Garden Landscaping 15 Creative Rock Garden Ideas to Consider for Your Own Yard From a complete rock garden to subtle gravel accents, pair landscaping with hardscaping for a unique look. By Blythe Copeland Blythe Copeland Blythe Copeland is a contributing writer with more than a decade of experience as a freelance lifestyle writer. Editorial Guidelines and Madeline Buiano Madeline Buiano Madeline Buiano is an associate editor at MarthaStewart.com, sharing her knowledge on a range of topics—from gardening and cleaning to home and pets. She has five years of writing and editing experience in the digital publishing industry. Editorial Guidelines Updated on April 26, 2023 Rock gardens are a beautiful and low-maintenance way to bring dimension to your landscape. Incorporating stone in your garden—whether small gravel, large boulders, smooth river rocks, or flat flagstone—allows you to add natural texture and visual interest to accent your flowers, trees, and shrubs. Rock gardens are also a great opportunity to highlight native plants, as these varieties can often live among or on rocks and thrive with little to no supplemental irrigation. What’s more, these stones can be used in places where grass won’t grow (or in lieu of turf altogether), providing a beautiful and sustainable alternative to more traditional landscaping. Are Picture-Perfect Grass Lawns on Their Way Out? Why Natural Is the New Beautiful Add Low Growing Plants Courtesy of Mt. Cuba Center Ground covers, like phlox, are a great choice in a rock garden, as they are usually drought-tolerant, relatively low maintenance, and can help choke out weeds. “Carpets of colorful Phlox subulata (moss phlox) brighten rock gardens in the spring, and the semi-evergreen foliage adds texture throughout the rest of the year,” says Vic Piatt, senior garden advisor at Mt. Cuba Center. “This plant thrives in rock gardens and slopes, environments similar to where it can be found in nature.” Use Large Boulders bubblea / GETTY IMAGES Don’t be afraid to incorporate large boulders in your landscape. “Large boulders are the perfect stand-alone design element for a rock garden,” says Piatt. “The shape, color, texture, and positioning of the boulders bring an element of intrigue.” Create a Water Feature Getty / Simon McGill Creating a water feature in your garden is made easy with larger rocks. A hilly outcropping on this property offers an ideal spot for a collection of boulders installed at different heights and surrounded by pink flowering shrubs, soft grass, and growing vines. The natural slope of the garden allows a small waterfall to run into a pond. Make a Zen Garden Getty / Tetra Images In a Japanese Zen garden, paved pathways and large trees border a central focal point, where oversized stones sit in a bed of smaller pebbles or sand raked into a rippled wave design. Add Steps Getty / AnnBaldwin In this tiered garden, flat stones form steps while gravel and smaller, smooth stones offer a visual contrast. On each layer, plant drought-tolerant varieties, like ornamental grasses and Mediterranean plants to complete the arid look. Add Rocks to a Hillside Courtesy of Mt. Cuba Center If you have a sloped landscape, a rock garden is the ultimate way to help control runoff. “The rock garden on a sloped landscape has the effect of holding the water in place a little longer, then more slowly disperses it into the landscape and ground,” says Piatt. Make a Raised Bed beekeepx / GETTY IMAGES Rocks are a great medium for raised beds, which are ideal for landscapes with poor soil quality or gardeners with mobility issues. “If the gardener has flat stones, they could create a dry-laid stone wall," says Piatt. "If the rocks are more dimensional, such as 1 to 1 1/2 feet tall and wide, they could be laid end-to-end in the desired shape of the bed. Mixing the two stone types is an opportunity to be creative.” Rebranding the Great American Lawn for the 21st Century Use Pebbles amite / Getty Images A rock garden is more than just large boulders and hardscape. Make a gravel garden with tiny pebbles for growing native plants, which improve biodiversity and require little water. Rather than being grown in soil, the plants are placed in washed gravel, which is commonly used to replace traditional turf lawns. Plant Between Rocks Galina Sandalova / GETTY IMAGES There are a handful of plant species that can grow between pockets of rocks. “First, make certain that the pocket has drainage, whether the rock itself is hollowed out or the pocket has been created by mortaring stones in place,” says Piatt. Some herbaceous selections (baptisia, aster, and phlox), as well as some woody plants can thrive between rocks. Make a Wall Stacked stones in organic shapes create a low, natural garden wall. Add interest to the landscape with trailing vines of delicate, bell-shaped flowers. The vision strikes the perfect balance between rustic and whimsical. Focus on Texture Werner Hilpert/Getty Images Feel free to take some liberties when it comes to the types of plants you grow in your rock garden. In this landscape, a variety of flowering shrubs in various colors and sizes are planted next to one another, which provides height and textural contrast. Use Different Materials Use a variety of different materials and shapes—from flat patio stones and abstract steps to a stacked stone wall and gravel bed—to create a unique rock garden that complements tall trees and low flowers. Line Your Driveway Anne Rhett Amp up your home’s curb appeal by taking notes from this paved driveway, which leads through a garden featuring neatly trimmed shrubs, soaring trees, and traditional brick bed borders. Create a Garden Path Peden + Munk Create a walkway in your backyard with precisely-cut square and rectangular stones set directly into the grass. A border of wild greenery, from flowers and trees to shrubs and bushes, gives this landscape an English garden-like feel that’s easily replicable. Welcome Pollinators loveallyson / GETTY IMAGES Pollinators are an essential part of any garden. Welcome wildlife, including bees and butterflies, to your rock garden with some pollinator-friendly native plants, like aster and pale purple coneflower. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit