Fall 2025 Plant Sales

Fall is the best time to plant native flowers, shrubs, and trees, and many of our chapters have upcoming fall plant sales. Take advantage of this opportunity to easily obtain native plants suited to your ecoregion and along with making your space beautiful, you’ll be providing food and habitat for butterflies, birds, and other wildlife. Many native plants even do well in containers – no yard required. Plant sales also support your local NPSOT chapter, and NPSOT volunteers at the plant sale are a great resource to answer your native plant questions.

This list will be updated with additional sales so check back for additions! If your chapter is having a plant sale that is not listed, or you have a correction to this list please let us know at webmaster@npsot.org.

If you have specific questions about a plant sale, please contact the host chapter directly for the quickest response!

H-E-B stores will be selling a variety of quart-sized Texas native plants this fall. Learn more here.

Plant Sales are over for 2025. We’ll be back next year with 2026 plant sales.

ChapterDate and TimeDescriptionLocationLink for More Info
Clear LakeOctober 25
8am - 10:30am
Come visit our fall sale. Will be offering a limited amount of trees and shrubs in addition to 50 + species of native plants.Environmental Institute of Houston 2700 Bay Area Blvd 77058
DallasOctober 25
10am - 12pm
Fall Native Plant SaleOakland Cemetery
3900 Oakland Cir, Dallas, TX 75215
More info...
Highland LakesOctober 25
9:30am
The fall plant sale is part of our chapters’ celebration of Texas Native Plant Week. We use this opportunity to promote and sell native plants and help us spread the word about the benefits of using our local flora for gardening to the general public.Burnet Courthouse Square
220 S Pierce St, Burnet, TX 78611
Burnet Farmers and Crafts Market on the courthouse square in Burnet.
AustinNovember 2
10am-2pm
The Austin Chapter Fall Plant Sale will have a large variety of plants for sale that are native to the Austin area. We will sell plants you may not normally find in a retail garden center. They are perfect for our soil types and climate. We can help you find native plants that are perfect for your yard, patio container, school garden or other project!NPAT Dowell Ranch
301 Farm to Market 1626, Manchaca, TX 78652
More info...

About the Region

2026 Fall Symposium Logo

This low-elevations region of Texas extends inland from the barrier islands, about 60 or so miles, and stretches from Brownsville to Louisiana. In total, it covers about 9.5 million acres, with a high point of 150 feet in elevation. More than 1000 species of plants can be found in this region. On the southern end, species more common in Mexico (such as Sabal mexicana) and Central America occur.

The barrier islands provide us with dune systems, and clay flats to the inland side, which have species found in these areas alone. Many plants here, such as Ipomoea pes-caprae (beach morning glory), can be found throughout tropical regions of the globe. I’ve encountered the same species on the beaches of Guam.

Once inland, vast marshes and wet prairies occur. Occasionally, oak (Quercus fusiformis) groves can be found. Common grasses include species of Bothriochloa, Paspalum, and Sporobolus; eastern gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides); and switchgrass (Panicum species). Many rivers and creeks cut through the Gulf Prairies, and along these riparian areas various species of trees, Sabal minor, and other plants adapted to clay soils can be found. Due to overgrazing, farming, and fire suppression, woody species such as mesquite (Prosopis glandulosa) and huisache (Acacia farnesiana), and invasive species such as chinaberry (Melia azedarach), Brazilian pepper (Schinus terebinthifolius), and Chinese tallow (Sapium sebiferum) have increased and displaced our native flora.

Source: Wildflowers of Texas by Michael Eason