Designing a small garden: tips for small spaces

The more varied your small garden is, the larger and more appealing it will look. Tips, tricks and ideas for small gardens.

Kleingarten mit Terrasse, Gartenmöbeln und Pflanzenkübeln vorne, dahinter Rasenfläche mit kleinen Bäumen und Sträuchern.

Overview: Designing small gardens

  • Small gardens appear larger when space and perspective are shaped with the help of lines of sight such as curved paths, plants and sculptures.

  • When it comes to garden design in small gardens, the right choice of colours, such as a combination of white, blue and pink or yellow, is crucial.

  • Integrating neighbouring gardens into your own small garden is a great way to create more space.

  • Less is more: avoid sharp contrasts and gaudy mixes when designing a small garden.

  • Small, handy, manoeuvrable tools such as cordless hedge trimmers and grass trimmers are ideal for small gardens.

Designing a small garden: Good planning is half the work

Planning and designing a small garden is all about utilising space and visually expanding the garden. After all, you don't need a lot of space for a tasteful design: proper division of the space and a good choice of plants and colours will have a significant impact on the appearance of your garden.

Small garden – big impact

Whether your garden is square, rectangular, oval or round, there are solutions for every shape. The expansion of a garden therefore plays a lesser role. Rather, it is the art of creating space and perspective that makes a small garden appear larger.

First ask yourself how you would like to use your garden. Should it simply be an oasis of calm or a kitchen garden? Do you want to integrate a children’s play area or do you dream of a small romantic garden ↓ with a variety of different seats?

Structuring a small garden

–You should design your small garden in a varied and exciting way so that you can't immediately see what is hidden behind a half–height hedge or a group of tall perennials. Even small green spaces seem more open and exciting if they do not reveal their secrets to the visitor at first glance. Visitors should be able to explore a small garden.

Rectangular gardens generally appear smaller, so it is advisable to create round or oval areas, lawns and seats in them. This creates an impression of space and means that it is not immediately apparent where the garden ends.

Small garden with lawn at the front, plants, shrubs, small trees, solitary plants, and a tall wooden fence at the back.

Create individual areas and oases: These could take the form of a covered or enclosed seating area, a relaxation area with a garden lounger, a vegetable patch or a play area for children. The various areas can be separated by tall grasses, a small hedge, a half–height wall, a trellis or perennial beds.

Partitioning walls and fences covered in plants create a feeling of space, as they do not give an immediate idea of what is behind them. This also applies to half–height perennials that grow into the garden like a peninsula.

Privacy screening also plays a major role in the design of small gardens. You should plant your garden with a well–spaced variety of shrubs should be planted – not encircling your garden – as a continuous hedge quickly becomes tedious. Mixed hedges are therefore often the better choice in small gardens.

How to design a small garden: A few enlargement effects

Are you wondering how to make your small garden appear larger? How do you create more structure and accentuate the main features? Here are a few tips:

A sunken garden in a small garden with paving stones, garden furniture at the front and a lawn at the back.

A sunken garden creates different levels

By creating several levels in a small garden, you can add excitement and variety.

If possible, try to create a sunken garden. This is usually a square or rectangular cut–out section within your garden with a few steps leading down to it. It is surrounded by natural stone and in its centre is a small pond, a seat, or a flower bed.

The different heights in a sunken garden generate space and the kind of expansive feel that brings small gardens to life, while the slope also provides more room for planting.

An alternative to the sunken garden: raised areas with dry stone walls. These form banks that create interest and bring structure to small gardens.

Small garden design with lawn at the front, densely planted area of shrubs with a view of the neighbouring garden.

Designing a small garden: Integrating adjacent property

Incorporate neighbouring gardens by leaving lines of sight and views of attractive trees unobstructed. Your flower bed can flow seamlessly into your neighbour’s hedge.

Choose similar shrubs to your neighbour so that your two gardens merge into one where they meet. This allows you to integrate neighbouring gardens into the design of your own garden and therefore create more space.

Using evergreens such as yew or box around the borders of your garden will help you to merge the boundaries to neighbouring gardens.

Our tip: A good third of the plants you use should be evergreen, as this will also provide variety in winter.

Paths in a small garden create depth

You can also create a path in your small garden. Make it narrower towards the back to make the distance look further. Set up a large, attractive arch or trellis at the start of the path to distract from its size and convey an impression of space and distance. You should also place a striking feature at the end of a path: sculptures, a solitary flowering bush, a corner seat, or a small pond.

Curved stone path surrounded by ground cover, shrubs and hedges, with the lawn and trees in the background.

In long, narrow gardens, you should always create curved paths, not straight lines. These could run along a perennial bed, or alternatively, you could plant hedge sections to break up the long expanse. If the garden is wider and shorter, you should emphasise the longitudinal perspective, for example in by adding diagonal or curved paths running at an angle to the house.

Stick with one material such as wood or stone so that the space doesn't appear untidy. A stone patio or a path should consist of a maximum of two stone materials.

Small gardens: Which plants to use?

Which plants are suitable for small gardens? A few ideas:

Which colours are best for small gardens?

A few tips on how to skilfully use colour in small gardens:

Close-up: blue-purple wild hydrangea

Blue creates space; blue tones add depth to the garden. To make your small garden seem larger, plant blue plants or flower beds towards the back if it does not directly adjoin onto a neighbouring garden. This means that the end of the property will blend into the horizon as a background, giving your garden an impression of vastness.

Curved, sloping lawn at the front, bordered by plant beds with shrubs, flowers, separated by English lawn edges.

The combination of white, blue and pink always works very well, as does a mix of white flowers and any pastel colour, because light and cool shades are noticeable from a distance.

Close-up: sunflower perennials with bright yellow blooms

Yellow is a friendly colour and brightens up dark corners. However, it is better to only use it selectively, otherwise it could make your garden look smaller again.

Less is more: Avoid sharp contrasts and gaudy mixes – this looks untidy and tends to make gardens seem smaller.

You should also avoid the extensive use of signal colours and dark shades, as these can make small gardens appear even smaller. Red in particular tends to force its way into the foreground and dominate.

Designing a small garden: Ideas and inspiration

We will show you how to make a small garden attractive using examples of different styles and types of small gardens. Be inspired.

Small romantic garden: Soft pink and white climbing roses are ideal her, along with ornate trellises and rose arches to mark the start of pathways. Distribute several tubs containing the same type of plants throughout the space to create your small romantic garden –  not too many at once though, otherwise the garden may appear fragmented.

Contemporary small garden: For those who like simplicity, clean geometric lines and shapes as well as warm wood tones add elegance to a small contemporary garden. Using stylish elements made of high-quality material, seats and chairs on a gravel bed or wooden deck, you can expand your home interior and create a second living room in the open air. This works particularly well if you design your garden and home in the same style. A round seat will make the space look bigger overall.

Atmospheric light in a small garden: Several small lights form atmospheric pools of light, and the accented lighting of a plant or path will create additional lines of sight. Solar lamps along the beds collect solar energy during the day, then shine long into the night, and create visual structure and order. Wooden lanterns or lamps also radiate a particularly warm light – and just like many items of wooden furniture, you can easily make them yourself.

Designing a small kitchen garden: If you plan to design a small herb garden or a vegetable garden, it is best to arrange several raised beds symmetrically – this gives the small garden more structure. A raised bed is ideal for small gardens, and as a replacement for a “real” bed, and is also a popular design element in contemporary garden design.

A babbling water feature or mini pond with water feature not only has a calming, relaxing effect, but also makes the space appear larger, as the sky and surroundings are reflected in the surface. Here too, you can use height to great effect by placing a mini pond in a barrel, even in the smallest garden. A stream running through a small garden is also a very nice idea, but this only works on slopes. And if you design a watering hole for animals in your small garden, you’ll supply both small and larger creatures with water.

Purple perennial blooms in a garden, summer house with awning in the background

Planning and creating a garden

Creating a garden requires careful planning. Different types of gardens and plants have different needs throughout the year. Our guides provide useful tips on what to look for –for amateur gardeners and anyone interested in becoming one.

Power tools for the small garden

Cordless power tools are particularly well–suited to garden design in small gardens. They operate quietly and don’t need to be plugged in, so are not only sustainable but also protect the ears of both humans and animals. Electric models are also very quiet and environmentally friendly. Power tools for small gardens should be handy, small, light and manoeuvrable.

View from above: Man mowing a lawn around a small tree with the STIHL RMA 235 cordless lawn mower.

STIHL lawn mowers for small lawns

These STIHL lawn mowers deliver impressive mowing results and a clean cut in your small garden. The light, low-noise cordless battery lawn mower makes it easy to care for small gardens, as they are also flex-free and manoeuvrable.

Woman wearing safety glasses and work gloves scarifying a small lawn with the STIHL RLA 240 cordless lawn scarifier.

STIHL scarifier for small lawns

STIHL lawn scarifiers are exceptionally easy to manoeuvre thanks to their lightweight design and smooth-running wheels. They are very easy to use and move thanks to the folding crossbar and handle on the front. The cordless lawn scarifier scarifies or grooms smaller lawns in small gardens without needing to be plugged in, and is easily manoeuvrable and efficient, especially on awkwardly shaped lawns in small gardens. Like the electric lawn scarifier, it removes moss and dense matting in small gardens in a particularly quiet and environmentally friendly manner.

Woman wearing safety glasses and work gloves trims lawn edging along stone path with STIHL FSA 45 cordless lawn trimmer.

STIHL lawn trimmers for small lawns

From the lightweight entry-level model for small garden owners to the high-power electric brushcutter for small gardens – these STIHL lawn trimmers are ideal for creating small gardens by trimming and clearing as well as working on smaller lawns. They are perfect for trimming lawn edges and clearing around small garden trees, paths and steps as well as mowing small areas of wild growth in small gardens.

FSA 45

View details about FSA 45.Grass Trimmers and Brushcutters
Compact battery grass trimmer for trimming and clearing jobs in domestic outdoor spaces
AvailabilityThis item is only available at STIHL Approved Dealers.
$249.00

FSA 57 Kit

View details about FSA 57 Kit.Grass Trimmers and Brushcutters
Lightweight battery brushcutter with high mowing performance
AvailabilityThis item is only available at STIHL Approved Dealers.
$459.00