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Pest x crop · Aphids on roses

How to get rid of aphids on roses

High — act quickly

What aphids look like on roses

Bright green rose aphids (Macrosiphum rosae) cluster densely on the youngest stems, flower buds, and emerging leaves. Buds open distorted; ant trails climb the cane.

For the full set of aphids damage symptoms across host crops, see our Aphids identification page.

Why roses attracts aphids

Roses produce flushes of soft new growth all summer, exactly the tender tissue rose aphids specialise on. The RHS lists rose aphid as one of the most common UK garden pests.

Severity for this combo: High — act quickly. When to act: From the first spring leaf flush onwards — rose aphids appear earlier than most natural predators are active, so manual intervention is needed in April-May (UK) or March-April (US southern states).

Step-by-step control protocol

This is the integrated-pest-management protocol — non-chemical control first, biological and organic options second, conventional sprays only as a labelled last resort. Total cycle: about three weeks for most home cases.

  1. Confirm the pest. Inspect the plant — look for curled, distorted, or yellowing new growth. If unsure, photograph the affected area and open Growli for instant species ID.
  2. Isolate where possible. Move container-grown roses away from healthy plants. For outdoor beds, mark the affected row so you can monitor it daily.
  3. Apply non-chemical control first. Strong water blast every 2-3 days to dislodge colonies
  4. Add biological or organic spray. Strong jet of water from a garden hose every 2-3 days through spring, plus weekly insecticidal soap. Plant garlic, chives, or catmint at the rose base. Avoid systemic neonicotinoids — they kill the pollinators visiting your blooms.
  5. Repeat on schedule. Most aphids protocols need repeating every 5-7 days for three weeks to catch each new hatch. Most aphid species reproduce asexually in warm weather — females are born already pregnant. A new generation hatches every 7-10 days, which is why single-spray treatments fail and a 3-week protocol is needed.
  6. Monitor and prevent recurrence. Inspect roses weekly for the rest of the season. Reflective silver mulch under outdoor vegetables (reduces winged-aphid colonisation by 70-80 percent)

Best biological control for aphids on roses

For greenhouse, polytunnel, conservatory, and indoor production on roses, biological control gives long-term suppression without the residue or pollinator harm of synthetic sprays:

Organic spray options

Insecticidal soap (1-2 percent solution) and neem oil are the standard organic-approved sprays — apply to thorough wetness in early morning or late evening, repeat every 4-7 days. Pyrethrin is a stronger short-residue option for outbreaks. Avoid neonicotinoids on flowering plants (UK HSE rejected emergency use in January 2025; pollinator risk is documented).

Pesticide safety: Always read the product label and follow manufacturer's PPE, dosage, and re-entry guidance. Pesticide approvals change — confirm via the UK HSE pesticide register or US EPA before use.

Prevention going forward

Common mistakes when treating aphids on roses

Frequently asked questions

How do I get rid of aphids on roses?
Strong jet of water from a garden hose every 2-3 days through spring, plus weekly insecticidal soap. Plant garlic, chives, or catmint at the rose base. Avoid systemic neonicotinoids — they kill the pollinators visiting your blooms. Most aphid species reproduce asexually in warm weather — females are born already pregnant. A new generation hatches every 7-10 days, which is why single-spray treatments fail and a 3-week protocol is needed.
What do aphids look like on roses?
Bright green rose aphids (Macrosiphum rosae) cluster densely on the youngest stems, flower buds, and emerging leaves. Buds open distorted; ant trails climb the cane.
When should I treat aphids on roses?
From the first spring leaf flush onwards — rose aphids appear earlier than most natural predators are active, so manual intervention is needed in April-May (UK) or March-April (US southern states).
Why are aphids attracted to roses?
Roses produce flushes of soft new growth all summer, exactly the tender tissue rose aphids specialise on. The RHS lists rose aphid as one of the most common UK garden pests.
What is the best biological control for aphids on roses?
Ladybird beetles (Hippodamia convergens, Coccinella septempunctata) — adult eats roughly 50 aphids/day. Strong jet of water from a garden hose every 2-3 days through spring, plus weekly insecticidal soap. Plant garlic, chives, or catmint at the rose base. Avoid systemic neonicotinoids — they kill the pollinators visiting your blooms.
Will aphids on roses spread to other plants?
Yes. Aphids from roses typically migrate to nearby susceptible hosts — see the affected-crops list on the main aphids page. Quarantine, sticky traps, and weekly inspections of neighbouring plants are essential.
Are pesticides safe to use on roses?
Insecticidal soap, horticultural oil, neem oil, and Bti are the safest options for edible and indoor roses. Always read the product label and follow manufacturer's PPE, dosage, and re-entry guidance. Pesticide approvals change — confirm via the UK HSE pesticide register or US EPA before use.

Sources

Combo-specific guidance sourced from US Cooperative Extension publications (UC IPM, NC State, UMD, UMN, Penn State, CSU, UF/IFAS EDIS), Clemson HGIC fact sheets, Royal Horticultural Society guidance, and Cornell NYS IPM Biocontrol fact sheets. Reviewed by the Growli editorial team in May 2026.

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