🌺 Geranium Sunlight Calculator
Find out exactly how much sun your geraniums need based on type, location, and climate conditions
| Geranium Type | Min Sun (hrs) | Ideal Sun (hrs) | Sun Tolerance | Spacing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zonal / Common | 4 | 6–8 | Highest | 10–14 in |
| Ivy / Trailing | 4 | 4–6 | Moderate | 10–12 in |
| Scented | 4 | 6–8 | High | 12–18 in |
| Martha Washington / Regal | 4 | 4–6 | Low | 12–16 in |
| Hardy / Cranesbill | 4 | 4–6 | Lowest | 12–24 in |
| Interspecific (Calliope) | 6 | 6–8 | Very High | 12–16 in |
| Climate Zone | Sun Adjustment | Best Timing | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hot (90°F+ / 32°C+) | –1.5 hrs | Morning sun only | Afternoon shade essential, Martha Washington struggles most |
| Warm (80–90°F / 27–32°C) | –0.5 hrs | Morning to midday | Light afternoon shade helps, interspecific handles heat best |
| Moderate (70–80°F / 21–27°C) | No change | Full day OK | Ideal growing conditions for most geranium types |
| Cool (60–70°F / 16–21°C) | +0.5 hrs | Maximum sun | More sun needed to compensate, Martha Washington thrives here |
| Location | Best Types | Sun Notes | Spacing Tips |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outdoor Bed | Zonal, Scented, Interspecific | Full sun 6–8 hrs ideal | Space at recommended intervals for airflow |
| Container | All types | Easy to move for sun control | Can plant slightly closer than bed spacing |
| Hanging Basket | Ivy / Trailing, Interspecific | 4–6 hrs, cascading habit | 3–5 plants per 12 in basket |
| Indoor Windowsill | Scented, Martha Washington | Brightest south or west window | Single plant per 8–10 in pot |
| Geranium Type | Bloom Season | Bloom Style | Indoor/Outdoor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zonal / Common | Spring through frost | Round flower clusters on upright stems | Both |
| Ivy / Trailing | Spring through fall | Cascading clusters, trailing stems | Both |
| Scented | Late spring through summer | Small delicate flowers, aromatic foliage | Both |
| Martha Washington / Regal | Spring to early summer | Large showy ruffled blooms | Both (prefers cool) |
| Hardy / Cranesbill | Late spring through fall | Five-petaled open flowers | Outdoor perennial |
| Interspecific (Calliope) | Spring through frost | Large semi-double clusters | Both (heat tolerant) |
Geraniums like sunshine, but whether something is “sufficient” really depends on the kind that you grow. The yearly types most would like to sit in full Sun when it is possible. Ivy Geraniums are the rebels between them, they most like bright shade and can suffer in too strong, direct rays.
What about the perennials? They are quite flexible, glad in Sun or shade depending on the kind.
How Much Sun Do Geraniums Need?
Here what I found useful as guide: Geraniums need at least four hours of direct sunshine daily to really flower and stay lively. If you give them six or eight hours, they then really benefit. Also bright, indirect light works for that same six to eight hour period if you care about possible sunburn.
When your main goal is flowering, around five to six hours of direct light seems the best amount.
Afternoon shade can help you, especially if it stops burns outside. Partly shady place with filtered sunshine leaves Geraniums glad without stress. Really, they will grow best in full Sun, but they handle a bit of shade without big complaint.
The range of four to eight hours of direct Sun widely works well. Even so, in summer heat keep them outside with enough brightness, while in winter they require more light without problem.
Perennial Geraniums form another case. They benefit with four to six hours of direct sunlight, nicely in partial Sun or shade. Some kinds even struggle under blazing full Sun, just as hydrangeas burn if one does not carefully care.
The Geranium sanguineum, known as bloody cranesbill, handles full Sun well and keeps itself in light shade with filtered light through it.
North balcony that never receives direct rays does not work for Geraniums. Similarly happens with places covered by trees or neighboring houses. When you grow them indoors, south window is your best choice…
It gives the most direct sunlight and helps strong growth. North window gives only indirect light, that does not work four what Geraniums really need to flower.
Here where folks commonly mess up. Those “Geraniums” in garden centers usually are not real Geraniums; they are Geraniums. These lively, Sun-loving plants flower constantly from summer until the first cold.
They are very easy to take care of, do well in drought and benefit in pots, beds or hanging baskets. In short, Geraniums want the most Sun that you can give to them. Leave the ground dry between waterings, feed them steady and they will repay you with years of faithful flowering.
Because Geraniums react to the length of days, at least half of their light use should be direct sunshine… Otherwise they will stop flowering andstop growing. Mix plenty of direct Sun with regular feeding during growing season to make a clear difference in their health.
