Cold hardiness & minimum temperature
Is Common Jasmine (Jasminum officinale)cold hardy? Hardiness zone & min temp
Also called Poet's Jasmine, Summer Jasmine.
More about common jasmine
About Common Jasmine
Jasminum officinale · also called Poet's Jasmine, Summer Jasmine · flowering
Common jasmine is a vigorous semi-evergreen to deciduous twining climber bearing clusters of small, star-shaped, intensely fragrant white flowers through summer and into autumn. A classic for sunny walls, pergolas and arbours, it scrambles to 6-9 metres on supports. It is reliably hardy in temperate gardens and easy to grow in any fertile, well-drained soil.
Cold limit: USDA 7-10 · RHS H5 (-10 to 26°C)
Watch for — Winter dieback: Cold, exposed sites can scorch or kill stem tips in hard winters. Grow against a sheltered, sunny wall and tidy out frost-damaged growth in spring.
What common jasmine's hardiness rating actually means
Yes — common jasmine is genuinely cold hardy. Rated RHS H5 and USDA 7-10, it lives outdoors all year and needs winter cold rather than protection from it. Its RHS rating of H5 means: Hardy in most of the UK and in cold winters. On the US scale that maps to USDA 7-10 — the zones where it can be left outdoors year-round.
New to these scales? The USDA hardiness zone map explained covers how the zone numbers work, and you can find your own zone with the zone finder.
Minimum temperature — and what happens below it
Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about −15 to −10 °C. Common Jasmine is built for winter — once established it takes hard frost and snow in its stride.
Concretely, for common jasmine as it gets too cold:
- It tolerates winter lows to about −15 to −10 °C once established.
- Below its rated zone, the visible damage is browned or blackened top growth and, in the worst case, a killed crown or root.
- First-year, newly planted, or container-grown specimens are noticeably less hardy than established garden plants — the roots are exposed.
Can common jasmine go outside or overwinter — and where?
- Plant it out within USDA 7-10 and it overwinters with little or no help.
- It does not want to come indoors — a warm winter room actually weakens a hardy plant by denying it dormancy.
- The real risks in its range are waterlogging, wind-rock on young plants, and a late hard frost on new growth — not ordinary winter cold.
Work back from your local frost dates with the frost-date calculator: the last spring frost and first autumn frost are what really decide when common jasmine can be outside. US growers can check USDA zones; UK growers should use the RHS hardiness ratings, which match the H5 figure above.
Frost protection for borderline common jasmine
Common Jasmine is right on a hardiness edge in many gardens, so if you are pushing it, these measures buy it the margin it needs:
- At the cold edge of its range, mulch the root zone in late autumn to buffer the deepest freezes.
- Protect container specimens — pots freeze through far faster than open ground, costing roughly a zone of hardiness.
- Shelter new growth from late spring frosts with fleece if a hard night is forecast.
Common Jasmine hardiness — frequently asked questions
Is common jasmine cold hardy?
Yes — common jasmine is genuinely cold hardy. Rated RHS H5 and USDA 7-10, it lives outdoors all year and needs winter cold rather than protection from it. An outdoor plant. Common Jasmine is hardy across USDA 7-10; it belongs in the ground or a frost-proof container, not on a windowsill, and many types actively need a cold winter to perform.
What is the minimum temperature common jasmine can survive?
Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about −15 to −10 °C. Common Jasmine is built for winter — once established it takes hard frost and snow in its stride.
What hardiness zone is common jasmine?
Common Jasmine is rated USDA 7-10 and RHS H5 — Hardy in most of the UK and in cold winters.
Can common jasmine survive winter outside?
Plant it out within USDA 7-10 and it overwinters with little or no help. It does not want to come indoors — a warm winter room actually weakens a hardy plant by denying it dormancy. The real risks in its range are waterlogging, wind-rock on young plants, and a late hard frost on new growth — not ordinary winter cold.
How do I protect common jasmine from frost?
At the cold edge of its range, mulch the root zone in late autumn to buffer the deepest freezes. Protect container specimens — pots freeze through far faster than open ground, costing roughly a zone of hardiness. Shelter new growth from late spring frosts with fleece if a hard night is forecast.
Keep reading
- Common Jasmine care — the full brief (light, water, soil, problems, pet safety)
- USDA hardiness zones — find yours and what grows there
- Is common jasmine hardy in the UK? — the RHS-rating version
- RHS hardiness ratings — the UK system explained
- Frost-date calculator — your real outdoor window
- The USDA hardiness zone map, explained
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- All 1284plant hardiness & min-temp guides