How Big Do Blueberry Bushes Get? | Height By Variety

Blueberry bushes range from 6 inches to 12 feet tall depending on the variety, with most home-garden types falling between 4 and 8 feet at maturity.

The answer to how big blueberry bushes get starts with one honest fact: the size you get depends entirely on which type you plant. A Lowbush blueberry looks like a ground cover next to a 12-foot Rabbiteye, and planting the wrong one for your space is the fastest way to a crowded garden. This guide breaks down mature sizes for every major variety, how long they take to get there, and exactly how much room each one needs so you pick the right fit the first time.

Blueberry Bush Sizes By Variety Type

Blueberries fall into four main categories: Lowbush, Northern Highbush, Southern Highbush, and Rabbiteye. Each has a distinct mature size range that determines where it belongs in your yard.

Variety Type Height Range Width Range Best For
Lowbush (Vaccinium angustifolium) 6 inches – 2 feet 1 – 2 feet Cold climates, ground cover, small spaces
Northern Highbush (V. corymbosum) 5 – 12 feet 4 – 10 feet Northern US, colder regions, hedgerows
Southern Highbush 2 – 8 feet 6 – 10 feet Warm climates with low chill hours
Hybrid Half-High (Dwarf) 3 – 6 feet 3 – 4 feet Northern US, containers, small yards
Rabbiteye (V. virgatum) 6 – 12 feet 6 – 10 feet Southeastern US, zones 7–9, heat-tolerant

Northern Highbush is the most common choice for home gardens in the upper two-thirds of the US. It can hit 6 to 8 feet under normal conditions and up to 12 feet in ideal ground—NC State’s Plant Toolbox confirms that range for established plants. Rabbiteye varieties like Premier and Tifblue are the giants of the blueberry world, reaching 6 to 10 feet in the Southeast. Dwarf cultivars like Bountiful Delight top out at just 2 to 3 feet and grow well in containers.

How Long Until A Blueberry Bush Reaches Its Full Size?

Blueberries grow slowly. A new bush takes 8 to 10 years to reach its full mature height and spread, according to the University of Minnesota Extension. The same timeline applies across all major types.

What this means in practice: the 6-foot Northern Highbush you plant this spring will measure closer to 3 feet after three seasons. It will produce a small handful of berries in its second or third year, but the harvest only becomes substantial after year five. That slow start is normal, so do not mistake it for failure.

Spacing Blueberry Bushes: What Each Variety Needs

Blueberries that outgrow their spacing produce smaller crops and develop disease from poor air circulation. The correct distance between plants depends on both the variety and whether you plant a single row or an intensive hedge.

Variety Plant-to-Plant Spacing Row Spacing Strategy
Northern Highbush 4 – 5 feet 10 – 12 feet Basic rows
Northern Highbush 4 feet 8 feet Intensive hedge
Rabbiteye 6 – 8 feet 12 – 14 feet Basic rows
Rabbiteye 6 – 8 feet 10 feet Intensive hedge
Southern Highbush 5 – 6 feet 8 – 10 feet Basic/intensive
Lowbush 1 – 2 feet Not rowed Ground cover mass

The biggest spacing mistake is cramming a Rabbiteye into 4 feet of space because the tag said “dwarf” on another variety. Rabbiteye needs at least 6 feet between plants even in a tight hedge, and Monrovia’s care guide recommends a minimum of 3 to 4 feet for air circulation regardless of type. If you plan a hedge, the tighter spacing works, but you must stay on top of yearly pruning to prevent a tangled mess.

Pruning To Control Size

Pruning keeps a blueberry bush at the size you want without stunting the harvest. The rule changes as the plant ages.

First Two Years: Root Before Fruit

Cut back the top third to half of each cane right after planting. Remove every flower bud that appears in the first two seasons. This sounds wasteful, but the University of Maryland Extension makes it clear: all that energy goes into root and stem growth instead of a tiny handful of early berries, and the payoff is a bush that reaches its mature size years faster.

Year Three And Beyond: Structure Pruning

Prune in February or March while the plant is dormant. Remove weak, spindly shoots and any branches that cross or rub against each other—keep the stronger one. Thin out small branches in the center of the bush so light reaches the interior. Each year, select the best 2 to 3 new canes and remove the oldest canes at ground level. The goal is 12 to 18 canes of mixed ages. This keeps the bush productive at a manageable 5 to 6 feet instead of the 10 feet it would reach without intervention.

Common Mistakes That Affect Size And Health

Even a correctly spaced bush will underperform if the soil or care is wrong. These are the errors that show up most often in home blueberry patches.

Soil pH outside 4.0–5.5. Blueberries cannot absorb nutrients in alkaline soil, and the plant stalls at half its potential height. Test your soil every one to two years, and amend with sulfur the fall before planting or mix 4 to 6 inches of sphagnum peat into the top 6 to 8 inches of soil.

Planting only one variety. Most blueberries need a second, different variety nearby for good cross-pollination. A solo bush may still fruit, but the harvest will be thinner. Rabbiteye varieties in particular produce almost nothing alone.

Over-mulching. More than 3 inches of mulch immediately after planting smothers the roots. Increase gradually to 4 to 6 inches over 5 to 6 years.

Harvesting too early. Berries that need a tug are not ready. Ripe blueberries nearly fall into your hand when touched, and pulling them early costs you sweetness.

Choosing The Right Variety For Your Space

Match the variety to your available room and climate, and the size question answers itself.

  • Small yard or containers: Dwarf half-high cultivars (3–4 feet) or Lowbush (under 2 feet). These need 2 feet of spacing and work in pots.
  • Typical suburban garden: Northern Highbush (5–7 feet with pruning). Allow 4 to 5 feet between plants and 10 feet between rows.
  • Southeastern heat zones (7–9): Rabbiteye (6–10 feet). Accept the height and give it 6 to 8 feet of elbow room. It will not survive a Minnesota winter, but it thrives in southern summer heat.
  • Northern cold regions: Northern Highbush or half-high hybrids. Patriot Highbush stays compact at 4 to 5 feet while surviving zone 3 winters.

One bush may be enough if you have a single 4-by-4-foot spot. But you will get a better harvest from two different varieties planted within 50 feet of each other, so size your bed accordingly.

References & Sources

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