North America Native Plant

Christmas Fern

Botanical name: Polystichum acrostichoides var. acrostichoides

USDA symbol: POACA

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Native to Canada âš˜ Native to the lower 48 states  

Synonyms: Polystichum acrostichoides (Michx.) Schott var. schweinitzii (Beck) Small (POACS)   

Christmas Fern: The Perfect Native Evergreen for Shady Spots If you’re looking for a reliable, low-maintenance plant that stays green all winter long, meet your new best friend: the Christmas fern (Polystichum acrostichoides var. acrostichoides). This wonderful native fern gets its festive name because it remains beautifully green throughout the ...

Christmas Fern: The Perfect Native Evergreen for Shady Spots

If you’re looking for a reliable, low-maintenance plant that stays green all winter long, meet your new best friend: the Christmas fern (Polystichum acrostichoides var. acrostichoides). This wonderful native fern gets its festive name because it remains beautifully green throughout the holiday season, bringing life to your garden when most other plants have called it quits for the year.

A True North American Native

Christmas fern is as American as apple pie, naturally growing throughout eastern North America. This hardy perennial fern calls both Canada and the lower 48 states home, thriving from the Maritime provinces down to Florida and stretching west to Texas. You’ll find this adaptable native growing wild in Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin, plus several Canadian provinces including New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, and Quebec.

Why You’ll Love Christmas Fern in Your Garden

Christmas fern brings several fantastic qualities to your landscape that make it a gardener’s dream:

  • Year-round beauty: Those glossy, dark green fronds stay attractive through winter, providing structure when your garden needs it most
  • Perfect for problem spots: Thrives in those tricky shaded areas where many plants struggle
  • Low maintenance: Once established, it pretty much takes care of itself
  • Great groundcover: Forms lovely colonies that help suppress weeds naturally
  • Erosion control: Those sturdy root systems help stabilize slopes and banks

Where Christmas Fern Shines in Your Landscape

This versatile native is perfect for creating that lush, woodland feel in your garden. Christmas fern works beautifully in shade gardens, naturalistic plantings, and anywhere you want to add evergreen texture without the bulk of a shrub. It’s particularly stunning when planted in drifts along woodland paths or used as a living mulch under trees and shrubs.

While Christmas fern doesn’t produce flowers to attract pollinators (ferns reproduce via spores, not flowers), it does provide valuable habitat and shelter for small wildlife throughout the year, especially during winter when cover is scarce.

Growing Christmas Fern Successfully

One of the best things about Christmas fern is how forgiving it is. This tough native adapts to a wide range of conditions, making it perfect for beginning gardeners or anyone who wants a beautiful plant without the fuss.

Ideal Growing Conditions

  • Light: Shade to partial shade (morning sun is fine, but protect from hot afternoon sun)
  • Soil: Moist but well-draining soil; tolerates various soil types including clay and rocky conditions
  • Hardiness: Thrives in USDA zones 3-9, so it handles both cold winters and warm summers like a champ
  • Water: Prefers consistent moisture but tolerates some drought once established

Planting and Care Tips

Getting your Christmas fern off to a good start is surprisingly easy:

  • Best planting time: Spring or fall when temperatures are moderate
  • Spacing: Plant 18-24 inches apart for groundcover effect
  • Soil prep: Add some compost if your soil is particularly poor, but Christmas fern isn’t picky
  • Watering: Keep soil consistently moist the first year, then it can handle some dry spells
  • Mulching: A light layer of organic mulch helps retain moisture and suppress weeds
  • Winter care: Remove any damaged fronds in early spring before new growth appears

The Bottom Line

Christmas fern is one of those wonderful plants that gives you maximum impact with minimum effort. It’s native, it’s beautiful, it’s tough as nails, and it provides year-round interest in your shade garden. Whether you’re creating a woodland sanctuary or just need something reliable for that difficult shady spot, Christmas fern delivers. Plus, you’ll feel good knowing you’re supporting local ecosystems by choosing a native plant that belongs in your area naturally.

So go ahead and give Christmas fern a try – your shaded garden spots will thank you, and you’ll wonder why you waited so long to discover this fantastic native gem!

Christmas Fern

Classification

Group

Fern

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision
Division

Pteridophyta - Ferns

Subdivision
Class

Filicopsida

Subclass
Order

Polypodiales

Family

Dryopteridaceae Herter - Wood Fern family

Genus

Polystichum Roth - hollyfern

Species

Polystichum acrostichoides (Michx.) Schott - Christmas fern

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