Here’s an exclusive list of the Best Vines for Containers that you can grow in the smallest of spaces. Adorn your patio, balcony, rooftop or backyard garden with these today! Growing these climbing plants in pots will also save you from controlling their invasiveness.

Check out some cool Indoor Vines & Climbers here

Best Vines for Containers

1. English Ivy

Botanical Name: Hedera Helix

USDA Zones: 4-10

English ivy is one of the best climbers for containers in the shade. Its ability to adapt to all types of conditions makes it an excellent choice for beginners. You can learn how to grow English ivy indoors in this article!

Note: All parts of English ivy are toxic if ingested.

Discover the best English ivy varieties here

2. Morning Glory

Botanical Name: Ipomoea purpurea

USDA Zones: 3-11 (Perennial in warmer zones, but can be grown as an annual in all climates)

Morning glories are a good option and one of the best creepers or vines for containers. This old-fashioned plant is easy to grow and can even survive in a standard 12 inches pot.

Check out the names of the best morning glory varieties here

3. Clematis

Botanical Name: Clematis

USDA Zones: 4-9

Clematis is the perfect plant to add vertical height and interest to any container garden. Fertilize this plant regularly and make sure to always water it thoroughly and deeply. Check out some of the best clematis varieties here!

Learn how to grow clematis in pots here

4. Virginia Creeper

Botanical Name: Parthenocissus quinquefolia

Virginia Creeper’s foliage turns into a beautiful crimson red in the autumn. You can also grow it in a pot, even on a balcony. It improves privacy too!

These are the best red foliage plants

5. Climbing Hydrangea

Botanical Name: Hydrangea anomala petiolaris

Climbing hydrangea is a great option if you live in the USDA Zones 4-9. It is shade tolerant and can be grown in partially shaded spots.

6. Trumpet Vine

Botanical Name: Campsis radicans

This fast-growing vine is considered a weed in some parts due to its invasiveness. Trumpet vine is more suitable for warm temperate zones, but it can easily acclimatize and grow in cooler regions.

7. Bougainvillea

Botanical Name: Bougainvillea

USDA Zones: 9-11

Bougainvillea is not a vine but a climbing shrub. You can also grow it as an annual to give a tropical touch to your container garden. It grows best in full sun in medium to large pots.

See the best drought tolerant plants here

8. Honeysuckle

Botanical Name: Lonicera

USDA Zones: 5-9

Most of the honeysuckle varieties are evergreen in warmer climates. When growing honeysuckle in pots, place the plant in full sun and do regular watering.

9. Wisteria

Botanical Name: Wisteria

Wisteria is one of the most popular vines and it grows best in a moderately cool climate. By providing solid support to the wisteria vine and some space you can grow it in a large container.

10. Common Jasmine

Botanical Name: Jasminum officinale

USDA Zones: 7-11

It is easy to grow in containers and requires well-draining soil and warmth to thrive. This most fragrant flower usually blooms in summer in cool climates, but jasmine flowers for almost all the year in warm, frost-free climates.

11. Confederate Jasmine

Botanical Name: Trachelospermum jasminoides

USDA Zones: 8-10

Similar to other jasmines, it also likes a warm climate and exposure to the sun. The beautiful star-shaped flowers appear in clusters.

12. Climbing Rose

Botanical Name: Rosa

USDA Zones: 5-11

Climbing roses bloom prolifically and many varieties have a pleasant rosy scent too. Prune the plant regularly to keep it looking attractive.

13. Mandevilla

Botanical Name: Mandevilla spp.

USDA Zones: 10-11

Its funnel-shaped flowers appear all summer. It requires a warm climate to thrive, but you can still grow it as an annual in cooler zones.

14. Cup and Saucer Vine

Botanical Name: Cobaea scandens

Cup and saucer vine is a fast-growing flowering plant that is native to Mexico. It blooms prolifically but to do this the plant needs an optimal bright location.

15. Passion Flower

Botanical Name: Passiflora

If you prefer an exotic flair and extraordinary flowers, the passionflower is the right choice for you. It is important that you provide it sufficient sun.

16. Black-Eyed Susan Vine

Botanical Name: Thunbergia alata

It is a perennial vine hardy in frost free regions that requires a sunny place and a trellis to climb on. Black-eyed Susan is ideal if you want colorful flowers and privacy in your container garden.

17. Dutchman’s Pipe

Botanical Name: Aristolochia durior

If you are looking for an unusual plant for your container garden, plant the Dutchman’s pipe. The heart-shaped foliage also provides interest apart from flowers.

18. Butterfly Pea

Botanical Name: Clitoria ternatea

Butterfly pea is a tropical vine and grows best in USDA Zones 10 and 11. In a cold temperate zone, grow this perennial as an annual.

19. Moonflower

Botanical Name: Ipomoea alba

USDA Zones: 10-12

Moonflower is a fantastic night-blooming plant with large trumpet-shaped fragrant flowers. Place the pot near your patio or bedroom window to enjoy its fragrance.

20. Snapdragon Vine

Botanical Name: Maurandya scandens

USDA Zones: 9-10

You can also use this vine in hanging baskets or as a groundcover. This is more of a warm climate plant and is often grown as an annual in temperate zones.

21. Canary Creeper

Botanical Name: Tropaeolum peregrinum

The canary creeper has a long blooming period from summer to fall and even more in warm subtropical regions where it is perennial (USDA Zone 9 and higher).

22. Sweet Pea

Botanical Name: Lathyrus odoratus

USDA Zones: 3-8

Grow sweet peas in warm zones in fall and winter. In temperate zones, plant this fragrant vine in spring or summer. When growing in containers, choose bush-type varieties.

23. Sweet Autumn Clematis

Botanical Name: Clematis terniflora

USDA Zones: 4-11

Sweet autumn clematis vine forms masses of amazingly fragrant flowers from late summer to fall. You can grow this vine in both the cold and warm climates (USDA Zones 4-11) as an annual or perennial.

24. Snail Vine

Botanical Name: Cochliasanthus caracalla

This beautiful tropical vine has rare snail-like fragrant flowers that are white in the beginning and later unfurl to lavender-pink.

25. Cardinal Climber

Botanical Name: Ipomoea × multifida

USDA Zones: 10-12 (Can be grown as annual in cold climates)

This beautiful annual vine blooms during the day and closes in the evening in mid-summer. It offers cardinal-red flowers and fern-like foliage.

26. Common Grape Vine

Botanical Name: Vitis vinifera

USDA Zones: 6-11

Native to Southwest Asia, it offers harvestable delicious fruits that can be consumed fresh, dried into raisins, or pressed into wine. Select a sunny location and use well-draining soil.

27. Boston Ivy

Botanical Name: Parthenocissus tricuspidata

USDA Zones: 4-8

This easy-to-grow climbing vine looks stunning with its colorful foliage. It thrives well in full sun to partial shade in dry to medium, well-draining soil.

28. Mexican Flame Vine

Botanical Name: Pseudogynoxys chenopodioides

USDA Zones: 9a-11b

This fast-growing annual vine flowers vigorously and produces daisy-like blooms. Keep the pot in full sun and well-hydrated.

29. Purple Bell Vine

Botanical Name: Rhodochiton atrosanguineus

This beautiful vine offers purple, dangling, narrow-shaped blooms in your container garden on thread-like delicate stems. The heart-shaped green leaves enhance its overall beauty.

30. Nepal Ivy

Botanical Name: Hedera nepalensis

USDA Zones: 7-10

Nepal ivy is a woody, evergreen, trailing, perennial vine. It shows off lacy gray-green, heart-shaped leaves in deep shade to full sun.

31. Cypress Vine

Botanical Name: Ipomoea quamoclit

USDA Zones: 11-12

This flowering vine boasts small, dainty, papery, star-shaped blossoms in red, pink, or white shades and feathery fern-like leaves. Grow it under full sun in well-draining soil.

32. Sky Blue Cluster Vine

Botanical Name: Jacquemontia pentanthos

Native to Florida, the sky blue cluster vine is an evergreen perennial. You can plant this climber in partial shade to full sun. It displays green foliage and funnel-shaped sky-blue flowers.

33. Bluebell Creeper

Botanical Name: Billardiera heterophylla

Grow this semi-hardy, climbing, evergreen vine in a lightly sheltered location in well-draining, humus-rich soil. This vine flowers in spring through summer.

34. Pandora Vine

Botanical Name: Pandorea jasminoides

This fast-growing vine offers tubular pink-white blooms in spring and summer. Grow it in full sun near a patio or porch in containers.

35. Tropical Bleeding Heart Vine

Botanical Name: Clerodendrum thomsoniae

Tropical Bleeding Heart Vine is also popular as a bleeding glory bower, bag flower, and glory bower. It shows off blooms like a drop of red blood emitting from the heart-shaped calyx. You can also grow it as an annual in colder regions.

  • Lynne
  • June 13, 2016 At 5:16 am
  • Some lovely suggestions there. I am a huge fan of the scented snail vine for around patios, and also climbing rose Zephrine Droughin which is the only true thornless rose and has the added bonus of being very fragrant.
  • There are a few (morning glory and cup and saucer vine and certain varieties of clematis) that are banned in our country of New Zealand as our climate is too temperate to cause die-back and so they seed too freely and smother our native forests.
  • Reply
  • DORLIS GROTE
  • July 10, 2016 At 7:51 pm
  • I have 4 cats and wonder if any of these vines are toxic to cats and dogs and children.
  • Reply
  • Sky
  • July 14, 2019 At 8:46 pm
  • Morning Glory is poisonous for cats.
  • Reply
  • Sara
  • May 14, 2021 At 9:26 am
  • Black eyed Susan, toxic to catd
  • Reply
  • خرید گل
  • September 27, 2016 At 3:22 pm
  • i love hydrangea
  • Reply
  • Lucy rios
  • January 22, 2017 At 2:35 am
  • I live in Daly City ca. which is nr, san Francisco a. what is the best climbing vail to grow (near the beach)in container Lucy Rios
  • Reply
  • Sammi
  • March 17, 2017 At 4:42 pm
  • Your area will love sweet pea or passion flowers. Happy growing!!
  • Reply
  • Queenie
  • March 20, 2017 At 10:57 am
  • Watch out for the Virginia Creeper. It affects somed people like Poison Ivy.
  • Reply
  • Sharmishtha Basu
  • May 14, 2017 At 7:46 am
  • Can you suggest how to make your vine grow around a basket? My plant is in a pot, I live in rented house and don’t want to leave it here in case.. Its honeysuckle I think, we call it madhabilata. Please tell me the material best for the basket, plastic or metal or bamboo and caring for the plant after its wrapped around the basket. Thanks a lot for your time.
  • Reply
  • Rosario
  • July 16, 2017 At 9:42 pm
  • That is a great idea. How can be
  • Keeped in winte?
  • Reply
  • Alma Hernandez
  • September 19, 2018 At 8:12 am
  • You can also use these climbing plants as a decoration to make your house beautiful.
  • Reply
  • Veena Bhatia
  • September 27, 2018 At 6:06 am
  • Gud article but from where we can buy these plants at reasonable prices
  • Reply
  • Mel
  • October 25, 2018 At 1:04 pm
  • The clematis are so beautiful! I would love to grow some of them in a pot with something purple. It’s pretty cold where we live, so I guess it could be an indoor plant in winter.
  • Reply
  • Angel
  • April 13, 2021 At 10:09 pm
  • WARNING!!!! INVASIVE PLANTS listed here should ALWAYS be managed in a pot. The “trumpet vine” and the “wisteria” for starters. YES some are poisonous to animals. PLEASE do your research before planting weather it be in pots or in your yard
  • Reply
  • Brandy
  • April 20, 2021 At 7:34 pm
  • vine. They may even be sold as the same plant in some garden centers. Dipladenia plants are slightly more shrubby in appearance, with smaller leaves that are a deep glossy green. Both plants are grown the same way and can be used for similar purposes in containers.
  • Reply
  • Debra Thornington
  • May 9, 2021 At 9:35 pm
  • How wide / deep should cedar box be built to accommodate Virginia Creeper to successfully overwinter? (Box would be 38 – 40″ long). Thank you.
  • Reply
  • Dotti Timkey
  • May 16, 2021 At 8:01 pm
  • Where can you find Dutchman’s pipe? Or how to you grow a cutting from a plant? I love it but cannot find it in any of the garden stores.
  • Reply
  • Mary E kongable
  • August 8, 2021 At 8:33 pm
  • I had a small vine that I grew in a container with a heart shaped support for it to vine around. I had 1 pink and a red one. I can’t think of the name of it and can’t find it in a catalog. Can anyone tell me what it was?
  • Reply
  • elimama
  • January 1, 2022 At 11:49 am
  • great i think dutch rose is more beautiful flower that i knoww
  • Reply
  • Thisni Caza
  • March 15, 2022 At 11:24 pm
  • @Angel: I’m glad you pointed out the invasive nature of several of these vines. I once lived in a home where I continuously battled trumpet vines. They popped up all over the yard. Mowing them seemed to only strengthen their root systems, which are massive. Pulling each one and trying to follow the roots seemed to be the only way to remove them. On the other hand, I once had a Sweet Autumn clematis on my back fence. I didn’t know what it was at first. The fence was overgrown with various vines and I cut them all back. The next fall, much to my delight, I had a huge cloud of tiny white flowers that appeared to float just above the fence. The main thing is for everyone to do their research before planting! My aunt and uncle loved trumpet vines and actually took some starter plants from my yard to plant in their yard.
  • Reply
  • Thisni Caza
  • March 15, 2022 At 11:33 pm
  • @Dotti Timkey You can buy seeds on Etsy (and probably other places). I’ve never seen the plant in a nursery but they are available online for shipping for about $15. Good luck!
  • Reply

Some lovely suggestions there. I am a huge fan of the scented snail vine for around patios, and also climbing rose Zephrine Droughin which is the only true thornless rose and has the added bonus of being very fragrant. There are a few (morning glory and cup and saucer vine and certain varieties of clematis) that are banned in our country of New Zealand as our climate is too temperate to cause die-back and so they seed too freely and smother our native forests.

  • Sky
  • July 14, 2019 At 8:46 pm
  • Morning Glory is poisonous for cats.
  • Reply
  • Sara
  • May 14, 2021 At 9:26 am
  • Black eyed Susan, toxic to catd
  • Reply

I have 4 cats and wonder if any of these vines are toxic to cats and dogs and children.

Morning Glory is poisonous for cats.

Black eyed Susan, toxic to catd

i love hydrangea

  • Sammi
  • March 17, 2017 At 4:42 pm
  • Your area will love sweet pea or passion flowers. Happy growing!!
  • Reply

I live in Daly City ca. which is nr, san Francisco a. what is the best climbing vail to grow (near the beach)in container Lucy Rios

Your area will love sweet pea or passion flowers. Happy growing!!

Watch out for the Virginia Creeper. It affects somed people like Poison Ivy.

Can you suggest how to make your vine grow around a basket? My plant is in a pot, I live in rented house and don’t want to leave it here in case.. Its honeysuckle I think, we call it madhabilata. Please tell me the material best for the basket, plastic or metal or bamboo and caring for the plant after its wrapped around the basket. Thanks a lot for your time.

That is a great idea. How can be Keeped in winte?

You can also use these climbing plants as a decoration to make your house beautiful.

Gud article but from where we can buy these plants at reasonable prices

The clematis are so beautiful! I would love to grow some of them in a pot with something purple. It’s pretty cold where we live, so I guess it could be an indoor plant in winter.

WARNING!!!! INVASIVE PLANTS listed here should ALWAYS be managed in a pot. The “trumpet vine” and the “wisteria” for starters. YES some are poisonous to animals. PLEASE do your research before planting weather it be in pots or in your yard

vine. They may even be sold as the same plant in some garden centers. Dipladenia plants are slightly more shrubby in appearance, with smaller leaves that are a deep glossy green. Both plants are grown the same way and can be used for similar purposes in containers.

How wide / deep should cedar box be built to accommodate Virginia Creeper to successfully overwinter? (Box would be 38 – 40″ long). Thank you.

Where can you find Dutchman’s pipe? Or how to you grow a cutting from a plant? I love it but cannot find it in any of the garden stores.

I had a small vine that I grew in a container with a heart shaped support for it to vine around. I had 1 pink and a red one. I can’t think of the name of it and can’t find it in a catalog. Can anyone tell me what it was?

great i think dutch rose is more beautiful flower that i knoww

@Angel: I’m glad you pointed out the invasive nature of several of these vines. I once lived in a home where I continuously battled trumpet vines. They popped up all over the yard. Mowing them seemed to only strengthen their root systems, which are massive. Pulling each one and trying to follow the roots seemed to be the only way to remove them. On the other hand, I once had a Sweet Autumn clematis on my back fence. I didn’t know what it was at first. The fence was overgrown with various vines and I cut them all back. The next fall, much to my delight, I had a huge cloud of tiny white flowers that appeared to float just above the fence. The main thing is for everyone to do their research before planting! My aunt and uncle loved trumpet vines and actually took some starter plants from my yard to plant in their yard.

@Dotti Timkey You can buy seeds on Etsy (and probably other places). I’ve never seen the plant in a nursery but they are available online for shipping for about $15. Good luck!

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