Garden and Outdoor Living Products on Amazon

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From the first seeds of spring to a warm evening under outdoor lights, the garden is where home extends into the open air. This page covers everything for gardeners, growers, and outdoor enthusiasts โ€” tools, plants, structures, furniture, and the equipment that turns a patch of ground into something special.

Whether you are maintaining a lawn, building raised beds, setting up a greenhouse, or designing an outdoor entertaining space, the departments below are organised to help you find exactly what you need on Amazon.

The buttons on this page are organised by department to help you navigate directly to the right section of your local Amazon store. Use the search bar above to find something specific, or browse by department to see what is available.

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Shop Garden & Outdoor Living on Amazon

Browse every department โ€” lawn care, hand tools, power equipment, planting supplies, greenhouses, garden structures, ponds, wildlife, and outdoor living essentials.

Seeds, bulbs, raised beds, compost, soil testing, greenhouses, hydroponics, and indoor growing equipment for every stage of the growing season.

Sheds, garden rooms, arches, edging, storage, ponds, water features, ornaments, bird feeders, beekeeping, and poultry supplies.

Outdoor furniture, gazebos, parasols, lighting, heaters, fire pits, grills, rugs, and doormats for comfortable outdoor entertaining spaces.

Lawn Care

Lawn Care

Keep your lawn in top condition all year round. Mowers for every size of garden, robotic mowers for hands-free maintenance, strimmers for the edges, leaf blowers for autumn tidying, and fertilisers to keep the grass healthy and green.

Garden Hand Tools & Equipment

The essential hand tools that every gardener reaches for daily. Spades, forks, trowels, secateurs, pruning saws, kneelers, wheelbarrows, and sprayers for feeding and treating plants.

The Year-Round Lawn: What to Do and When

A healthy lawn does not happen by accident, but it does not require obsessive attention either. The secret is doing the right things at the right times of year. Most lawn problems โ€” bare patches, moss, yellowing, weeds โ€” trace back to doing too much of one thing or neglecting another at a critical moment in the growing cycle.

Spring is when the lawn wakes up. As soil temperatures rise above about six degrees Celsius, grass starts growing again and this is the time for the first cut โ€” set the mower high, removing no more than a third of the blade length. Scalping a lawn in early spring stresses the grass and gives weeds an advantage. This is also the ideal window for overseeding bare patches: scatter seed, rake it in lightly, and keep the area damp for two to three weeks. A spring feed with a nitrogen-rich fertiliser gives the grass the energy it needs for the growing season ahead. By late spring, the lawn should be thick enough to crowd out most weeds naturally.

Summer, Autumn, and the Often-Forgotten Winter

Summer brings its own challenges. During dry spells, resist the urge to water daily โ€” this encourages shallow roots. Instead, water deeply once a week or simply let the lawn go dormant. Brown grass in a British summer almost always recovers once the rain returns. Raise the mower height in hot weather to shade the soil and reduce moisture loss. Autumn is arguably the most important season for lawn care. Scarifying โ€” raking out the layer of dead grass (thatch) that builds up at soil level โ€” allows air and water to reach the roots. Aerating with a garden fork or hollow-tine aerator relieves compaction from summer use. An autumn feed high in potassium strengthens the grass for winter. In winter, the best thing you can do for your lawn is stay off it when it is frozen or waterlogged. Walking on frozen grass snaps the blades, leaving brown footprints that persist until spring growth fills them in.

Power Tools & Machinery

Heavy-duty tools for serious garden work. Chainsaws, hedge trimmers, pole saws, tillers, wood chippers, log splitters, pressure washers, and traditional axes for the jobs that hand tools cannot handle.

Planting & Growing

Everything to help plants thrive. Raised beds, containers, seeds and bulbs, compost and growing media, soil testing, plant protection netting, and cold frames to extend the growing season.

Growing from Seed: The Most Rewarding Way to Fill a Garden

There is something almost magical about watching a tiny seed transform into a plant that produces food you can eat or flowers you can cut for the kitchen table. Growing from seed is also far more economical than buying established plants โ€” a single packet of tomato seeds can produce more plants than most people have space for, at a fraction of the cost of buying seedlings from a garden centre.

The key to success with seeds is timing and temperature. Most vegetable and flower seeds need warmth to germinate โ€” typically between 15 and 25 degrees Celsius โ€” which in the UK means starting them indoors on a warm windowsill or in a heated propagator from late winter onwards. Tomatoes, peppers, and aubergines need the earliest start, sown in February or March. Courgettes, squash, and French beans can wait until April because they grow fast and resent root disturbance from being potted on too many times. Hardy annuals like calendula, cornflowers, and poppies can be sown directly outdoors in March or April where they are to grow โ€” no windowsill required.

The Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Overwatering kills more seedlings than underwatering. Seed compost should be damp but never waterlogged โ€” if you squeeze a handful and water drips out, it is too wet. Damping off, a fungal disease that causes seedlings to collapse at soil level overnight, thrives in cold, wet, poorly ventilated conditions. Good air circulation, moderate watering, and not sowing too thickly are the defences. The other common error is hardening off too quickly. Seedlings raised indoors need at least a week of gradual exposure to outdoor conditions โ€” a few hours outside on mild days, brought back in at night โ€” before they can cope with wind, direct sun, and cool temperatures. Skipping this step produces shocked plants that stall for weeks. Patience at this stage pays off with stronger, more productive plants that establish quickly once they are finally planted out.

Watering, Irrigation & Composting

Keep your garden watered and your soil enriched. Hoses, sprinklers, drip irrigation systems, composting equipment, and kitchen caddies for turning waste into garden gold.

Greenhouses & Indoor Growing

Extend the growing season and grow crops year round. Greenhouses in every size, hydroponic systems for soil-free growing, and indoor grow lights for starting seedlings and growing plants indoors.

Garden Rooms and Log Cabins: Adding Year-Round Living Space

The garden room has evolved from a simple summer house into a genuine extension of the home. Used as offices, gyms, studios, therapy rooms, and social spaces, a well-built garden room adds usable square footage without the cost, disruption, or planning complications of a traditional house extension.

The range of options has expanded considerably. At one end, flat-pack summer houses offer an affordable retreat for warm-weather use. At the other, fully insulated log cabins with double-glazed windows, electric heating, and wired internet connections function as comfortable workspaces throughout the British winter. The critical difference between a three-season building and a year-round one is insulation and ventilation. A garden room intended for winter use needs wall insulation of at least 50 millimetres, a properly insulated floor raised above ground level on bearers, double or triple glazing, and adequate ventilation to prevent condensation. Without these, the space becomes an expensive shed that is too cold from October to April.

Planning Permission and Practical Considerations

Most garden buildings fall under permitted development rights, meaning no planning permission is required provided they meet certain conditions: single storey, no higher than 2.5 metres at the eaves if within two metres of a boundary, not covering more than fifty percent of the garden area, and not used as self-contained living accommodation. However, these rules vary in conservation areas and for listed buildings, so checking with your local planning authority before ordering is always worthwhile. The foundation matters more than most people realise. A level, well-drained base โ€” concrete pad, paving slabs on compacted hardcore, or adjustable foundation pads โ€” prevents the building from settling unevenly and developing structural problems. Skimping on the base to save money is false economy that creates problems that are expensive to fix once the building is in place.

Garden Structures & Storage

Sheds, log cabins, garden rooms, arches, trellises, edging, and outdoor storage solutions. Build the framework that defines your garden's layout and keeps everything organised.

Ponds, Dรฉcor & Water Features

Add character and life to your garden. Ponds and pond equipment, decorative water features, bird baths, garden fountains, ornaments, and decorative touches that bring personality to outdoor spaces.

Creating a Wildlife-Friendly Garden: Small Changes with Big Impact

You do not need acres of countryside to support wildlife. Even a small urban garden can become a vital habitat for birds, bees, hedgehogs, frogs, and dozens of insect species โ€” and the changes needed to make it happen are surprisingly simple. In many cases, doing less is more effective than doing more.

The single most impactful change is adding a water source. A shallow dish of clean water, refreshed daily, attracts birds within days. A small wildlife pond โ€” even one made from a buried washing-up bowl with sloping sides so creatures can climb in and out โ€” transforms a garden's ecology almost overnight. Frogs, newts, dragonflies, and water beetles will find it within a season, often without any deliberate introduction. Surrounding the pond with long grass and a few flat stones for basking creates a complete micro-habitat. Bird feeders are the next step: sunflower hearts attract the widest range of species, while nyjer seed brings in goldfinches and fat balls sustain birds through cold weather when natural food is scarce.

The Case for Untidiness

The most wildlife-friendly thing you can do is leave parts of the garden a little untidy. A log pile in a shaded corner becomes home to beetles, woodlice, fungi, and overwintering amphibians. A patch of nettles feeds caterpillars of red admiral and small tortoiseshell butterflies. Fallen leaves raked into a quiet corner create shelter for hedgehogs and habitat for invertebrates. Cutting the lawn less frequently โ€” even just leaving a strip unmowed โ€” allows wildflowers to establish and provides nectar for pollinators. These are not compromises with garden aesthetics; they are deliberate design choices that create a living, dynamic space far more interesting than a sterile lawn with bare soil borders. The hedgehog population in Britain has declined dramatically in recent decades, and one of the simplest things any gardener can do is cut a thirteen-centimetre hole in the bottom of a fence panel to allow hedgehogs to travel between gardens on their nightly foraging routes.

Garden Wildlife & Smallholding

Attract and support wildlife in your garden, or take the next step into beekeeping and poultry keeping. Bird feeders, bee supplies, and chicken coops for gardens of all sizes.

Outdoor Living Space That Works in Every Season

Designing an Outdoor Living Space That Works in Every Season

The best outdoor spaces are not the ones that look perfect in a summer photograph โ€” they are the ones that get used from March to November because someone thought carefully about comfort, shelter, and practicality rather than just aesthetics. An outdoor living area that works in the unpredictable British climate needs to account for wind, rain, shade, and the fact that evenings get cool surprisingly quickly even in midsummer.

Start with shelter. A pergola, gazebo, or retractable awning provides shade in summer and protection from light rain, extending the usable hours of the space dramatically. Position it where it blocks the prevailing wind โ€” in most of Britain, that means the west or south-west side โ€” and the space becomes comfortable on days when an exposed patio would be unusable. A solid fence or hedge on the windward side achieves the same effect. Once you have shelter, lighting transforms the space for evening use. Festoon lights strung overhead create atmosphere, while solar-powered path lights provide practical illumination without wiring. A combination of ambient and task lighting lets the space transition naturally from afternoon relaxation to evening entertaining.

Warmth and All-Weather Comfort

Heat extends the outdoor season by weeks at each end. A fire pit provides warmth, a focal point, and the primal appeal of an open flame that draws people together in a way no other garden feature manages. Chimeneas offer directional warmth with less smoke. Electric or gas patio heaters provide instant, controllable heat without the ritual of lighting a fire. Underfoot, an outdoor rug defines the living area and adds warmth โ€” modern polypropylene rugs designed for outdoor use are waterproof, UV-resistant, and can be hosed clean. Furniture should be chosen for comfort and durability rather than appearance alone. Aluminium frames resist rust, hardwood weathers gracefully with annual oiling, and synthetic rattan offers the look of natural wicker without the maintenance. Add good-quality outdoor cushions with waterproof covers that can stay out in a shower, and the space becomes genuinely inviting โ€” the kind of place where an afternoon cup of tea turns into an evening under the stars without anyone suggesting moving indoors.

Outdoor Living and Entertaining

Outdoor Living and Entertaining

Turn your garden into an extension of your home. Furniture, gazebos, parasols, lighting, heaters, fire pits, grills, rugs, and doormats for creating comfortable outdoor spaces that work day and evening, spring through autumn.

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