look into narrow side yards and tight corners.
- Adirondack Crabapple — white bloom and orange-red fruit for crisp contrast against the purple foliage.
Is Royal Raindrops Crabapple Right for Your Yard?
Royal Raindrops wants full sun (6+ hours) — that's what keeps the cut-leaf foliage richly purple — and adapts to nearly any Minnesota soil, including clay-loam and salted boulevard strips, in a 15-foot footprint. Excellent disease resistance means no spraying. Protect young trunks from rabbits and deer. It's not a fit for shady yards (the foliage goes greenish and bloom thins) or for anyone wanting a fruitless patio tree — though the tiny persistent fruit is tidy, it's still there.