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NatureZ Edge1500 English Lavender Seeds for Planting Outdoors or Indoors, 90% Germination, Lavender Plants, Non-GMO, Heirloom Herb Seeds (1 Pack)

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$6.99

$ 2 .99 $2.99

In Stock

1.Size:10 Pack


About this item

  • High Germination Rates: Carefully selected lavender seeds with high germination rates; perfect for successful planting
  • Fragrant Blooms: Produces beautifully fragrant lavender flowers; ideal for enhancing gardens, borders, and containers
  • Attracts Pollinators: Lavender plants naturally attract beneficial pollinators like bees and butterflies; supports a healthy garden ecosystem
  • Drought-Tolerant: Lavender is a hardy, drought-tolerant plant that thrives in full sun and well-drained soil; perfect for low-maintenance gardening
  • Versatile Uses: Ideal for creating homegrown lavender sachets, oils, and culinary delights; enjoy the soothing scent and multiple uses of lavender



Product Description

Field of lavender

Yes! You can grow lavender from seed!

Lavender can be tough to grow from seed but our lavender seed packs give your more seeds ensuring your success.

Only the most fresh seeds!

Before any of our seeds are packaged, they undergo laboratory testing to ensure we only deliver seeds with the highest germination rates. Seeds that do not meet our strict standards or are more than 1 year old are donated to various organizations locally so nothing goes to waste

Transplanting lavender

Indoors or Outdoors

Lavender is best started indoors but can be grown both indoors or outdoors.

lavender seeds raw

Saving Seeds

Once you have mature plants, you can save the seeds from your harvest and grow lavender year after year.

1400 Lavender seeds

1400 Seeds per Packet

Each of our packs contains at least 1400 mg of seed. Most packets you would purchase elsewhere only contain 2-300 mg. With more than twice the amount of seeds, your success rate more than doubles!

English Lavender, also known as Vera Lavender

butterfly on lavender plant

How to grow lavender from seed

Lavender is a perennial plant that tends to have low germination rates. This is partially due to the hard outer coating on the seed that protects it during the winter months. For the best chances of success, it is best to cold stratify the seeds.

What is cold stratification?

To give you the best chance of success:

- Take your seeds and soak them in water for 1-2 hours.

- Filter the seeds out using a paper towel.

- Place the seeds into a damp paper towel and seal in a zip lock bag.

- Place the seeds in the refrigerator for 1 month before planting.

- If the seeds start to germinate before the 1 month is over, just remove the seeds and plant them in a pot until they are ready to plant outdoors.


G. Garcia
September 1, 2025
Lavender can be slow to germinate so it takes quite a long time for anything to show up. Once they do sprout, they don't look like lavender leaves. I frankly thought they were weeds but when I rubbed the tiny leaves, they had that unmistakable lavender aroma. I didn't have much luck the first year I sowed them but I took more care and patience the second year and have been rewarded with little lavender plants. I recommend keeping them in a sheltered spot to sprout and grow a few inches before transferring them to the garden. Patience is the word when growing lavender from seed.
HighPlainsHounds
June 25, 2025
I’m an experienced gardener, so I know that starting lavender from seed can be a fussy project. I liked that there was a larger amount of seeds in this packet than you would usually get in most other ones, but that’s about the only good thing I have to say. I soaked the seeds, cold stratified them in the fridge for a month, keeping an eye on them for any sprouting (which there wasn’t), used proper seed starting soil, and still got only six seedlings to sprout after all that. That something like a 0.5% germination rate, quite different from what was promised. And since I had cold stratified them for a month, it was past the 30 days, so I couldn’t ask for a refund. Very disappointed with this product and this seller. Unless you’re going to devote a lot of time and energy to this painstaking process, I wouldn’t recommend growing lavender from seed (it’s not something you can just dump in a pot and it’ll grow), and I definitely wouldn’t recommend using this company’s seeds if you’re going to try it, no matter how tempting the bigger package might be. Very disappointed.
Madeleine
June 16, 2025
Germinated. Looks beautiful and smells great.
Myrtille Fleur
June 10, 2025
These seeds took a long time to sprout and are quite slow to grow. I put them in the soil and waited over a month, but they didn't sprout. I thought maybe they're dead or just not good. So, I decided to just use the pots to sow some cilantro seeds. Cilantro sprouted within a week, and started growing. Then, after about a month more, I saw little sprouts of different leaves coming out in between the cilantro. I waited and little more, and smelled them. They smelled like lavender. lol. I was quite taken by surprise, and not sure how to handle this now that I have cilantro and lavender growing in the same pot.I tried to uproot the cilantro carefully to leave the lavender in. I managed to save a few per pot. And I am now waiting for them to grow. It's been another few weeks and they still are really quite small, like not even 2 inches tall. I guess they are kind of slow to grow by their nature? I'm not sure as I've never grown lavender before.But nevertheless, the seeds did sprout after 2 months. So, they need a little patience and care still, even if nothing is happening in the pots for this whole time. Keep watering as needed and they should sprout. I hope they pick up some spreed in growing, as I would really love to be able to transplant them in the garden.
Steve
April 23, 2025
Placed these in a jar and they grow wonderful
G. L. Stone
March 20, 2025
For cold germination; however the instructions never said how to get the seeds off the wet paper towel, or if I should let the paper towel and the seeds dry before I sowed them. I'm new at this, so I apologize for my ignorance if that's something that I should have known. I went ahead and planted the seeds that I could get off the paper towel and put the paper towel with most of the seeds, under some dirt, as well, to see if maybe something would sprout. Nothing has sprouted as of yet. Still hopeful, though!!
Kelly
February 5, 2025
I am not a plant whisperer by any means, only the toughest plants survive in my household! 🤣 I have pretty severe chronic anxiety, so I figured I would try and grow some lavender plants in my apartment to help with my symptoms. I put them into a wet paper towel and refrigerated them for a month to mimic winter per the instructions, and then planted them. They are growing!
Angelique
January 27, 2025
The product never grew for me and usually I can get anything in the grow
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