My Front Yard Stays Private All Year Round Thanks To This One Plant – It Shields My Home From Nosy Neighbors Perfectly

This glossy evergreen is my absolute favorite when it comes to privacy plants.

Close-up of evergreen hedge cherry laurel shrub under sunlight. Prunus laurocerasus cherry laurel flowering plants, group of white flowers on bush branches
(Image credit: Alina Kostrytsia/Getty Images)

Step into any front yard and you’ll quickly realise how exposed it can feel. Unlike a back garden, where fences and hedges create a sense of retreat, the front of your home is often on full display – open to passers-by, neighbors, and the general hum of the street.

For years, ours felt exactly like that: visible, slightly bare, and lacking that sense of calm privacy you really want at your front door. That all changed, though, thanks to one plant – which my husband (who just so happens to be a professional gardener) brought home with him unexpectedly one day.

Reader, I admit that I was unimpressed. At the time, the bundle of sickly yellow laurels under his arm looked more like end-of-life twigs than thriving privacy plants. Someone had thrown them out, he told me. No kidding, I thought traitorously in response.

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Cherry laurel hedge with lots of white flowers

(Image credit: imageBROKER/Jürgen Pfeiffer / Getty Images)

To me, they looked utterly beyond saving, but he was adamant they just needed a bit of TLC, and so into the back garden (aka my husband's plant hospital) they went. Over the following months, he quietly nurtured them back to health – and, slowly but surely, those tired sprigs began to transform.

Once they were strong enough, he transplanted them into our front yard, and that’s when the real magic happened. Because this one plant flowers in early spring, bringing in pollinators just as the garden begins to wake up, and keeps its dense, glossy leaves all year round.

Best of all? t creates a natural screen that gives us privacy without making the space feel closed off.

The Pros and Cons of Laurel

Laurel, particularly the cherry laurel we've fallen so hard for, is one of those quietly brilliant garden staples that more people should consider, not least of all because of how quickly it establishes. In the right conditions, laurel is a fast grower, meaning you don’t have to wait years for that sense of enclosure.

It’s also incredibly adaptable. Laurel thrives in a range of USDA zones, tolerates both sun and partial shade, and isn’t too fussy about soil type as long as it’s reasonably well-drained. For busy households like ours (we have two very small children and a dog to contend with, not to mention our full-time jobs), that's a VBD, as we don't have the time or energy to pour into anything too high-maintenance.

Honestly, a light trim once or twice a year is enough to keep it looking tidy, and the payoff is more than worth it. Just be aware that all parts of the plant are considered toxic if ingested – I cannot stress this enough: do not eat the laurel, no matter how tasty it may look.

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What I love most about our this one plant is how it manages to do two things at once: some much-needed privacy at the front of the house, and a lot of support for local wildlife, offering shelter, seasonal flowers for pollinators, and a consistent green presence even in the depths of winter.

It’s proof, too, that you don’t always need to start from scratch or spend a fortune to transform a space – even if what you're working with arrives looking a little worse for wear. (My husband would also likely suggest that this plant serves as proof that he is, indeed, sometimes right, but let's not get ahead of ourselves).

Now, when I walk up to our front door, our laurels create a sense of calm and enclosure, and there’s always a gentle buzz of life around it. For something that started as a near-discarded plant, that's not bad going, is it?

Kayleigh Dray
Content Editor

Kayleigh is an enthusiastic (sometimes too enthusiastic!) gardener and has worked in media for over a decade. She previously served as digital editor at Stylist magazine, and has written extensively for Ideal Home, Woman & Home, Homes & Gardens, and a handful of other titles. Kayleigh is passionate about wildlife-friendly gardening, and recently cancelled her weekend plans to build a mini pond when her toddler found a frog living in their water barrel. As such, her garden – designed around the stunning magnolia tree at its centre – is filled to the brim with pollinator-friendly blooms, homemade bird feeders, and old logs for insects to nest in.