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Best Feature Trees for Small Areas: 6 Compact Picks

Best Feature Trees for Small Areas: 6 Compact Picks

Five compact feature trees that deliver impact in courtyards and small gardens.

CourtyardFeature TreeSmall Garden

Small gardens still need feature trees — they just need the right ones. Compact species that stay in proportion, hold their form at scale, and don't outgrow the courtyard in three years.

The six compact features below are the ones we recommend most often for small courtyards, front gardens and tight side strips.

  • Acer palmatum — the small-garden Japanese Maple. Soft palmate leaves and brilliant autumn red on a compact frame.
  • Magnolia 'Little Gem' — the compact polished Magnolia. Glossy cinnamon-backed leaves and fragrant cream summer flowers.
  • Magnolia 'Teddy Bear' — the plushest compact Magnolia. Deep velvety brown undersides on a tight pyramidal frame.
  • Tristaniopsis 'Luscious' — the polished native compact feature. Glossy oversized leaves and smooth cinnamon bark.
  • Olea 'Bambalina' — the compact Mediterranean olive. Silver foliage, sculptural trunk, fits 75L pots and small beds.
  • Lagerstroemia 'Natchez' — the long-flowering compact Crepe Myrtle. White summer flowers, cinnamon trunks, autumn red.

Compare at a glance

CultivarHeightWidthFormFoliageBest if you…
Acer palmatum
Japanese Maple
3 to 5 m2 to 4 mSpreadingPalmate turning red autumnCourtyards and small gardens.
Magnolia grandiflora 'Little Gem'
Little Gem Magnolia
4 to 6 m2 to 3 mUprightDark greenNarrow courtyards and small block features.
Lagerstroemia indica 'Lipan'
Lipan Crepe Myrtle
3 to 5 m2 to 3 mVase-shapedGreen turning red autumnCompact summer-flowering features.
Cercis canadensis 'Forest Pansy'
Forest Pansy Redbud
3 to 5 m3 to 4 mSpreadingBurgundy heart-shapedBurgundy-leaved feature in small spaces.
Laurus nobilis
Bay Tree
3 to 6 m1.5 to 3 mUpright denseAromatic dark greenFormal courtyard features.
Pick by climate
Acer palmatum prefers cool to warm-temperate with part shade. Bambalina loves Mediterranean. Magnolias handle a wide range. Tristaniopsis loves humid coastal. Natchez handles warm temperate to subtropical.
Mature footprint
All six sit at 3 to 5m at maturity — perfect for courtyards. Match the species to the specific width and height your space wants.
Evergreen or deciduous
Little Gem, Teddy Bear, Tristaniopsis and Bambalina are evergreen. Acer palmatum and Natchez are deciduous — seasonal drama with bare winter form.
Sun exposure
Most want full sun. Acer palmatum prefers part shade or filtered light.

1. Acer palmatum (Japanese Maple)

Japanese Maple is the classic small-area feature tree.

Type
Deciduous feature tree
Height
3 to 5 m
Width
2 to 4 m
Growth rate
Slow to moderate
Foliage
Palmate turning red autumn
Form
Spreading
Conditions
Part shade
Maintenance
Low
Best for
Courtyards and small gardens.

Why choose it

Compact size with maximum visual impact.

Perfect pair

Japanese Maple feature with a Bay hedge.

Tips for planting

Avoid afternoon sun.

Small space, big impact.

Shop Acer palmatum

2. Magnolia grandiflora 'Little Gem' (Little Gem Magnolia)

Little Gem is the compact evergreen feature tree.

Type
Evergreen feature tree
Height
4 to 6 m
Width
2 to 3 m
Growth rate
Moderate
Foliage
Dark green
Form
Upright
Conditions
Full sun to part shade
Maintenance
Low
Best for
Narrow courtyards and small block features.

Why choose it

Magnolia presence at half the footprint.

Perfect pair

Little Gem feature with a Murraya hedge.

Tips for planting

Plant in winter or autumn.

Compact Magnolia presence.

Shop Magnolia grandiflora 'Little Gem'

3. Lagerstroemia indica 'Lipan' (Lipan Crepe Myrtle)

Lipan is the compact pink Crepe Myrtle for small features.

Type
Deciduous feature tree
Height
3 to 5 m
Width
2 to 3 m
Growth rate
Fast
Foliage
Green turning red autumn
Flowers
Fuchsia pink summer
Form
Vase-shaped
Conditions
Full sun
Maintenance
Low
Best for
Compact summer-flowering features.

Why choose it

Pink summer flowers on a small frame.

Perfect pair

Lipan feature with a Bay hedge.

Tips for planting

Plant in winter.

Compact summer pink.

Shop Lagerstroemia indica 'Lipan'

4. Cercis canadensis 'Forest Pansy' (Forest Pansy Redbud)

Forest Pansy is the burgundy heart-leaved feature tree for small spaces.

Type
Deciduous feature tree
Height
3 to 5 m
Width
3 to 4 m
Growth rate
Moderate
Foliage
Burgundy heart-shaped
Flowers
Pink early spring
Form
Spreading
Conditions
Full sun to part shade
Maintenance
Low
Best for
Burgundy-leaved feature in small spaces.

Why choose it

Constant burgundy foliage from spring through autumn.

Perfect pair

Forest Pansy feature with a Bay hedge.

Tips for planting

Plant in winter into improved soil.

Burgundy heart leaves.

Shop Cercis canadensis 'Forest Pansy'

5. Laurus nobilis (Bay Tree)

Bay is the formal evergreen feature for small formal courtyards.

Type
Evergreen feature tree
Height
3 to 6 m
Width
1.5 to 3 m
Growth rate
Slow to moderate
Foliage
Aromatic dark green
Form
Upright dense
Conditions
Full sun to part shade
Maintenance
Low, can be pruned to desired height
Best for
Formal courtyard features.

Why choose it

Edible foliage plus formal structure in one plant.

Perfect pair

Bay feature with a Westringia low hedge.

Tips for planting

Trim regularly to maintain shape.

Formal courtyard classic.

Shop Laurus nobilis

How to plant and care for them

Pick the position
Match sun exposure to the species. Allow the mature footprint clear of buildings.
Prepare the planting hole
Twice the width of the rootball, same depth. Mix the original soil with aged compost.
Plant level
Set the rootball level with surrounding soil, never deeper.
Water in deeply at planting
Soak the rootball thoroughly so the new soil settles around the roots.
Mulch out to the drip line
Lay 75 to 100mm of organic mulch from 50mm clear of the trunk.
Water deeply through the first two summers
Twice a week in warm weather, once a week in mild weather.
Light shaping prune
Once a year. Maintain natural form rather than hard pruning.

The wrap up

The six compact feature trees turn small gardens into composed designed spaces. Pick by climate and exposure, plant well, water through the first two summers — the feature does the rest.