From the announcements so far, the show gardens at RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2025 include gardens from horticultural stars such as Tom Massey, Monty Don, Jo Thompson, Manoj Malde and Kazuyuki Ishihara. Below is a full list of the show gardens you can expect for 2025, with a little bit of information on each. Stay tuned here for more information as it is released and don't miss our Chelsea Flower Show hub page for all our coverage.
The show runs from 20 to 24 May 2025, at the Royal Hospital Ground in Chelsea.
Discover all the details announced so far for RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2025
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SHOW GARDENS AT RHS CHELSEA FLOWER SHOW 2025
RHS and Radio 2 Dog Garden
designed by Monty Don
Read all about the garden here
The RHS and Radio 2 Dog Garden will celebrate the nation's love of dogs and the gardens we share with them. Jamie Butterworth of Form Plants will lead on creating the garden at the show and plans to include plants such as dogwoods. It will find its forever home at Battersea Dogs Home just across the river from the Chelsea Flower Show site after the show has finished.
There will be an area focusing on raising awareness of certain plants that are toxic to dogs (this section won't be being relocated after the show). As it's an RHS garden, this one won't be judged.
The Avanade 'Intelligent' Garden
designed by Tom Massey with Je Ahn
built by The Outdoor Room
The Avande Garden will use AI technology to feed data back to the owner about conditions in the garden, making it easier for people to garden more sustainably. There will be a digital twin of the garden for visitors to access via QR code to see the future. It is hoped that this will empower gardeners - it will become a community garden in London after the show and a test-bed for this sort of development.
Expect plants including Toona sinensis ‘Flamingo’, Zanthoxylum simulans, Cornus kousa, Rubus phoenicolasius and Lycium barbarum.
Discover another of Tom Massey's gardens
Discover Tom Massey and Je Ahn's WaterAid garden from Chelsea 2024
The Glasshouse Garden
designed by Jo Thompson
supported by Project Giving Back
This garden will celebrate the transformative effect of second chances through horticulture, inspired by the work of Glasshouse Botanics. Glasshouse Botanics help to provide a sense of purpose for women approaching the end of their prison sentences.
The garden will be an immersive space, centred around a translucent elliptical pavilion, emerging from the foliage. Plants include river birch trees, ferns, grasses and roses including, Rosa ‘Tuscany Superb’, Rosa ‘Charles de Mills’, and Rosa ‘Emma Bridgewater’.
Discover more about Glasshouse Botanics
The Down's Syndrome Scotland Garden
by Duncan Hall and Nick Burton
supported by Project Giving Back
built by Kate Gould Gardens
This is Duncan Hall and Nick Burton's first ever Chelsea Show Garden, featuring work by artist Francis Priest. The garden highlights misconceptions that people with Down's Syndrome face.
The garden is inspired by Duncan Hall's nephew Liam, and will feature a crazy paving path with a feature building with decorative tiles. The naturalistic planting includes Betula nigra, Pinus sylvestris, Iris sibirica ‘Tropic Night’, Primula florindae and Arisaema candidissimum.
London Square Chelsea Pensioners Garden
designed by Dave Green
supported by London Square
A spot for our much-loved Chelsea Pensioners to relax in, this garden designed by Dave Green will feature planting that reflects the ceremonial life and stories of the Pensioners.
Expect a woodland space, filled with trees and seating upholstered in recycled Pensioners' uniforms. It is being relocated to the Prince of Wales Yard in the grounds of the Royal Hospital.
The Hospice UK: Garden of Compassion
designed by Tom Hoblyn
supported by Project Giving Back
built by Mark Whyman Landscapes
This garden draws climate and planting parallells between County Durham and the mountainous areas of the Mediterranean. It is designed to demonstrate how spaces can play a role in providing comfort and calm at the end of life.
The layout mirrors the Olive Houses in Mallorca, and uses rocks to create a sense of being grounded in nature.
The garden will be relocated to St Cuthbert’s Hospice in Durham following the show.
The Garden of the Future
designed by Matthew Butler and Josh Parker
built by Acacia Gardens
Making the RHS Chelsea Flower Show debut, designers Josh Parker and Matthew Butler will feature climate-resilient ornamentals, crops and edible plants in order to demonstrate how to harness innovation when it comes to the climate.
This garden is sponsored by Bill and Melinda Gates foundation and is inspired by scientists, researchers, farmers and more developing and implementing innovative approaches for adapting to a warming world. Key plants include Sorghum bicolor, Cajanus cajan, Ipomoea batatas, Cistus × purpureus and Crataegus monogyna.
The King's Trust Garden: Seeding Success
designed by Joe Perkins
supported by Project Giving Back
built by Landscaping Consultants
Inspired by a volcanic environment, this garden highlights how seeds represent the potential for life growth and optimism for the future, drawing parallels with young people. Screen printed glass panels weave through the garden and represent seed dispersal.
Plants included are Ostrya carpinifolia and Phillyrea angustifolia, Papaver miyabeanum ‘Pacino’, Allium vinneale ‘Hair’, Hunnemannia fumariifolia, and Molopospermum peloponneseiacum.
Tackle HIV Challenging Stigma Garden
designed by Manoj Malde
built by JJH Landscapes
RHS Chelsea Flower Show regular Manoj Malde is famous for having got married at the show. This year, he'll be designing this garden for Viiv Healthcare, inspired by the advances in science and the power of the HIV community to tackle stigma.
Tree statues serve as a tribute to lives lost to HIV and the stigma that sadly persists. Hexagonal paving reflects a key chemical structure found within many HIV medications.
The garden will be relocated to Calthorpe Community Gardens in Kings Cross.
Discover more about Manoj Malde
Addleshaw Goddard: Freedom to Flourish Garden
designed by Joe and Laura Carey
built by The Outdoor Room
supported by Addleshaw Goddard
This garden from Joe and Laura Carey will embrace nature's call for an unhurried pace of life. It looks to the mental health benefits of slowing down and having an unhurried lifestyle.
The landscape of North Norfolk is its inspiration, with natural materials that represent cliffs and habitats for wildlife. Plants included are Oenothera odorata ‘Apricot Delight’, Baptisia australis and Hesperis matronalis.
Killik & Co Futureproof Garden
designed by Baz Grainger
built by Landform Consultants
Designer Baz Grainger returns this year to work with Killik & Co on this RHS Chelsea Garden for 2025. The Futureproof Garden offers a glimpse at 25 years into the future and is designed to withstand unpredictable weather patterns.
This modern family garden features resilient trees such as Zelkova serrata and Pinus mugo ‘Mughus’ and is inspired by rainscaping techniques. Expect plants more often associated with southern France and northern Spain such as Persicaria virginiana ‘Filiformis’, Artemisia ludoviciana ‘Valerie Finnis’ and Salvia sclarea.
The Pathway Garden
designed by Robert Beaudin and Allon Hoskin
Supported by Project Giving Back
built by Modular Garden Limited
Allon Hoskin and Robert Beaudin of Modular have designed a garden for Pathway, the charity that supports people who have experienced homelessness to access inclusive health care. Expect boulders intersecting around a path, as well as a pergola and a water feature. The garden will be designed using only upcycled materials. The garden will be going to Derriford Hospital, Plymouth after the show.
The Boodles Raindance Garden
designed by Catherine MacDonald
built by Gadd Brothers Trees and Landsapes
Catherine MacDonald will be designing the Boodles Raindance Garden, celebrating the Boodles jewellery collection. The design draws heavily on the styles and motifs of the collection with circular paving pads, featuring etched concentric circles, lead the visitor to a platinum coloured Raindance pavilion
complete with domed roof that channels rainwater to a circular rill at its base.
Expect a raindance pavilion, which channels water into a circular rill at its base and plants including Astrantia ‘Shaggy’ and Paeonia ‘Noémie Demay’.
The Cha no Niwa - Japanese Tea Garden
designed by Kazuyuki Ishihara
Regular Chelsea Show Garden designer Kazayuki Ishihara's garden for 2024 will feature a traditional Japanese tea house among maples. Stones are key to the design and which also takes inspiration from the traditional flower arranging art of ikebana. '
Expect plants that include Acer palmatum, Enkianthus perulatus, Iris, Sedum, Hornbeam and Pachysandra terminalis.
Discover more about Kazuyuki Ishihara.
Children with Cancer UK 'A Place to Be...' garden
designed by Ros Coutts-Harwood and Tom Clarke
built by Big Fish Landscapes
First time RHS Chelsea designer Ros Coutts-Harwood teams up with Tom Clarke on this garden, which offers a space for children to be carefree, happy, refreshed and grounded by the natural world. It will feature a monorail, a pool and a path to a reflective refuge, called the Nest.
The colour scheme is deep pinks and burgundy, from Rosa ‘Emma Bridgewater’, Allium ‘Forelock’, and Lysimachia atropurpurea ‘Beaujolais’. Splashes of white from Digitalis purpurea ‘Pam's Choice’.