• fortunes holly fern growing as a shaded border plant in a woodland garden
  • vibrant green foliage on Fortune's Holly Fern
  • close up view of unique fronds on Fortune's Holly Fern

Images Depict Mature Plants

Fortune's Holly Fern

Cyrtomium fortunei

Fortune’s Holly Fern is a good choice when you want a shade fern with more structure than the usual soft woodland look. The upright, leathery fronds give it a clean, almost architectural feel, and the holly-like leaflets add texture beside hostas, hellebores, heuchera, and carex. Give it shade, moisture, and drainage, and it will settle in as a dependable foliage plant.

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A Cold-Hardy Holly Fern for Evergreen Shade Texture

Bold Holly-Like Fronds for Shaded Gardens

Fortune’s Holly Fern is a handsome shade fern grown for its upright habit, leathery texture, and distinctive holly-like fronds. Unlike softer, feathery ferns, Cyrtomium fortunei has strong, structured foliage that gives shaded beds a more polished, architectural look.

The fronds are typically green to gray-green and divided into glossy, holly-shaped leaflets that add year-round texture in mild climates. In colder regions, the foliage may be semi-evergreen or die back after winter weather, returning with fresh growth in spring.

A Hardy Fern with Strong Landscape Structure

Fortune’s Holly Fern is often valued as a cold-hardy alternative within the holly fern group. It brings the bold texture of Japanese holly ferns into shade gardens where a tougher, more structured fern is needed.

Use it as a specimen fern, a woodland accent, a shaded foundation plant, or a mass planting under trees and shrubs. Its upright shape makes it especially useful near hostas, hellebores, heuchera, brunnera, carex, Japanese forest grass, and other shade perennials with softer foliage.

Low-Maintenance Color Without Flowers

This fern is grown for foliage, not flowers. Its leathery fronds provide a calm, green texture throughout the growing season and help anchor mixed shade beds where flowering perennials come and go.

Because the foliage has a sturdier look than many woodland ferns, Fortune’s Holly Fern works well in more formal shade plantings as well as naturalistic woodland gardens. It can also be used in shaded containers where upright fern texture is needed.

Deer Resistant and Shade Tolerant

Fortune’s Holly Fern is generally considered deer resistant, making it a practical choice for shaded gardens where browsing pressure is common. Deer may sample almost any plant under heavy pressure, but the leathery fronds of holly ferns are usually less appealing than tender foliage plants.

Plant it in part shade to full shade for the best foliage quality. Too much direct sun can bleach or scorch the fronds, especially in hot climates. Morning sun may be acceptable in cooler regions if the soil stays evenly moist.

Easy Care in Moist, Well-Drained Soil

Fortune’s Holly Fern grows best in moist, humus-rich, well-drained soil. Good drainage is important, especially in winter, because constantly wet soil can lead to root problems. Add compost or leaf mold when planting to create the woodland-style soil ferns prefer.

Water regularly after planting until the roots establish. Once established, the plant is relatively low-maintenance, requiring only occasional cleanup of winter-damaged or tired fronds. Mulch with shredded leaves, compost, or fine bark to help conserve moisture and keep the root zone cool.


Growzone: 6-9 Fortune's Holly Fern Hardiness Zones 6-9
Hardiness Zone: 6-9
Mature Height: 1 to 2 Feet
Mature Width: 1 to 1.5 Feet
Sunlight: Part shade to full shade; protect from hot afternoon sun
Soil Moist, humus-rich, well-drained soil
Water Water regularly after planting; prefers even moisture but dislikes soggy winter soil
Bloom Time / Color Non-flowering; grown for foliage texture and year-round color
Ornamental Features Holly-like fern fronds, upright habit, leathery texture, evergreen shade interest, woodland structure
Wildlife Value Provides shade-garden cover and texture; not a nectar or berry plant
Resistance Generally deer resistant; low maintenance; shade tolerant
Landscape Uses Shade garden, woodland garden, under trees, shaded foundation, container, mass planting, fern border, texture plant, companion for hostas and hellebores

How to Care for Fortune's Holly Fern

Before you buy a Fortune's Holly Fern Plant, make sure to read about the care instructions that are recommended to keep this plant healthy and thriving.

How should I plant Fortune’s Holly Fern?

How should I plant Fortune’s Holly Fern?

Plant Fortune’s Holly Fern in part shade to full shade with moist, humus-rich, well-drained soil. Choose a shaded site under trees, along a woodland edge, near a shaded foundation, or in a container where the upright foliage can add structure. Dig a hole slightly wider than the root ball and just as deep. Set the crown level with the surrounding soil, backfill gently, and water thoroughly. Add compost or leaf mold to improve soil texture, and mulch lightly to help conserve moisture.

How often should I water Fortune’s Holly Fern after planting?

How often should I water Fortune’s Holly Fern after planting?

Water Fortune’s Holly Fern deeply after planting, then keep the soil evenly moist while roots establish. During the first growing season, water when the top few inches of soil begin to dry. Established plants prefer steady moisture, especially during hot or dry weather. Avoid planting in soggy soil or areas that stay wet through winter, because good drainage is important for healthy roots.

When should I fertilize Fortune’s Holly Fern?

When should I fertilize Fortune’s Holly Fern?

Fortune’s Holly Fern usually needs little fertilizer when planted in rich woodland-style soil. A light spring topdressing of compost, leaf mold, or a mild slow-release fertilizer is usually enough. Avoid heavy feeding, which can encourage weak growth. Good soil organic matter, even moisture, shade, and drainage are more important than frequent fertilizer.

When and how should I prune Fortune’s Holly Fern?

When and how should I prune Fortune’s Holly Fern?

Prune Fortune’s Holly Fern in late winter or early spring by removing winter-damaged, browned, or tired fronds. Cut old fronds close to the base before new growth fully expands. In mild climates, some fronds may remain evergreen and attractive through winter. Remove only damaged foliage as needed so the plant keeps as much healthy texture as possible.


Frequently Asked questions

Is Fortune’s Holly Fern the same as Cyrtomium fortunei?

How tall does Fortune’s Holly Fern grow?

Does Fortune’s Holly Fern stay evergreen?

Does Fortune’s Holly Fern grow in full shade?

Is Fortune’s Holly Fern deer resistant?

Can Fortune’s Holly Fern grow in containers?


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