Clematis are the most widely grown flowering climbing plants in European gardens — with 300+ species and thousands of cultivars, they bloom from late winter through to late autumn in every colour from white to deep purple, in flower sizes from 1cm to 25cm across. Browse our Clematis collection with delivery across Europe.

Which Clematis Should I Choose?

Clematis are divided into three pruning groups. Group 1 (early-flowering: Clematis armandii, montana) blooms January–April on previous year's wood — do not hard prune. Group 2 (large-flowered: Nelly Moser, The President) blooms May–June then again August–September. Group 3 (viticella, late large-flowered: Jackmanii) blooms July–September and is cut back hard every February — the easiest group for beginners.

How to Grow Clematis

Clematis grow best with their roots in cool, moist shade and their flowering stems in full sun or light shade — the classic rule is "head in the sun, feet in the shade." Plant at least 15cm away from a wall or fence to avoid the dry root zone. Most Clematis prefer a trellis or wire support to scramble through.

Clematis Care Tips

  • Watering — water deeply once or twice a week in dry weather, especially in the first season
  • Feeding — balanced fertiliser in spring; high-potash feed monthly from May to August
  • Pruning — follow the correct pruning group; wrong pruning is the most common cause of poor flowering
  • Wilt — if stems collapse suddenly, cut back to healthy growth at soil level; Clematis wilt rarely kills the root system

Browse our complete climbing plants collection and read our guide to the best climbing plants for your garden.

Four Clematis Armandii evergreen climbing plants with dark green leaves and pale purple-white flowers in tall grey pots
Clematis Armandii Evergreen Climbing Plant - Fragrant White Flowers
€118.95
Clematis 'Justa' with pale purple sepals and yellow stamens, green heart-shaped leaves visible below blooms in soil.
Flowering climbing vines close-up of Clematis 'Justa': Stunning Large-Flowered Purple Climber – May to September Bloo
Clematis 'Justa': Stunning Large-Flowered Purple Climber – May to September Blooms!
€68.95
Clematis Multi Blue double flower with layered purple-blue petals and pale centre, surrounded by bright green oval…
Flowering climbing vines close-up of Clematis Multi Blue - Double Flowering Climbing Plant 65cm
Clematis Multi Blue - Double Flowering Climbing Plant 65cm
€72.95
Clematis The President with purple flowers on wooden support stakes in grey pots, set of four plants shown
Flowering climbing vines close-up of Clematis The President Purple Climbing Plant 65cm - Set of 4
Clematis The President Purple Climbing Plant 65cm - Set of 4
€72.95

Clematis Plants — Flowering Climbing Vines

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Clematis are the most widely grown flowering climbing plants in European gardens — with 300+ species and thousands of cultivars, they bloom from late winter through to late autumn in every colour from white to deep purple, in flower sizes from 1cm to 25cm across. Browse our Clematis collection with delivery across Europe.

Which Clematis Should I Choose?

Clematis are divided into three pruning groups. Group 1 (early-flowering: Clematis armandii, montana) blooms January–April on previous year's wood — do not hard prune. Group 2 (large-flowered: Nelly Moser, The President) blooms May–June then again August–September. Group 3 (viticella, late large-flowered: Jackmanii) blooms July–September and is cut back hard every February — the easiest group for beginners.

How to Grow Clematis

Clematis grow best with their roots in cool, moist shade and their flowering stems in full sun or light shade — the classic rule is "head in the sun, feet in the shade." Plant at least 15cm away from a wall or fence to avoid the dry root zone. Most Clematis prefer a trellis or wire support to scramble through.

Clematis Care Tips

  • Watering — water deeply once or twice a week in dry weather, especially in the first season
  • Feeding — balanced fertiliser in spring; high-potash feed monthly from May to August
  • Pruning — follow the correct pruning group; wrong pruning is the most common cause of poor flowering
  • Wilt — if stems collapse suddenly, cut back to healthy growth at soil level; Clematis wilt rarely kills the root system

Browse our complete climbing plants collection and read our guide to the best climbing plants for your garden.

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