The 38 Best Gifts for Gardeners, Because You Can Do Better Than a Planter

Practical-yet-niche tools, beautifully designed attire for mucking about outside, and things the gardener in your life wouldn't think to buy themselves. 
Digs Barebones and Vermont Glove gardening gloves.
Photo by Travis Rainey

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You might be looking for the best gifts for gardeners because in today’s world there are a lot more people who love to garden. Like many activities that don’t require leaving the house, gardening has seen a boom in popularity the past few years for reasons I don’t need to mention. I love to garden so much that I have tricked my workplace into letting me write about it regularly, even though this is a food website. If you have a loved one who happens to also be a dedicated gardener, chances are they spent all winter resting on the windowsill in somber repose, waiting for spring to come. For some of us, indoor plants simply aren't enough. All the more reason to celebrate this spring by giving them a gift that helps them get back out into the yard.

Here's the thing, though: If you yourself aren't the owner of a green thumb, there’s a good chance the most obvious gift ideas that come to mind won’t be what a gardener needs.  Your beloved plant lover probably wont be too enthused over a grow kit for an indoor herb garden, a tote that says "I <3 Succulents", or a glass terrarium.  You can do much better than that. 

I compiled this list of the best gifts for gardeners, including practical-yet-niche tools, beautifully designed attire for mucking about outside, and things they wouldn't think to buy themselves. If you don't know much about gardening, don't worry; put down the bird feeder (a.k.a. squirrel magnet) and I'll help you out. Read on for all the best gifts for gardeners.


Essential tools and equipment

Gardening apparel 

Practical goods and accessories 

Weather instruments

Books


Essential tools and equipment

An all-purpose wonder digger

I have written at length about the usefulness of a hori hori hand tool. It's a supercharged garden trowel that cuts, digs, saws, tills, and measures, replacing the need for a full arsenal of gardening tools. I'd argue that any luxe garden tool set with ergonomic handles and all the fixings pales in comparison to this simple do-it-all tool.

Photo of a Hori-Hori Weeding & Digging Knife by Nisaku.

Nisaku Hori-Hori

A sickle for precise weeding

Not only do I love how a sickle looks, but it's also excellent for uprooting weeds without damaging precious nearby plants.

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Weeding Sickle

An indoor composting kit

Not everybody has the space for a full-on composting heap, so a bokashi composting system, which can be kept indoors, is perfect for an urban gardener with a need for a compost bin.

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Bokashi Composting Kit

A not-annoying hose

Most hoses are frustrating and unwieldy and most gardeners just put up with them. Get the gardener in your life this one, which never kinks and doesn't hold shape memory. You may not understand or care what that means, but trust me, they will.

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Flexilla Garden Hose

An in-demand Japanese toolbox 

Any gardener will need a year-round storage container to keep all their trowels and spades dry and rust-free. Toyo tool boxes have a cult-following thanks to their charming and sturdy form factor that prioritizes organization.  Fill it with small tools to assemble a gardening gift set, if you want to go all out. 

Toyo Y-280 Steel Angle Tool Box

An elegant pair of snips 

Niwaki is the name in garden shears and pruners—the horticultural equivalent of a luxurious Japanese chef's knife. This pair of snips features a simple handle wound with rattan; it's a gorgeous tool for harvesting mint and basil from a thriving herb garden. 

Niwaki Rattan Handle Snips

A tried and tested watering can

My coworker and fellow gardener Emily Farris tested watering cans, and she chose this as the winner, saying that it addresses nearly every complaint one might have about a watering can. 

Image may contain: Tin, Can, Watering Can, Tool, Lawn Mower, and Shovel

XXXFlower 1.5-Gallon Lightweight Deluxe Outdoor Watering Can

A collapsible wheelbarrow

I didn't actually know these existed until I began making this gift guide. I feel like the absolute brilliance of this foldable garden cart is pretty self-explanatory. I will probably be buying one for myself.

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Wheeleasy Foldable Garden Cart

A kneeler

A nice foam cushion is never a bad gift idea for someone with a ton of planting in store this season. 

Large Knee Mat


Gardening apparel

A designated pair of garden clogs

Gardening shoes should be waterproof and easy to kneel in, and these gardening clogs by Hunter check both those boxes. They're also easy to slip on and off when you're going in and out of the house.

gardening clogs

Hunter Gardening Clogs

A really nice pair of gloves

It is incredibly easy to ruin more than one pair of cheap gardening gloves in a season. An avid gardener will appreciate a nice pair like these, which are made from durable goatskin. Product-test winning Vermont gloves cost a pretty penny, but they are worth the comfort and durability they offer. 

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Vermont Gloves

An iconic piece of workwear

This is a Cornish fisherman's smock, which has been a popular piece of utilitarian workwear for more than a century. It may be meant for the sea, but the sturdy sailcloth construction means it functions as a perfect gardening smock—one that will last a lifetime.

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Yarmouth Oilskin Classic Smock

A practical apron

A practical garden apron with plenty of pockets is ideal for a day toiling in the duff; gardeners can keep all of their tools on hand and keep their clothes free of dirt.

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The Floral Society Essential Workshop Apron & Garden Glove Gift Set

A heavy duty sun hat for long afternoons outside

Often sunscreen alone is inadequate protection for a long day spent outside under the sun. I know that my skin would certainly fry without proper coverage, which is why I always garden with a sun hat. This Solbari hat is great because it gives you the option to go full overkill, but has detachable parts for toned down—but still effective—UV protection. 

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Ultimate Sun Hat UPF50+

Canvas arm protectors for protection

Sometimes you can't avoid being arms-deep in a rose bush, and canvas arm protectors are the perfect tool to shield you from wayward thorn pricks. 

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Canvas Arm Protectors


Practical goods and accessories 

A quintessential tin of garden twine

Believe it or not, British Nutscene gardening twine is the OG gardening twine (patented in 1926). It's dyed green so it's “not-seen” when wrapped around the stem of a plant, hence the name “Nutscene”. That fact alone is worth the gift, in my opinion. 

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Nutscene Tin of Twine

A weather-proof gardening journal

This is the perfect gift for a gardener who likes to take meticulous records of seed packet purchase dates and seasonal weather predictions. A Rite in the Rain journal can hold up against dirt and water, keeping the written contents inside intact.

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Rite in the Rain Outdoor Journal

A handmade garden trug to fulfill bucolic fantasies

I, for one, have always wanted to saunter around an English garden, filling a harvest basket tucked in the bow of my arm with fragrant blossoms and fat vegetables. Any person with an equally powerful Beatrix Potter complex will feel the same way, and will appreciate this unique gift.

Wooden Garden Trug

A classic French pocket knife

I love Opinel pocket knives (I've made that clear in the past). I use mine all the time while gardening, whether I'm opening bags of soil or trimming the thorns off of cut roses. You can choose between the low-maintenance stainless steel version or the sharp-but-slightly-finicky carbon-steel version, depending on whether your gift recipient happens to be a knife enthusiast or not. 

Photo of a No. 8 Carbon Steel Folding Pocket Knife with Brown Beechwood Handle by Opinel.

Opinel No. 8 Pocket Knife

Some beautiful jars for homemade preserves

Weck jars are the stylish older siblings of your standard mason jars—and they're a bit on the pricey side. If you have a small-time preserver on your hands, they'll love showing off their jams in these pretty vessels.

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Weck Canning Jars 743

A practical hand-held whisk broom

Gardening always requires a bit of sweeping, and a handsome, handmade whisk broom makes is ideal for tidying up after some messy repotting, or for simply  dispatching wayward dirt that followed you inside. It also will look quite nice hanging in a mudroom or by the back door.

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Better Whisk Broom

A culty-for-a-reason sunscreen

This sunscreen is unlike anything I've ever used. It's sheer on the skin and blends in better than any other. It's expensive, I know, which is what makes it actually gift-worthy for someone who loves to spend all day outside.

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Unseen Sunscreen SPF 40

An ancient ingredient for preserving fragrant blooms

Orris root powder is a natural perfume fixative; it keeps the volatile fragrant oils on plants from evaporating. This is a great gift for anybody with a penchant for drying and preserving aromatic summer flowers for display on the dinner table.

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Orris Root Powder

A grow light for inside germination

Expert gardeners know to get a head start on gardening season, planting their seeds indoors well before the last frost of the year. This grow light, which blends both style and function, is ideal for early-season germination.

Photo of a Grow Light by Soltech Solutions.

Soltech Solutions Grow Light

A soil-testing kit for a good harvest 

Many beginners attempt to grow their own produce and become discouraged after a lackluster harvest year. Chances are their soil was not right. Proper nutrients are vital for robust fruits and veggies, and a soil test is the best way to diagnose what plants need.

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Soil Testing Kit

An ingenious zero-waste pot maker

This simple analog tool lets you make DIY stand-alone pots from recycled newspaper. Start seeds in those pots and the whole thing can go directly into the ground once the seedlings are big enough. Watch a tutorial of how it works here.

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Carrot Design Newspaper Pot Maker

Plant markers that won't fade on them

Organized gardeners use labels to keep track of what they plant: It's easy to forget exactly where you put those squash seeds. These slate markers won't rot over time, and the wax pen won't wash off when they get wet, meaning that these plant markers will always be legible and can be reused indefinitely.

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Slate Plant Labels

A vegetable brush for cleaning spuds

After plucking potatoes and carrots from the vegetable garden, your favorite gardener will need to give them a little scrub to remove dirt and debris. This vegetable brush has two kinds of bristles, so it can be used on both tough and delicate produce. 

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Vegetable Scrub Brush

A shaker peg rack for hanging tools

The Shakers knew how to make simple, utilitarian goods and their most iconic contribution to the world of design is the peg rack. Perfect for hanging garden tools, a simple wooden peg rack is both beautiful and functional.

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Solid Maple Shaker Peg Rack

Collapsible planter bags

These reusable bags are great for annual plantings. Unlike most of the planter bags out there, these ones—designed by Australian artist and horticulturalist Laura Brown— are worth showing off. Once the season is over, you can empty them and store them for next season.

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Laura Brown Planter Bag

A German berry harvester for P.Y.O. fantasies

This harvester makes picking delicate berries very easy and efficient. Use it for harvesting mulberries, blackberries, service berries, huckleberries…the list goes on!

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Huckleberry Comb Berry Harvester

An inviting home for pollinators 

This is a thoughtful gift, not only for your loved one, but for the pollinators that dwell in their garden—specifically the bumblebees. If you didn't know, those rotund, buzzing sprites don't live in hives like honey bees do. Bumblebees like to make solitary homes in wood piles and other detritus. To them, this wooden bee hive is like stumbling upon a completely vacant dream home ready for the taking. 

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Solitary Bee Hive


Charmingly analog weather instruments

An old-school Goethe barometer

Sure, modern science made these obsolete over a century ago, but they're still a fascinating tool for anybody who likes to keep an eye on the weather, i.e. most gardeners. A barometer is a simple and fascinating way to gauge relative air pressure by observing the water level rise and fall in the spout. When the water level is low, the weather's good; when the water rises high, a storm's a comin'!

Ambient Weather Liquid Barometer with Drip Cup

A climate meter to keep an eye on humidity 

This smart-yet-simple climate meter allows you to keep an eye both on temperature and humidity. It's especially great for monitoring climate conditions for finicky indoor houseplants. 

Climate Meter

A rain gauge for moisture monitoring 

Hardcore gardeners can optimize the overall health of their plants by keeping an eye on hyperlocal rainfall levels. This is rain gauge is easy on the eyes, as well. 

Outdoor 12-Inch Rain Gauge


Gardening books

For the budding propagator 

This book introduced me to propagating many years ago, and while it may not seem like a book for the advanced gardener, it is a surprising little vessel of insights for a range of propagation methods, some actually quite advanced. 

Cover of Don't Throw it, Grow it

Don't Throw It, Grow It!: 68 Windowsill Plants From Kitchen Scraps

A gardening book for everyone

Julia Watkins shares many brilliant insights on gardening in this book, where she presents an extensive array of practical gardening know-how in an approachable, easy-to-understand format. Advanced gardeners might find more meaning in the underlying principle of Watkins' book, that gardens should be messy.

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Gardening for Everyone, Julia Watkins

For the militant organic

Lee Reich is a well-established expert in organic gardening, and any of his books are worth paging through. Weedless Gardening provides is an approachable introduction to no-till gardening. 

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Weedless Gardening