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Annual

Quick definition

A plant that completes its entire life cycle—from germination to flower, seed production, and death—within a single growing season.

In plain terms

Annuals grow fast because they only have one season to reproduce. After germination, they focus on producing leaves, flowers, fruit, and seeds before cold weather, frost, or natural aging ends their life cycle.

Many popular vegetables, herbs, and flowers are annuals. Unlike a perennial, which returns year after year, or a biennial, which takes two seasons to complete its life cycle, an annual must be replanted each year.

This quick growth makes annuals ideal for gardeners who want reliable flowers, seasonal color, or productive crops within a single growing season.

Why this matters

Understanding the difference between annuals, biennials, and perennials affects everything from garden planning to maintenance. Most vegetable gardens rely heavily on annual crops because they grow quickly and produce harvests within months. Annual flowers also provide long-lasting color and allow gardeners to redesign beds, borders, and container gardening displays each season.

In practice

Examples

  • Tomato plants grow, flower, produce fruit, and die after the first frost.
  • Zinnias bloom continuously through summer before cold weather ends their season.
  • Marigolds produce dozens of flowers from a single planting.
  • Beans develop from seed to harvest in only a few months.

Practical applications

  • Replant annual vegetables and flowers each year.
  • Use annuals for seasonal color in container gardening and landscape beds.
  • Collect seeds from healthy plants for future planting.
  • Succession plant annual crops to extend harvests throughout the growing season.

Connected terms