Spacing is one of the biggest reasons evergreen screens fail. Plants set too far apart may take years to provide privacy. Plants set too close together may crowd, thin out, or become difficult to maintain.
Do not design only for the first year
Small plants can make a new screen look underwhelming, but mature width matters more than nursery size.
Leave room for health and access
Overcrowded evergreens can shade each other, trap moisture, and make pruning harder. Pair this with our Evergreen Screen Gap Filling Guide for Homeowners if an existing screen already has weak spots.
Use staggered planting carefully
Staggered rows can improve coverage, but they need enough depth and maintenance access to work long term.
What homeowners should remember
The best evergreen screen spacing balances privacy now with plant health and manageability later.

Leave a Reply