Camellia sinensis

Camellia sinensis

Camellia sinensis is the tea plant, an evergreen shrub valued for young leaves used to make green, oolong, and black teas. It stands out for small, fragrant white fall flowers and for tolerating regular clipping for leaf harvest. It performs best in sun to part shade with acidic, well‑drained soil and steady moisture. Typical hardiness is USDA zones 7 to 9.

At‑a‑glance

Group/Class: Species

Height × spread: 10–15 ft (3.0–4.6 m) × 6–10 ft (1.8–3.0 m)

Bloom window: October to December

Color & flower form: white, single, yellow stamens

Fragrance: 2 noticeable

USDA hardiness: zones 7–9

Breeder / Year / Origin: unknown, unknown, China

Cut‑flower notes: small stems and blooms; short vase life; better as foliage accent or floating blooms

Pet safety: sources differ; leaves contain caffeine – avoid pet ingestion

How it differs

  • Grown mainly for edible leaves rather than large flowers.
  • Smaller flowers than ornamental camellias but noticeably fragrant.
  • Tolerates and benefits from regular clipping for harvest.
  • Useful as an edible hedge in mild climates.

Strengths

  • Edible leaves for tea making.
  • Fragrant fall bloom for seasonal interest.
  • Dense, manageable shrub with glossy evergreen foliage.

Care in one minute

  • Light: sun to part shade; shelter from drying winter winds where possible.
  • Soil: acidic and organic with excellent drainage; maintain mulch.
  • Water: steady moisture through summer when buds and new leaves form.
  • Feeding: light, balanced fertilizer in spring if needed.
  • Pruning: maintain 3–5 ft (0.9–1.5 m) for harvest; clip after flowering.

Watch‑outs

  • Tea leaves contain caffeine, which is toxic to pets; keep prunings away from animals.
  • Leaf spots, root rot, and scale in stressful or wet conditions.
  • Needs routine pruning to keep harvestable size.

Best uses (tags)

edible hedges; containers; evergreen structure; pollinator gardens

Provenance note

Domesticated in China for tea production over millennia; now grown in warm, humid regions worldwide and as an ornamental in North America.

References

Written by: Your Flowers Guide editorial team
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