North America Native Plant

Alpine Sweetgrass

Botanical name: Anthoxanthum monticola monticola

USDA symbol: ANMOM2

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: grass

Native status: Native to Alaska ⚘ Native to Canada ⚘ Native to Greenland ⚘ Native to the lower 48 states ⚘ Native to St. Pierre and Miquelon  

Synonyms: Anthoxanthum monticola (Bigelow) Veldkamp ssp. orthantha (T.J. Sørensen) G. Tucker (ANMOO)  ⚘  Hierochloe alpina (Sw. ex Willd.) Roem. & Schult. ssp. orthantha (T.J. Sørensen) G. Weim. (HIALO)  ⚘  Hierochloe alpina (Sw. ex Willd.) Roem. & Schult. var. orthantha (T.J. Sørensen) Hultén (HIALO2)  ⚘  Hierochloe monticola (Bigelow) Á. Löve & D. Löve, non Mez (HIMO3)  ⚘  Hierochloe orthantha T.J. Sørensen (HIOR)   

Alpine Sweetgrass: A Fragrant Native Grass for Cool Climate Gardens If you’re looking for a unique native grass that brings a touch of the wild alpine world to your garden, alpine sweetgrass (Anthoxanthum monticola monticola) might just capture your imagination. This delicate perennial grass carries the sweet fragrance that gives ...

Alpine Sweetgrass: A Fragrant Native Grass for Cool Climate Gardens

If you’re looking for a unique native grass that brings a touch of the wild alpine world to your garden, alpine sweetgrass (Anthoxanthum monticola monticola) might just capture your imagination. This delicate perennial grass carries the sweet fragrance that gives it its common name, though it’s definitely not your typical lawn grass!

What Is Alpine Sweetgrass?

Alpine sweetgrass is a native North American grass species that belongs to the graminoid family—that’s the fancy way of saying it’s a grass or grass-like plant. This perennial has quite the impressive list of botanical synonyms, having been reclassified several times as botanists better understood its relationships to other grasses. You might also encounter it listed under names like Hierochloe alpina in older references.

Where Does Alpine Sweetgrass Grow Naturally?

This hardy little grass has an extensive native range that spans some pretty impressive territory. It’s native to Alaska, Canada (including Ontario, Quebec, Nunavut, Labrador, and Newfoundland), Greenland, St. Pierre and Miquelon, and several northern states including Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont. Basically, if you live somewhere that gets seriously cold winters, this grass might be right at home in your area.

Should You Plant Alpine Sweetgrass in Your Garden?

Here’s where things get interesting—and a bit challenging. Alpine sweetgrass is definitely a plant for specialized situations rather than your average garden bed. Here are some things to consider:

The Good News:

  • It’s completely native to North America, so you’re supporting local ecosystems
  • The sweet fragrance is genuinely lovely and unique
  • It’s adapted to harsh, cold conditions that would challenge many other plants
  • Perfect for naturalistic plantings and alpine gardens

The Challenges:

  • This grass has very specific growing requirements that can be difficult to replicate
  • It’s adapted to cool, often harsh mountain and arctic conditions
  • May not perform well in typical garden settings or warmer climates
  • Limited availability from nurseries due to specialized nature

Growing Conditions and Care

If you’re determined to give alpine sweetgrass a try, you’ll need to think like a mountain! This grass thrives in cool, moist conditions with excellent drainage—think of those rocky alpine slopes where water moves quickly but doesn’t pool.

Based on its native range, alpine sweetgrass likely performs best in USDA hardiness zones 2-5, though it may struggle in areas with hot summers even within these zones. It’s truly adapted for northern and high-elevation conditions.

Best Garden Applications

Alpine sweetgrass works best in:

  • Alpine or rock gardens with excellent drainage
  • Native plant gardens in appropriate climates
  • Naturalistic plantings that mimic mountain meadows
  • Cool-season container gardens (if you can source it)

The Bottom Line

Alpine sweetgrass is one of those plants that’s absolutely fascinating from a botanical perspective but may not be practical for most home gardeners. Unless you live in a naturally cool climate and have experience with alpine plants, you might want to admire this species in its native habitat rather than attempting to grow it.

If you’re drawn to native grasses but live outside alpine sweetgrass’s comfort zone, consider exploring other native grasses that are better suited to your local conditions. Your local native plant society or extension office can help you identify beautiful native alternatives that will thrive in your specific garden setting.

For those adventurous gardeners in the right climate zones with the right conditions, alpine sweetgrass could be a unique and fragrant addition to a specialized native plant collection—just be prepared for a gardening challenge that’s as rewarding as it is demanding!

Alpine Sweetgrass

Classification

Group

Monocot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Liliopsida - Monocotyledons

Subclass

Commelinidae

Order

Cyperales

Family

Poaceae Barnhart - Grass family

Genus

Anthoxanthum L. - hornwort

Species

Anthoxanthum monticola (Bigelow) Veldkamp - alpine sweetgrass

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA