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Troubleshooting · Not flowering

Why is my Flowering Dogwood not flowering?

A healthy-looking plant that refuses to bloom — typically light, nutrients, or patience, and sometimes all three at once.

A plant that grows healthy leaves but refuses to bloom is almost always missing one specific trigger: enough light, the right day-length, or the right fertilizer ratio.

Care profile

Water
Medium water
Light
Any light
Difficulty
Beginner

Likely causes

Work through these in order.

Each cause below has a quick check you can do in about thirty seconds. Stop as soon as one matches. You’ve found your answer.

  1. Not enough light

    Flowering takes far more energy than growing leaves, so a plant in marginal light will prioritize foliage and skip the flowers.

    Quick check

    Is the plant in its recommended light range, or a step too dim? A windowsill plant needs closer to the glass than most beginners think.

    What to do

    Move the plant to the brightest spot it can tolerate without burning. For indoor plants, a south- or west-facing window, or a grow light, makes the difference.

  2. Wrong fertilizer ratio

    High-nitrogen fertilizer (the first number on the NPK label) pushes leafy growth at the expense of flowers. Bloom-specific fertilizers have more phosphorus (the middle number).

    Quick check

    Are you using a general-purpose fertilizer with a high first number, like 20-10-10?

    What to do

    Switch to a bloom fertilizer like 10-30-20 or 5-10-10 during the budding season. Reduce nitrogen, don't stop feeding entirely.

  3. Plant is too young

    Many perennials, shrubs, and trees won't flower for one to three years after planting while they establish roots. This is normal and not fixable.

    Quick check

    Was the plant purchased or planted within the last two years?

    What to do

    Be patient. Top up with a balanced fertilizer and make sure light, water, and drainage are good, then wait.

  4. Pruned at the wrong time

    Some plants bloom on old wood (last year's growth), others on new wood. Pruning old-wood bloomers in the wrong season removes the flower buds before they open.

    Quick check

    Did you prune the plant in late winter or early spring? If it's an old-wood bloomer, you pruned off this year's flowers.

    What to do

    Research the specific plant's pruning window. For old-wood bloomers, prune right after flowering, not before.

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This page is beginner-friendly general guidance, not professional horticultural, medical, or veterinary advice. For pet-exposure questions, contact the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center at (888) 426-4435. For persistent plant-health issues, your local university cooperative extension office is the best free expert in the country. See our full disclaimer for details.