
Where to find the first flowers of spring
The first blooms of the year are already visible in some parts of the United States. Here’s why certain flowers are the first to usher in the season.
Early spring is marked by deceptive and unpredictable weather, swinging from milder temperatures to flash freezes.
"There are warm, almost hot days when you sit out on the steps lifting a pallid face to the spring sun," says gardening expert and author of The Country Garden Josephine Nuese. "Then, that night, the temperature drops to almost zero and you wake up to a blizzard."
Fortunately, nature has anointed some flowering plants with both the hardiness and the beauty to withstand fickle March weather and remind winter-weary souls that spring is indeed arriving.
From the hellebores (also known as lenten roses) that may have already begun blooming in December to the daffodils that begin slicing through frozen ground with their deep green leaves early in the new year, flowers can be seen well before overcoat weather has subsided, if you know where to look.
Here’s everything you should know about the first flowers of spring as winter nears its end.
Which spring flowers are the earliest to appear?
Crocuses, snowdrops, hellebores, and daffodils are some of the flowers that tend to bloom earliest in spring gardens. While these varieties are not native to the United States, they have been planted for decades in gardens across the country and often have naturalized, meaning they can reproduce in the wild without human intervention. Other blooms include wildflowers, such as violet-indigo spikes of Texas bluebonnet that crop up on roadsides in the state; trumpet-shaped Virginia bluebells appearing across eastern North America; and desert blooms that bring color to parts of the West.
In 2026, the first blooms of the year are already visible in the southernmost parts of Texas, Arizona, and California, according to the National Phenology Network's First Bloom Index. That index is based on lilacs and honeysuckles, which the network notes are the first woody plants to leaf out and bloom in the springtime.
In general, spring—as measured by first leaf dates between 1991 and 2020—has been arriving earlier across much of the continental United States, driven by climate change. However, first bloom dates over the same period, compared to the 20th-century average, are more mixed, with earlier-than-average flowering centered in the West, parts of the Midwest, and the Northeast.
Regardless of when spring begins, there are a few reasons why certain flowers are the first to usher in the season. Many early-flowering plants take advantage of the fact that deciduous trees have not yet grown out their leaves, allowing light and warmth to reach them as the days lengthen. Many bulb and corm varieties that are planted in the fall, such as daffodils and snowdrops, benefit from the dormancy of winter. They grow their roots and convert water to energy during the cold months, in the process bypassing competition from trees and surrounding plants for nutrients.
Why early spring flowers are important
Botanist Gregory Moore notes that many plants have coevolved with the creatures that pollinate them, beckoning emerging insects and returning migratory birds. Spring flowers support pollinators such as bees, hummingbirds, and butterflies, which derive nutrition from the nectar and pollen in flowers. Migrating hummingbirds begin appearing across the southern portion of the continental United States by early March, so they depend on nourishment from flowers such as coral honeysuckle in Texas, along with insects and spiders.
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All pollinators, in turn, are important to our food supply, since many of the foods we eat—almonds, apples, and tomatoes, to name a few—come from flowering plants that depend on them for reproduction.
Wildflowers also do their part to maintain sensitive ecosystems such as the Northern Great Plains by blanketing the soil with root systems that store water and nutrients underground.
Where are the best places to see the first flowers of spring?
March and April are generally the best months to look for flowering spaces in your area, whether it's the National Cherry Blossom festival in Washington, D.C., wildflowers in Texas, or botanical and display gardens (check out Georgia's Gibbs Gardens for its huge planting of daffodils). Some national parks, including Great Smoky Mountains and Pinnacles, have diverse wildflower populations that begin blooming as early as February or March. And in 2026, rain patterns in Death Valley have created a superbloom across the desert.
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The best and easiest way to take in an early display of spring flowers is to plant some in a yard, window box, or community garden. Some types, such as daffodils, have a wide range of flowering times, so be sure to seek out varieties labeled "early" and plant them as directed (often in the fall). For a small bit of effort, you can be rewarded season after season, not only with the blooms themselves but the show of pollinators that come to visit.