4) Holly (Inkberry or American): Zones 5-9

Unlike some seasonal options (looking at Forsythia), Holly provides year-round seclusion. Both Inkberry and American varieties make a dense and truly effective evergreen privacy screen. As a bonus, Holly is rated 13/10 bird-friendly; besides shelter, it sometimes offers berries for the feathered snackers.
5) Lilac: Zones 3-7

Plan your best garden yet! This printable 2026 Sowing Calendar tells you exactly when to plant your favorite vegetables, herbs, and flowers for a thriving garden all year long.
Lilac is an icon! It smells like heaven, and even a color wears its name. Although its privacy is seasonal, it offers fine visual protection during warmer months. So choose taller varieties and plant them closely to maximize their screening effect. It is growing moderately fast and rewards your patience with a bunch of breathtaking flowers each spring. The eventual bare branches are a worthy trade-off.
6) Viburnum: Zones 2-9

Arrowwood, Koreanspice, and Leatherleaf are just a few of the many Viburnum kin, all celebrated for their notably dense foliage.
Thick and bushy, many Viburnums are alfa-shrubs with often fragrant white blooms. Excellent candidates for creating substantial outdoor privacy, these cousins are both pretty and effective yard guards.
7) Red Twig Dogwood: Zones 2-7

There’s more than meets the eye with Red Twig Dogwood, especially when winter comes. Leafy in summer, its bright red stems are what truly sets it apart from other seasonal privacy shrubs. It is hardy, adaptable, fast and furious…-ly red.
8) Spirea: Zones 3-8

Plan your best garden yet! This printable 2026 Sowing Calendar tells you exactly when to plant your favorite vegetables, herbs, and flowers for a thriving garden all year long.
Don’t underestimate the privacy potential of Spirea. Yes, it is mostly celebrated for its generous seasonal flowers, available in a wide range of colors and sizes.
Still, many varieties also have a habit of compact and full growth. It provides a surprisingly effective visual barrier during the growing season and is easy to maintain.
9) Butterfly Bush: Zones 5-9

Butterfly Bush is not always the first plant that comes to mind for dense privacy. It usually does offer substantial growth and provide an effective green screen.
Yet, it is more famous for being a LVL 100 pollinator magnet. What a row of Butterfly Bushes lacks in a somewhat see-through privacy department, it makes up for by creating buzz.
10) Mock Orange (Philadelphus): Zones 4-8

Someone must have been jealous of Philadelphus and called it Mock Orange. After all, it is elegant, easy to grow, and has white, stunningly fragrant and sweet flowers. So what if they resemble orange blossoms? And are also citrus-scented. Whoever enjoyed its sensory richness and leafy barrier never mocked it again.
11) Pittosporum: Zones 8-11

Plan your best garden yet! This printable 2026 Sowing Calendar tells you exactly when to plant your favorite vegetables, herbs, and flowers for a thriving garden all year long.
Someone sometime noticed that Pittosporum has soft white timber and thought to call it Cheesewood. It stuck. No matter how hard it tried to refute that reputation with dense, low-maintenance, well-behaved growth and an attractive and effective evergreen screen.
Many of its varieties even offer appealing foliage in shades of green, silver, or even burgundy! No luck. At least it smells really gouda, that’s a relief.
12) Texas Sage (Silverleaf): Zones 8-11

Howdy, y’all lookin’ for a privacy shrub that can take on the sun without so much as a whimper. Silverleaf is tougher than a two-dollar steak in July, loves the heat, and ain’t too picky about waterin’.
Its leaves got this real purdy, silvery-gray sheen to ’em. Plant a few of these fellas side-by-side, and they’ll grow up nice and bushy, givin’ you a decent, if a bit airy, screen from pryin’ eyes.
Where to Plant a Privacy Bush for Maximum Privacy?

Planting right along your property lines is a smart move for instant privacy. Then, create even more secluded outdoor living areas around patios, porches, or balconies.
While you’re at it, use staggered planting for a denser, more organic barrier. Try to combine evergreens with flowering shrubs for year-round coverage and seasonal beauty. And don’t forget to give roots room to grow and leaves a little air, too. Happy shrub, happy hub!