🌸🌱 What Flowers to Sow in January (UK Guide)
Last Updated on: January 16, 2026

🌸🌱 What Flowers to Sow in January (UK Guide)

🌱 Introduction: A Head Start on the Flowering Season

January may seem early for flower sowing, but it’s an excellent month to start slow-growing flowers that need a long season to perform well. The key is indoor sowing, warmth, good light, and patience. Done right, January sowing gives you stronger plants and earlier blooms later in the year.

🚨 FLASH AMAZON DEAL RIGHT NOW 🚨
Thursday 30 April 2026

Keter Manor Outdoor Apex Double Door Garden Storage Shed (6 x 8ft)

A durable and stylish beige and brown garden storage shed perfect for storing garden tools, equipment, bikes, and outdoor essentials. Weather-resistant, low maintenance, and ideal for any garden or allotment setup.

🌿 Essential Garden & Allotment Products for April
April is peak planting season — time to get crops in the ground and your garden thriving.

Vegetable Plants & Seedlings
Browse Plants

All-Purpose Compost & Soil Improvers
View Compost

Plant Feed & Fertiliser for Strong Growth
Shop Fertiliser

👉 VIEW THE AMAZON DEAL

⭐ Recommended Gardening Products

1️⃣ Gardening Planner or Journal
Perfect for mapping beds, tracking sowing dates, and learning from what worked last year.
👉 Click here to see it

2️⃣ Seed Storage Box
Keeps seeds dry, organised, and easy to find when sowing season starts.
👉 Click here to see it

3️⃣ Permanent Garden Markers
Ideal for planning now so you remember what’s planted where later in the year.
👉 Click here to see it


🌡️ What January Conditions Mean

In the UK, January brings:

  • Cold temperatures
  • Short daylight hours
  • Regular frosts

➡️ Nearly all flower sowing in January should be done indoors, on a bright windowsill, or in a heated greenhouse.


🌸 Flowers You Can Sow in January (Indoors or Heated Greenhouse)

🌼 Sweet Peas

  • Benefit from early root development
  • Sow in deep pots or root trainers
  • Grow cool but frost-free

Pinch out later for bushier plants and more flowers.


🌸 Lupins

  • Long growing season
  • Sow individually as they dislike root disturbance
  • Germinate in warmth, then grow on cool

Early sowing produces stronger flowering plants.


🌺 Antirrhinums (Snapdragons)

  • Slow to germinate and establish
  • Surface sow — seeds need light
  • Excellent for early summer colour

🌺 Geraniums (Pelargoniums)

  • Very slow-growing from seed
  • Needs warmth (around 20–22°C)
  • Strong light essential after germination

January sowing leads to much earlier flowering.


🌼 Begonias (from seed)

  • Extremely slow to develop
  • Surface sow — do not cover seed
  • Needs warmth and humidity

Patience is essential, but results are rewarding.


🌱 Perennials You Can Sow in January

Many perennials benefit from early sowing:

  • Delphiniums
  • Echinacea
  • Aquilegia
  • Verbena bonariensis

Some perennials germinate better after exposure to winter cold, making January ideal.


🌷 Hardy Annuals You Can Start Early (With Protection)

If you have good protection and light, you can sow small amounts of:

  • Larkspur
  • Cornflowers
  • Nigella

Growth will be slow until daylight levels improve.


🚫 Flowers to Avoid Sowing in January

Avoid fast-growing, warmth-loving flowers:

  • Cosmos
  • Zinnias
  • Sunflowers
  • Nasturtiums

These are best sown from March onwards to avoid weak, leggy plants.


🌱 January Flower Sowing Tips for Success

  • Use fresh seed compost
  • Provide maximum light
  • Avoid overwatering in cold conditions
  • Keep seedlings frost-free
  • Label trays clearly — growth is slow and seedlings look similar

Slow progress is normal in January — don’t panic.


🧠 Key Takeaway

January is perfect for slow-growing flowers and long-season plants. Focus on sweet peas, lupins, antirrhinums, geraniums, begonias, and selected perennials. With warmth, light, and patience now, you’ll enjoy earlier, stronger, and longer-lasting blooms later in the year.

January may be quiet outside — but it’s a powerful month for getting ahead. 🌸

Join our new daily newsletter for tips, advice. recipes, videos plus lots more. Join for free!

📘 Learn How to Grow Your Own Fruit & Vegetables

Growing your own veg is one of the most rewarding things you can do on an allotment or in the garden — saving money, eating better, and enjoying the process from seed to harvest.

Allotment Month By Month: Grow your Own Fruit and Vegetables, know exactly what to do and when, with clear month-by-month guidance that makes growing easier and more successful.

👉 Take a look at this book on Amazon

Table of Contents

Share: