How to grow wattles: the right variety for your climate zone
There are around 1,000 species of wattle in Australia. They are among the easiest and most rewarding natives you can grow and require almost nothing from you once established.

The challenge is that wattles are short-lived by tree standards and some of the most popular options are actually weedy outside their natural range. This guide cuts through both problems by matching the right species to each Australian climate zone, covering the standout flowering performers and some underused alternatives worth knowing about.
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Before you plant: what every wattle gardener needs to know
Wattles are short-lived by design
Most wattles live between ten and twenty-five years depending on the species and conditions. This is not a flaw but an ecological strategy. In their natural environment they are pioneer plants and perform a multi-faceted role:
- Fast-growing colonisers that establish quickly after disturbance
- Fix nitrogen to improve the soil
- Provide early canopy cover for slower-growing understorey species coming up behind them

In your garden, use wattles as fast structure while longer-lived plants establish around them. Those longer-lived plants will ultimately be better for it, having grown up in the improved soil that the wattle leaves behind.
Phosphorus and fertiliser
Wattles are considerably more phosphorus-tolerant than banksias, grevilleas and hakeas and most species will not be harmed by moderate applications of a low-phosphorus native fertiliser. However, they do not need feeding in established garden conditions and are best left to grow on their own terms. A generous mulch layer is all the nutrition they require in most situations. Our guide to why standard fertiliser harms native plants has more detail on this.

Pruning after flowering
A light tip prune with sharp secateurs or loppers immediately after flowering each year is the single most effective way to extend the life of a wattle and keep it producing flowers. Cut back by no more than one third of the current season's growth and always leave green foliage below the cut. Wattles do not reliably regenerate from old bare wood, so the time to prune is while the plant is still young and healthy, not after it has become a collection of bare sticks.

The weed question: which wattles to avoid outside their natural range
Two widely sold wattles have become serious environmental weeds when planted outside their natural ranges. Cootamundra wattle (Acacia baileyana) is native to a small area around Cootamundra in southern NSW and is invasive in Victoria, South Australia, the ACT and large parts of NSW outside its range. Sydney golden wattle (Acacia longifolia) is similarly problematic in Victoria and South Australia. Both are beautiful plants and readily available in nurseries across the country, which makes the problem worse. Before buying either species, check whether it is considered invasive in your state or local government area.

Cootamundra wattle (Acacia baileyana) is native to a small area around Cootamundra in southern NSW and is invasive in Victoria, South Australia, the ACT and large parts of NSW outside its range.

Krzysztof Ziarnek, Kenraiz, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Sydney golden wattle (Acacia longifolia) is similarly problematic in Victoria and South Australia. Both are beautiful plants and both are readily available in nurseries across the country.
The wildlife value of wattles in your garden

| Wildlife | How wattles help |
|---|---|
| Honeyeaters and lorikeets | Wattle flowers produce nectar that sustains honeyeaters, eastern spinebills and lorikeets through late winter and early spring, when few other natives are flowering. Species with dense racemes — including Acacia fimbriata and Acacia rubida — are particularly productive. |
| Seed-eating birds | Wattle seeds are high in protein and fat. Finches, parrots, rosellas and cockatoos feed on seeds both on the plant and after they fall. The seed pods of many species persist on the plant for weeks, extending the feeding window. |
| Native bees and insects | Wattle pollen is a critical resource for native stingless bees, solitary bees, beetles and hoverflies. The mass-flowering habit of most species produces concentrated, accessible pollen over a short period that is highly efficient for pollinators. |
| Insectivorous birds | The insects attracted to wattle flowers and foliage in turn attract thornbills, fantails, wrens and other small insectivorous birds. Wattles with dense, twiggy canopies also provide nesting sites for these species. |
| Small mammals | Wattle thickets provide low shelter for small native mammals including bandicoots, antechinus and native rodents. Dense prostrate and spreading species are particularly valuable as refuge habitat in areas with cats and foxes. |
| Soil biology | Wattles fix atmospheric nitrogen through root nodule bacteria, increasing soil nitrogen availability for surrounding plants. When the plant dies naturally, the nutrient-enriched root zone provides a measurable boost to the soil ecology. |
Cool temperate and alpine
Silver wattle (Acacia dealbata)
Silver wattle produces masses of small, intensely fragrant golden pompom flowers that appear in dense racemes along the branches from mid-winter through early spring. The silver-grey bipinnate foliage gives the tree its common name.

It handles hard frosts, extended dry periods and poor soils with equal resilience. Prune lightly after flowering using long-handled loppers to prevent the tree from becoming too large for its position. Established specimens are very difficult to reduce without risk to the plant's structure, so starting the pruning habit early makes the difference.
Snowy River wattle (Acacia boormanii)
Snowy River wattle is an outstanding and underused wattle for cool temperate gardens and one of the best choices for Canberra, the ACT and southern highlands gardens where cold winters restrict options.

It produces bright yellow flower spikes along arching stems in late winter and spring, covering the plant so completely that the blue-grey phyllodes are barely visible. Compact enough for smaller gardens, it tolerates heavier soils than most wattles and handles severe frosts. Begin tip pruning in the first season with sharp secateurs and continue after every flowering.
Temperate
Golden wattle (Acacia pycnantha)
Golden wattle is Australia's national floral emblem and one of the most familiar plants in the Australian landscape. The fragrance of a plant in full spring bloom is one of the most distinctive scents in the southern Australian bush. It performs best in temperate climates across South Australia, Victoria and southern NSW and is exceptionally drought tolerant once established.

It reaches flowering size within two years of planting and is one of the most rewarding wattles to grow from a young plant. An annual post-flowering prune with loppers extends its life and prevents legginess. It is worth noting that in some parts of Victoria and SA outside its core range it has shown a tendency to spread, so check local guidelines before planting adjacent to remnant bushland.
River wattle (Acacia cognata)
River wattle offers something quite different from the classic wattle silhouette. Its narrow, weeping phyllodes and arching, pendulous branches give it an almost willow-like quality that sits beautifully in cottage-style and naturalistic garden settings.

Several compact cultivars are available including 'Limelight' and 'Lime Magik', which stay under a metre and work well in pots, containers or as low border plants. Use a hand fork to loosen the planting area and a hori-hori to set the plant to the correct depth, particularly in heavier soils where good drainage from the outset matters most.
Cool highland and semi-arid
Red-stemmed wattle (Acacia rubida)
Red-stemmed wattle earns its common name from the distinctive reddish colouring of its young stems. It is one of the more adaptable wattles, growing across a wide range of conditions from cool highland woodland in the ACT and Victorian alps through to rocky hillsides in NSW and QLD, and handling clay soils, alkaline conditions, moderate drought and severe frost.

Donald Hobern from Copenhagen, Denmark, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Plant using a hori-hori into well-drained soil and water in with a watering can deeply and slowly. It reshoots after fire and will sucker at the base, which can be managed with secateurs or left to form a multi-stemmed thicket. Tip prune after flowering each year to maintain density.
West Wyalong wattle (Acacia cardiophylla)
West Wyalong wattle is one of the best compact wattles for drier inland temperate and semi-arid gardens and is considerably underused given how well it performs. The small, heart-shaped phyllodes give it its botanical name and a fine, delicate texture that is genuinely ornamental year-round.

Melburnian, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
In winter and spring it produces masses of bright yellow flower heads on arching stems. It handles severe frosts, extended dry periods and the alkaline soils common across inland SA and NSW. Loosen the planting area well with a hand fork before planting to help roots establish quickly in sandy soils and apply a generous mulch layer to conserve moisture through the first summer. It also attracts a remarkable range of small birds throughout its flowering period.
Wattles and nitrogen fixation
All wattles are nitrogen-fixing plants, meaning they form symbiotic relationships with soil bacteria that convert atmospheric nitrogen into a form plants can use. This makes them genuinely useful companion plants in a native garden as they improve the soil chemistry for the plants around them. When a wattle reaches the end of its natural life and is removed, the soil it occupied is measurably richer than it was at planting.
Subtropical
Brisbane wattle (Acacia fimbriata)
Brisbane wattle is the floral emblem of Brisbane and one of the most reliable and generous-flowering wattles for subtropical gardens. It produces masses of bright golden yellow flower heads on arching branches from late winter through spring, with soft, feathery foliage.

Ethel Aardvark, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
It is fast-growing, considerably more humidity-tolerant than most wattles and responds extremely well to pruning, making it suitable as a screening plant. Use secateurs for tip shaping or loppers for harder post-flowering cuts. See our guide to the best native plants for Brisbane gardens for companion species.
Mount Morgan wattle (Acacia podalyriifolia)
Mount Morgan wattle is one of the most ornamentally striking wattles available to subtropical gardeners. Its rounded, silver-grey phyllodes have a soft, almost felted texture and in late autumn and through winter it produces generous clusters of bright yellow flowers that stand out brilliantly against the foliage.

The combination of silvery leaves and golden flowers over a long cool-season flowering period makes it one of the most useful winter garden plants in subtropical climates. Plant using a trowel into well-drained soil and water in well. It establishes quickly and handles the dry periods that interrupt subtropical winters without difficulty.
Mediterranean and south-west WA
Prickly moses (Acacia pulchella)
Prickly moses is a small, spine-tipped shrub native to the jarrah and marri forests of the south-west WA sandplain and one of the most generously flowering small wattles available to Perth and Adelaide gardeners. From late winter through spring it covers itself so completely in bright yellow globular flower heads that the foliage becomes effectively invisible.

h3 six, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
It is a valuable early-season nectar source, attracting insects and small birds in numbers. Collect spent pods before they open and store seed dry — scarify briefly with sandpaper or soak in hot water before sowing — and you will have replacement plants established before the parent declines. A pair of garden snips is useful for a light tip prune after flowering to keep the plant dense through its short life.
Mudgee wattle (Acacia spectabilis)
Mudgee wattle is a genuinely spectacular flowering shrub with large, globular golden yellow flower heads produced in generous clusters along arching branches from late winter through spring. The silvery bipinnate foliage is attractive in its own right throughout the year.

Melburnian, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
It performs best in low-nutrient, well-drained soils in full sun and is highly drought tolerant once established. Use a hori-hori to open the planting hole and set the plant at the correct depth. Apply a coarse mulch layer across the root zone immediately after planting. The floral display is among the most impressive of any wattle species in cultivation and it has proven adaptable to Mediterranean-climate gardens well beyond its natural range.
Tropical
Elephant ear wattle (Acacia dunnii)
Elephant ear wattle takes its common name from the large, broadly oval phyllodes that can reach fifteen centimetres in length, giving the plant an architectural quality. In Darwin and northern WA gardens it flowers through the dry season and the pale to bright yellow flower heads are a welcome sight against the drying landscape.

MargaretRDonald, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
It grows in a range of well-drained sandy and loamy soils. Use a planting spade in harder dry-season soils and water in deeply after planting. It is rarely seen in cultivation in southern gardens and is best left to tropical gardeners who can give it the dry summer it needs.
Currawang (Acacia doratoxylon)
Currawang is one of the most widely adaptable wattles in the country, growing naturally across a broad range of conditions from coastal subtropical Queensland through inland NSW and into semi-arid South Australia.

Stitchingbushwalker, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
It produces pale yellow flower heads in late winter and spring on a small, spreading tree. It is notably tolerant of clay soils, drought, moderate frost and the alkaline conditions common across much of inland Australia. In clay positions, use a wide-pronged garden fork to break the planting area thoroughly before planting and ensure the hole drains freely before backfilling.
How to establish any wattle successfully
Autumn planting gives wattles the best possible start. The cooler soil temperatures reduce establishment stress, natural rainfall reduces your watering burden and the plant has an entire cool season to push its root system deep into the soil before facing its first summer. Water deeply once or twice a week for the first eight to ten weeks, then taper off as the plant shows new growth and becomes self-sufficient.

Apply a generous layer of coarse wood chip mulch around the base, keeping it well clear of the stem. Begin tip pruning in the first season, before the plant has a chance to become woody at the base, and continue the habit every year after flowering. Wattles that are pruned consistently from a young age are consistently better plants: denser, longer-lived and more floriferous than those left to their own devices.

For more on the establishment process, see our guide to why native plants fail in the first year.
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