Non-native Plants

Beach Strawberry

Fragaria chiloensis chiloensis

USDA symbol: FRCHC

perennial forb

If you’re looking for a tough, attractive groundcover that can handle seaside conditions while producing delicate flowers and charming little berries, beach strawberry might just be your new best friend. This hardy perennial has been quietly carpeting coastal areas for centuries, and it’s ready to work the same magic in ...

Beach Strawberry: The Perfect Coastal Groundcover for Your Garden

If you’re looking for a tough, attractive groundcover that can handle seaside conditions while producing delicate flowers and charming little berries, beach strawberry might just be your new best friend. This hardy perennial has been quietly carpeting coastal areas for centuries, and it’s ready to work the same magic in your garden.

What Is Beach Strawberry?

Beach strawberry (Fragaria chiloensis chiloensis) is a low-growing perennial forb that belongs to the rose family. Don’t let the scientific name intimidate you – this is simply a hardy, herbaceous plant without woody stems that comes back year after year. You might also encounter it listed under the synonym Fragaria chiloensis var. scouleri, but it’s the same delightful plant.

Unlike its garden strawberry cousins, beach strawberry is built for survival in harsh coastal conditions. It forms dense mats of three-leaflet leaves that stay attractive throughout the growing season, punctuated by small white flowers that give way to tiny red berries.

Where Beach Strawberry Calls Home

This resilient native plant naturally occurs along the Pacific coast from Alaska down to California. It has evolved to thrive in the challenging conditions found in coastal dunes, bluffs, and sandy areas where salt spray and shifting sands would defeat many other plants.

Why You’ll Love Beach Strawberry in Your Garden

There are plenty of reasons to fall for this unassuming groundcover:

  • Tough as nails: Salt tolerant and drought resistant once established
  • Natural beauty: White flowers create a lovely contrast against the green foliage
  • Wildlife friendly: The flowers attract bees and other pollinators, while the berries feed birds
  • Erosion control: Those spreading runners help stabilize soil on slopes
  • Low maintenance: Once happy, it pretty much takes care of itself

Perfect Garden Situations

Beach strawberry shines in several garden scenarios:

  • Coastal gardens where other plants struggle with salt spray
  • Native plant gardens celebrating regional flora
  • Slope stabilization projects
  • Naturalized areas that need gentle groundcover
  • Rock gardens with sandy, well-draining soil

Growing Conditions That Make Beach Strawberry Happy

This plant isn’t fussy, but it does have preferences. Beach strawberry thrives in USDA hardiness zones 4-9, making it suitable for a wide range of climates. It prefers sandy, well-draining soil – think beach conditions – and can handle everything from partial shade to full sun.

The key to success is avoiding soggy conditions. While beach strawberry can tolerate some moisture, it won’t forgive constantly wet feet. If your soil tends to hold water, consider amending with sand or planting on a slope where drainage is naturally better.

Planting and Care Tips

Getting beach strawberry established is refreshingly straightforward:

  • Planting: Space plants 12-18 inches apart in spring or early fall
  • Initial watering: Keep soil lightly moist until plants are established
  • Long-term care: Once established, this drought-tolerant plant needs minimal water
  • Spreading: The plant will naturally spread via runners, filling in gaps over time
  • Maintenance: Very little required – just remove any dead foliage in early spring

Size and Growth Expectations

Beach strawberry stays low to the ground, typically reaching only 4-6 inches in height but spreading 12-24 inches wide per plant. It’s not a fast spreader, but it’s steady and reliable, gradually creating a dense mat that becomes more beautiful with each passing year.

The Bottom Line

If you garden in coastal areas or have sandy, well-draining soil, beach strawberry deserves serious consideration. It’s one of those plants that delivers far more than it asks for – providing attractive groundcover, supporting pollinators, and asking for very little in return. For gardeners looking to incorporate more native plants into their landscapes, this charming groundcover offers an easy entry point that celebrates the natural beauty of Pacific coastal regions.

Just remember to source your plants responsibly from reputable native plant nurseries to ensure you’re getting true local genetics and supporting sustainable growing practices.

Fragaria chiloensis chiloensis is also known as...

Often we refer to plants by their common names. When shopping for plants the scientific name is the best way to positively identify the plant species you desire. But some plants have more than one name! While it doesn't happen often, nurseries might display one name while you're searching for another. Fragaria chiloensis chiloensis is also known as:

Fragaria chiloensis var. scouleri | USDA symbol: FRCHS3

Why do some plants have more than one name? Over time plant species may be renamed for a few reasons:

  1. Botanists in different regions named the same plant without knowing it had already been classified.
  2. A species was reclassified after scientific advances in, for example, DNA analysis.
  3. Slight variations within a species are sometimes mistakenly identified as entirely new species.

Classification

Group: Dicot
Kingdom: Plantae - Plants
Subkingdom: Tracheobionta - Vascular plants
Superdivision: Spermatophyta - Seed plants
Division: Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants
Class: Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons
Subclass: Rosidae
Order: Rosales
Family: Rosaceae Juss. - Rose family
Genus: Fragaria L. - strawberry

Species: Fragaria chiloensis (L.) Mill. - beach strawberry

Subspecies: Fragaria chiloensis (L.) Mill. ssp. chiloensis (L.) Mill. [excluded] - beach strawberry

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA