Tree Seeds
Explore Tree Seeds by Category for Long-Term Landscape Growing
Browse tree seeds by major tree category, including conifer trees, deciduous trees, edible fruit and nut trees, evergreen leaf trees, hardwood trees, ornamental fruit trees, shade trees, and flowering trees. Select a category to see every tree included in that group, with each tree linked to its own page.
Tree Seed Finder
Choose Your Tree Seed Category
Type or select one of the main tree seed categories below. After choosing a category, the full linked list of trees in that category will appear under the search widget.
Tree Categories
Browse Tree Seeds by Main Category
These tree seed categories make the tree section easier to use. Start with the type of tree that matches your growing purpose.
Conifer Tree Seeds
Browse conifer tree seeds such as pines, firs, spruces, cedars, cypress, hemlock, juniper, larch, redwood, arborvitae, and other cone-bearing trees.
Browse Conifer Tree SeedsDeciduous Tree Seeds
Explore deciduous tree seeds for trees that drop their leaves seasonally, including many shade trees, flowering trees, hardwoods, fruit trees, and ornamental landscape trees.
Browse Deciduous Tree SeedsEdible Fruits-Nuts Tree Seeds
Find edible fruit and nut tree seeds for long-term food growing, orchard planning, edible landscapes, wildlife plantings, and homestead-style projects.
Browse Edible Fruit & Nut Tree SeedsEvergreen Leaves Tree Seeds
Browse broadleaf evergreen tree seeds and evergreen landscape trees that keep leaves through the year, adding structure, privacy, color, and winter interest.
Browse Evergreen Leaves Tree SeedsHardwood Tree Seeds
Explore hardwood tree seeds such as oak, maple, ash, beech, walnut, hickory, birch, elm, locust, and other trees valued for wood, shade, and landscape strength.
Browse Hardwood Tree SeedsOrnamental Fruit Tree Seeds
Find ornamental fruit tree seeds for decorative fruit, seasonal color, wildlife value, flowers, fall interest, and landscape beauty.
Browse Ornamental Fruit Tree SeedsShade Tree Seeds
Browse shade tree seeds for long-term canopy, yard cooling, landscape structure, street tree planning, parks, windbreaks, and large garden spaces.
Browse Shade Tree SeedsFlowering Tree Seeds
Explore flowering tree seeds for spring blooms, summer flowers, ornamental landscapes, pollinator value, garden focal points, and seasonal color.
Browse Flowering Tree SeedsTree Seed Planning
How to Choose Tree Seeds for Your Landscape
Choosing tree seeds is different from choosing vegetable, herb, or flower seeds. Trees are long-term plants, so the right choice depends on mature height, canopy width, root space, climate, soil, sunlight, growth rate, and the final purpose of the tree.
Some tree seeds are selected for shade, some for evergreen screening, some for ornamental flowers, and others for edible fruit or nuts. Starting with a tree category helps you avoid choosing trees that do not match the available space or the purpose of the planting.
Conifers and evergreen trees can add year-round structure. Deciduous trees can provide shade, fall color, flowers, fruit, and seasonal change. Hardwood trees are often valued for strength and canopy. Flowering and ornamental fruit trees are chosen for beauty, wildlife interest, and garden design.
Tree Seed Knowledge
Understand the Main Tree Seed Groups
Tree seeds are easier to browse when grouped by landscape use, growth habit, and long-term value.
Conifers
Conifer tree seeds include pine, fir, spruce, cedar, cypress, hemlock, juniper, larch, redwood, yew, and arborvitae.
Deciduous Trees
Deciduous tree seeds include trees that lose their leaves seasonally. Many maples, oaks, elms, birches, ashes, flowering trees, fruit trees, and shade trees belong in this broad category.
Edible Fruit and Nut Trees
Edible fruit and nut trees can support orchards, edible landscapes, homesteads, and wildlife plantings.
Evergreen Leaves
Evergreen leaf trees keep foliage through the year and are used for privacy, structure, screening, and winter interest.
Hardwood Trees
Hardwood tree seeds include broadleaf trees valued for strong wood, shade, habitat, and long-term landscape structure.
Shade Trees
Shade tree seeds are selected for canopy, cooling, landscape structure, and long-term outdoor comfort.
Growing Strategy
Match Tree Seeds to Climate, Space, and Long-Term Purpose
Start with mature size
A small seed can become a large tree. Consider final height, canopy width, root space, nearby buildings, power lines, sidewalks, and long-term maintenance.
Separate evergreen and deciduous goals
Evergreen trees provide year-round screening and structure. Deciduous trees can provide summer shade, fall color, flowers, fruit, nuts, and seasonal habitat value.
Understand seed dormancy
Many tree seeds need cold stratification, scarification, soaking, or warm-cold cycles. Tree seed germination can be slower than annual garden seeds.
Plan for patience
Tree growing is a long-term project. Some trees establish quickly, while others take years before showing strong growth, flowers, fruit, nuts, or full landscape value.
Seed Starting
Starting Tree Seeds: Stratification, Containers, and Time
Tree seed starting is often slower and more technical than annual seed starting. Many trees need seasonal cues before they germinate.
Often Need Cold Stratification
Many temperate tree seeds need a cold period before germination.
Often Started in Containers
Tree seeds are commonly started in pots, deep containers, seed trays, nursery beds, or protected outdoor areas.
Often Long-Term Projects
Oaks, pines, firs, spruces, maples, magnolias, fruit trees, nut trees, palms, and specialty trees require long-term planning.
Helpful Growing Notes
Tree Seed Tips for Better Planning
Tree seeds can be rewarding, but they require more patience than most garden seeds.
Research germination needs
Tree seeds may require cold stratification, scarification, soaking, warm stratification, or outdoor overwintering before germination.
Start more seeds than needed
Tree seed germination can be uneven. Starting extra seeds helps account for dormancy, nonviable seeds, and slower seedlings.
Use deep containers when needed
Oaks, walnuts, hickories, chestnuts, and other taproot-forming trees may benefit from deeper containers or careful early transplanting.
Protect young seedlings
Tree seedlings can be vulnerable to drought, heat, rodents, deer, rabbits, weeds, and foot traffic during the first stages of growth.
Choose the right planting site
Consider sunlight, drainage, soil type, mature spread, roots, overhead clearance, nearby structures, and long-term maintenance before planting.
Think in decades
Tree seed planting is a long-view project. The best tree choice is one that fits the space, climate, and purpose for many years.
Tree Seed FAQ
Common Questions About Tree Seeds
Use these answers as a practical starting point before browsing the tree seed categories.
What are the main tree seed categories?
The main Worldly Seeds tree categories are conifer, deciduous, edible fruits-nuts, evergreen leaves, hardwood, ornamental fruit, shade, and flowering.
Do tree seeds need cold stratification?
Many temperate tree seeds do need cold stratification or seasonal treatment before germination.
Can fruit trees be grown from seed?
Many fruit trees can be grown from seed, but seedlings may not produce fruit identical to the parent.
Should tree seeds be started indoors or outdoors?
Some tree seeds can be started indoors in containers, while others perform well in outdoor nursery beds or containers that experience natural seasonal temperature changes.
How should tree seeds be organized for a landscape plan?
A practical tree plan groups trees by mature size, evergreen or deciduous habit, root behavior, growth rate, wildlife value, shade value, edible use, ornamental interest, and climate suitability.