Zone 6 · winter lows -10°F to 0°F
Prunus for Zone 6
68 Prunus varieties rated hardy through Zone 6, ranked by how many gardeners actually grow them. Zone 6 is the sweet spot — nearly everything hardy grows here.
The Prunus that thrive in Zone 6
#1 most savedBlack Cherry
Prunus serotina
#2 most savedSugar Plum
Prunus domestica 'Sugar Plum'
#3 most savedJapanese Flowering Cherry
Prunus serrulata

Feiching Tao White Peach
Prunus persica 'Feiching Tao White'

Sweet Cherry
Prunus avium 'Mix'

Cherry Plum
Prunus cerasifera

Hale Haven Peach
Prunus persica 'Hale Haven'

Juliet Cherry
Prunus cerasus 'Juliet'

Peach Ruby Ruffle
Prunus persica 'Ruby Ruffle'

Snow White Peach
Prunus persica 'Snow White'

Silver Maple
Prunus saccharinum

Shirofugen Cherry
Prunus serrulata 'Shirofugen'

Carmine Jewel Cherry
Prunus pulsar 'Carmine Jewel'

Mount Fuji Cherry
Prunus serrulata 'Shirotae'

Peachy Keen Peach
Prunus persica 'Peachy Keen'

Flambe Peach
Prunus persica 'Flambe'

Peach Corinthian Rose
Prunus persica 'Corinthian Rose'

Ichiyo Cherry
Prunus serrulata 'Ichiyo'

John Fanick Peach
Prunus persica 'John Fanick'

Flat Wonderful Peach
Prunus persica 'Flat Wonderful'

European Plum
Prunus domestica

Alderman Plum
Prunus domestica 'Alderman Std'

Kanzan Cherry
Prunus saccharinum 'Kanzan'

Black Cherry Plum
Prunus cerasifera 'Nigra'
Showing the 24 most-saved of 68 Zone 6–hardy Prunus varieties. See the full Prunus list →
Prunus in Zone 6
Will Prunus survive a Zone 6 winter?
68 of the 71 Prunus varieties in the Sow catalog are rated hardy through Zone 6, where winter lows reach -10°F to 0°F. Hardiness is per-variety, not per-genus — the plants listed above are the ones that hold up; others in the genus are not rated for this zone.
When should I plant Prunus in Zone 6?
In Zone 6 the last spring frost typically lands around late April and the first fall frost around mid-October. Planting after the last frost — or in early fall, so roots establish before the ground cools — gives the best establishment. Each plant page lists its own planting months.
Which Prunus is best for Zone 6?
Start at the top of the list above: it is ranked by how many gardeners actually save and grow each variety, which is a strong real-world reliability signal. Then narrow by your sun exposure and the mature size that fits the bed.
