• DIY
    • Crafts
      • Outdoors & Garden Projects
    • Decorating
      • Exterior Painting & Decorating
      • Painting & Wallpaper
      • Room by Room
    • Furniture
      • Cabinets
      • Tables
    • Woodworking
  • Home Improvement
    • Real Estate
    • Living
    • Entertaining
    • Home Building & Design
      • Home Interior
      • Home Exterior
    • Home Management
      • Home Organization
    • Remodeling
    • Living Areas
    • Bathroom
    • Kitchen
  • Lawn & Garden
    • Lawn Care
    • Vegetable Gardening
    • Landscaping
      • Irrigating
    • Flowers
    • Trees & Shrubs
  • Categories
    • Home Improvement
    • Lawn & Garden
    • Landscaping
    • Real Estate
Housesumo.com
  • DIY
    • Crafts
      • Outdoors & Garden Projects
    • Decorating
      • Exterior Painting & Decorating
      • Painting & Wallpaper
      • Room by Room
    • Furniture
      • Cabinets
      • Tables
    • Woodworking
  • Home Improvement
    • Real Estate
    • Living
    • Entertaining
    • Home Building & Design
      • Home Interior
      • Home Exterior
    • Home Management
      • Home Organization
    • Remodeling
    • Living Areas
    • Bathroom
    • Kitchen
  • Lawn & Garden
    • Lawn Care
    • Vegetable Gardening
    • Landscaping
      • Irrigating
    • Flowers
    • Trees & Shrubs
  • Categories
    • Home Improvement
    • Lawn & Garden
    • Landscaping
    • Real Estate
Featured of Fast Growing Vines for Privacy
  • Landscaping
  • DIY
  • Lawn & Garden

Fast Growing Vines for Privacy

  • Perla Irish
  • July 6, 2019
Total
27
Shares
27
0
0
0

Blooming vines are an ideal screening choice for smaller downtown residences and urban lots when space is too limited for privacy trees or hedge shrubs.

Fast growing vines, in a matter of weeks, can provide screening from undesirable views, neighbors, and reduce noise levels.

Fast Growing Vines for Privacy
Fast Growing Vines for Privacy

Vines can be used for permanent screening or for temporary privacy as slower growing plants establish. Some vines twine, some have tendrils that grasp and support the plant and others will need to be trained and tied to structures for support.

Fast Growing Vines for Privacy


Read Also:

  • 11 Landscaping and Gardening Hacks That Are Going to Change Your Life Forever
  • Diagnosing Plant Problems, The Most Common Plant Diseases and How to Cure Them
  • Learn How to Make a Butterfly Garden in Your Own Backyard
  • How to Keep Your Houseplants Alive and Healthy
  • Creating a Knot Garden in a Small Yard
  • Install a Wood Fence in 7 Steps

Honeysuckle Vines

Honeysuckle vines are highly desirable vines used for screening and privacy. They are attractive plants and are effective at attracting hummingbirds and desirable insects.

Honeysuckle Vines
Honeysuckle Vines

Fast growing and extremely drought tolerant, the dense vines are a sanctuary for bird nests in the spring and will provide screening for privacy in the winter months.

Trumpet Creeper Vines

Trumpet Creeper Vines
Trumpet Creeper Vines

The Trumpet Creeper vine is a fast-growing vine which attracts hummingbirds and desirable insects like a magnet.

Unlike the honeysuckle vine, however, the Trumpet Vine is highly invasive and must be constantly kept in check. This vine is long-blooming and its bright red-orange flowers are a beautiful sight to behold in the summer.

Jackman Clematis Vines

Jackman Clematis Vines
Jackman Clematis Vines

The Jackman Clematis vines are one of the more popular types of clematis for the homeowner. The fast growth will cover a trellis or fencing in one growing period and provide a solid carpet of blooms for enjoyment year after year.

Colors range from blue to pale pink. The flowers are an attraction to butterflies and bees and the dense vines provide privacy screening in the winter months.

Sweet Autumn Clematis

Sweet Autumn Clematis
Sweet Autumn Clematis

The Sweet Autumn Clematis derives the name from the profuse blooms produced in the autumn. This vine grows 10-15 feet per growing season and produces a thick mass of vines that will screen for privacy and noise reduction during the winter months.

The sweet aroma of the blooms can be easily noticed from 20-25 feet from the location of the vine, and even farther when the wind is blowing. Bees and butterflies alike are drawn to the sweet and flat white flowers of this beautiful blooming vine.

Arctic Kiwi Vine

Actinidia Kolomikta - Arctic Kiwi Vine
Arctic Kiwi Vine (Actinidia kolomikta)

The Arctic Kiwifruit Vine (Actinidia kolomikta) lives up to the name. It is hardy to -40 degrees F. This vine is a twining vine that can reach heights of 10 feet or more and the main attraction of the vine is the variegated leaves in the spring season.

Each leaf may have the colors of white, green and pink. It is a thick and hardy vine for screening purposes.

Virginia Creeper Vine

Virginia Creeper Vine
Virginia Creeper Vine

One of the fastest growing vines, the Virginia Creeper can completely cover a lattice in a matter of weeks. Often mistaken for the common poison ivy plant, this woody vine produces a berry that is eaten by many small animals and birds. Mice, chipmunks, squirrels, cattle, and deer will munch on the leaves and vines.

Although considered invasive in parts of the United States, it is also cultivated as an ornamental in other areas. The plant thrives in partial shade to full sun and tolerates a wide range of soil conditions. It prefers acidic soil. A rampant grower, this vine can have a climbing height of 60 feet with a spread of over 50 feet. It must be kept in check.

Euonymus Climbing Vine – Evergreen

Euonymus Climbing Vine – Evergreen
Euonymus Climbing Vine – Evergreen

There are many types of euonymus vines, not all are climbers. The vine is evergreen and gives a dense screening year-round. It is a killer of trees if allowed to grow on them as the dense and vigorous vine will eventually cover the tree’s foliage and prevent photosynthesis.

This vine is best confined to a permanent fence structure or trellis. It is highly invasive and must be kept in check.

Wisteria Vine

Japanese and Chinese Wisteria Vines are beautiful. They can be invasive, especially in the southern regions of the United States. For North America, the preferred Wisteria is the American Wisteria vine.

It is less invasive and also blooms more quickly. The Wisteria Vine is beautiful in bloom, hardy and will grow quickly and live for many years.

Wisteria Vine
Wisteria Vine

Vines have a place in garden decorating that cannot be replaced by other plants. They have the ability to produce a large number of flowers in minimal space. Careful consideration of location, plant needs, and weather conditions must be considered when choosing climbing vines for privacy.

Visiting a local nursery or contacting a local Landscape Architect will provide valuable information, save time, and expense.

0
0
27
0
Total
27
Shares
Pin it 27
Share 0
Tweet 0
Share 0
Share 0
Previous Article
Featured of How to Create Your Own Yellow Brick Road in the Garden
  • Landscaping
  • DIY
  • Lawn & Garden

How to Create Your Own Yellow Brick Road in the Garden

  • Perla Irish
  • July 4, 2019
View Post
Next Article
featured image - The Complete Checklist of Move-Out Cleaning
  • Home Improvement
  • DIY

The Complete Checklist of Move-Out Cleaning

  • Perla Irish
  • July 8, 2019
View Post

You May Also Like

Temporary ground protection panels installed over lawn beside a residential patio to prevent surface damage during an outdoor event
View Post
  • Lawn & Garden
  • Lawn Care

How to Protect Your Lawn and Outdoor Surfaces During Events (Before Damage Sets In)

  • Perla Irish
  • February 23, 2026
Side-by-side comparison of casement and double hung windows in a modern home interior
View Post
  • Remodeling

Replace Casement Window with Double Hung? Structural & Code Impacts

  • Perla Irish
  • February 20, 2026
New residential asphalt driveway with smooth surface and landscaped edges
View Post
  • Home Improvement

Asphalt Driveway Advantages vs Concrete: Cost, Lifespan & Structural Value

  • Perla Irish
  • February 20, 2026
Modest kitchen with wood-look faux butcher block countertop
View Post
  • Kitchen

DIY Faux Butcher Block Countertops: Cost, Durability & Long-Term Reality

  • Perla Irish
  • February 14, 2026
Modular furniture components arranged as an adaptive interior system rather than fixed standalone pieces.
View Post
  • Furniture

Modular Furniture Beyond Sofas: Designing Interiors That Adapt Over Time

  • Perla Irish
  • January 27, 2026
Flexible living room interior layout illustrated as a system, showing modular seating, storage, and furniture arranged for long-term adaptability rather than fixed styling.
View Post
  • Home Interior

Flexible Living Room Layouts: Designing Spaces That Adapt Over Time

  • Perla Irish
  • January 26, 2026
Neutral living space illustrating eco-friendly interior design through flexible layout and long-term adaptability.
View Post
  • Home Interior

Transforming Your Home With Eco-Friendly Interior Design

  • Perla Irish
  • January 26, 2026
Illustration showing a neutral living room layout with abstract seating zones and circulation space.
View Post
  • Furniture

What Is a Modular Sofa and Why It Works for Modern Living Rooms

  • Perla Irish
  • January 21, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Join 13,000 folks!

Get instant access to our weekly newsletter where we share the best! 100% Privacy. No Spam.

  • Disclosure & Affiliate Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • About
  • Sitemap
  • Contact Us

Input your search keywords and press Enter.