Weeds With Flowers: 41 Flowering Weeds With Pictures

Did you find a weed with flowers in your yard, but aren't quite sure what it is? It's important to understand about weeds and if that type is harmful or beneficial to your garden goals. In this article, we examine the most common weeds with flowers to help you identify what stays and what needs to be relocated.

Weed With Flowers Growing in Field

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If you’re here, you likely have an unwanted case of weeds with flowers on your hands, or you’re curious about the beautiful weed-like flower growing harmlessly in your backyard. In either case, a weed is really just a native plant that’s growing where you don’t want it to. Flowering weeds can attract pollinators, and can even be beneficial to your garden.

It’s important to note, we are pollinator friendly here at this site! We don’t advocate you removing weeds with herbicides. But there are circumstances where certain weeds may be dangerous to touch or can cause harm to your gardening goals. So in these circumstances, we recommend relocation, while understanding this isn’t always possible.

In this guide, we identify the many different types of flowering weeds you are likely to encounter in your yard, with pictures to help you identify each of them. Let’s take a look at the most common flowering weeds that may pop up so you can decide which ones are harmless and can stay, and which ones should go.

Bindweed

Bindweed Flowers in Field
Bindweed has flowers that come in several different colors.
Scientific name: Convolvulus arvensis

Bindweed resembles morning glories, with 2-inch trumpet-shaped flowers in white and pink varieties. Sometimes, the flowers come with pink and white stripes. Its flowers bloom in the mid-summer and tend to remain until the fall.

But before its flowers appear, you’ll first notice bindweed vines growing over open land or up any object they come across. They have arrow-shaped leaves and latch tightly to their hosts by wrapping their thin vines tightly around them.

Should you want to intentionally plant bindweed, find dried-out pods on a plant in the wild. Then, crack the pod open and plant the seeds it contains in the fall.

Bindweed grows best in hedges and the outskirts of woods that receive full sun. It has a USDA hardiness of 4 – 8, with this perennial climber growing over six feet in ideal conditions.

Black Medic

Medicago lupulina
Black medic may be mistaken for clover by the initial looks of the plant.
Scientific name: Medicago lupulina

You may mistake black medic as a clover at first, given the heart-shaped nature of its leaves, which grow in groups of three. However, the most notable difference is that black medic is a weed that has yellow flowers instead of white ones.

During the summer, a stem emerges erect from each group of leaves, and small yellow flowers appear that collectively look like pom-poms.

Black medic thrives in tightly compacted soil, such as walkways through your garden and roadsides. It also doesn’t need much organic material, so its presence in your garden is a sign that your soil may need amending.

The plant prefers full or partial sun and neutral or acidic soil. It can handle conditions from coastlines to mountainsides. Black medic can grow in many climates within USDA zones 3a – 9a.

Black Nightshade

Solanum nigrum
Nightshade is a hardy weed that can stand up to many unhospitable growing conditions.
Scientific name: Solanum nigrum

The words “black nightshade” might give you the shivers because it contains the toxin solanine. It’s not safe for consumption for humans, or pets. Black nightshades make this list of weeds with flowers because of their white flowers that bloom starting in late spring.

They continue producing flowers until September and grow about two feet high and one foot wide. As a hermaphrodite, each plant contains male and female organs. Therefore, they rely on insects to pollinate their flowers.

Black nightshades have a high tolerance for less-than-ideal growing conditions. They do well in sandy, loamy, and clay soil. That said, wherever they grow needs good drainage and lots of sunlight. Black nightshades grow in USDA zones 10a – 11.

Canada Thistle

Cirsium arvense
Canada Thistle is a weed that’s very identifiable by it’s purple flowers.
Scientific name: Cirsium arvense

Canada thistle is a weed that extends outside of the great white north. It has an extensive root system that makes it challenging for the average person to prevent the plant from regrowing. This weed’s purple flowers emerge from this plant in the late spring or early summer.

The flowers have a sweet smell, encouraging insects to pollinate the 1,000 – 1,500 seeds it has on each flowering shoot. Canada thistle seeds have impressive hardiness, withstanding water transportation and surviving up to 22 years underground before germinating.

The Canada thistle needs abundant sunlight and cool, well-aerated soil to thrive. It also needs lots of rain—you’ll find it in areas that receive 17 – 35 inches of annual precipitation.

Under these conditions, a single Canada thistle plant can colonize up to six diameters of space within two years. It grows in USDA zones 3a – 10b.

Cat’s Ear

Hypochaeris radicata
Cat’s ear is also known as false dandelion.
Scientific name: Hypochaeris radicata

Cat’s ear is known for its brilliant yellow flowers that contain several layers of petals, resembling a flatter version of a dandelion. The flowers grow from thin, wiry stems and emerge from May to September. They have tiny hairs on their leaves, and you can even eat those leaves in salad.

Once you see cat’s ear pop up in your lawn or garden, you can expect these perennials to sow their seeds well so that they return every year. They tend to grow best where there’s grass, making it even more important for you to weed your garden regularly if you don’t want them there.

Cat’s ear prefers wet environments and holds up relatively well in soil with salt. Therefore, you may find them growing around swamps and salt lakes.

The self-sowing cat’s ear thrives in USDA zones 3a – 11.

Chickweed

Chickweed Flowers
Chickweed is an annual weed that grows tiny white flowers in the early spring.
Scientific name: Stellaria media

Chickweed is an annual flowering weed. It grows tiny white flowers in the early to mid-spring. The flower petals have a small, natural split on the tip of each end. The flowers only grow to about one centimeter in diameter.

If you look closely, you’ll notice yellow, green, or red anthers emerging from its green ovary. Like its stems, chickweed’s flower stalks have a fine layer of hair. Chickweed grows best in moist soil and partial shade. If you’re not trying to grow this weed, you’ll likely find it popping up under your bushes or tall vegetation.

It isn’t picky about the soil it grows in as long as it stays moist while simultaneously having decent drainage. Chickweed grows in USDA zones 4 – 11.

Chicory

Chicorium intybus
Chicory is a small weed that has lavender-colored flowers.
Scientific name: Chicorium intybus

Chicory is an erect, straggly weed that takes over many roadsides in the summer with its pretty periwinkle-colored flowers. The flowers remain until the first frost. They grow about 1.5 inches in diameter and cluster in groups of one two five along a turdy branch.

The short-lived chicory flowers only bloom for a day. Furthermore, if they’re in a cooler climate, the flower will stay open all day. But in hot climates, they’ll only emerge in the morning.

Interestingly, it’s challenging to find chicory in natural landscapes that humans haven’t touched. Instead, it prefers the disturbed land of roads, wastelands, and pastures.

Chicory prefers temperatures between 45 – 75 degrees Fahrenheit. It likes well-drained soil, but the ground itself doesn’t need to be of outstanding quality. Chicory grows in USDA zones 3 – 9.

Common Chickweed

Stellaria media
Common chickweed has very small white petaled flowers.
Scientific name: Stellaria media

The cold-loving common chickweed is one of the many weeds with flowers on this list that you can eat. They contain small white flowers with lobed petals, although some may not have any petals. The center of the flowers usually contains three each of stamens and styles, typically yellow or orange in color.

In cold climates, the chickweed is an annual plant. But in warmer areas, it becomes a perennial evergreen. Its thin stems can grow up to 16 inches, although they’re flimsy and break easily.

Chickweed has small, sporadic hairs on its stems. It has oval leaves that cascade opposite one another down the stalk.

Chickweed thrives in moist soil with full sun or partial shade. It’ll still flower in less-than-ideal conditions, but it’ll do so at a shorter height. Chickweed grows in USDA zones 4 – 11.

Common Evening Primrose

Oenothera biennis
Common evening primrose is sometimes grown for its ornamental value but is considered a weed.
Scientific name: Oenothera biennis

The common evening primrose causes much debate over whether it’s a weed, for it has gorgeous yellow flowers that produce a lemony aroma. That said, the flowers open in the evening and close by mid-day, so you’ll have to be a night owl to enjoy them for longer.

Each common evening primrose flower contains four petals and is two inches in diameter. The plant is massive, growing up to six feet high with long, thin leaves growing from a basal rosette.

Contrary to many weeds, the common evening primrose takes two years to finish its life cycle, as it doesn’t flower until its second year. The evening primrose prefers to grow in rocky and sandy soil. It can handle any amount of sun or shade, but it prefers an average amount of rain with dry soil moisture. It grows in USDA zones 4 – 9.

Common Ragworts

Jacobaea vulgaris
Common ragworts have bright yellow blooms and can spread very rapidly.
Scientific name: Jacobaea vulgaris, syn

Brilliant yellow flowers are iconic of the common ragwort. They flower for the entire summer and more, starting in mid-June and dropping their petals in November. In order to bloom, this plant must have undergone cold weather exposure.

Furthermore, the common ragwort must reach a large enough size to produce flowers, which can sometimes take them over three years. Each flower produces approximately 70 seeds per head, with one plant able to release around 150,000 seeds.

Common ragworts thrive in sandy soil, as sand dunes are their natural habitat. However, you can also find this weed in grasslands and soil with few nutrients—the worse the soil for planting, the happier the common ragwort since it’ll have less competition.

You’ll find common ragwort growing in USDA zones 4 – 8, and they don’t have specific pH requirements to thrive.

Common Self-Heal

Prunella vulgaris
The common self-heal is a purple flowered weed that you’ll often see mixed with grass.
Scientific name: Prunella vulgaris

It’s “common” to encounter the common self-heal plant intertwined with grass. During the months of June to September, it produces brilliant violet, pink, or white flowers. These flowers grow erect, with petals emerging from a single center.

Starting in August, common self-heal’s seeds start ripening. They have a high chance of survival, given that they grow well in sandy, loamy, and clay soils with mild acidy to mild alkalinity.

Common self-heal is among the problematic weeds with flowers to combat in gardens because it needs space to sprawl where it’ll have access to full sun or partial shade—in other words, the footpaths through your garden.

It likes soil that remains moist but drains well and avoids the shade of taller plants. Common self-heal grows in USDA zones 3 – 7.

Common St. John’s Wort

Hypericum perforatum
Common St. John’s wort has yellow flowers, and is common in zones 5-10.
Scientific name: Hypericum perforatum

The European native common St. John’s wort is a household recognized name because of its anti-depression property. It contains deep yellow flowers with dozens of stamen that emerge around a lighter yellow center.

For ideal flower production, common St. John’s wort requires a balance between shade and sun. If the sun hits its leaves too long, leaf scorch will set in; too little sun, and it’ll reduce its flower output.

St. John’s wort will grow in practically any soil condition, from rocky to loam. As for pH, it can handle acidic to moderately alkaline earth. If you live in an area with occasional flooding, you’ll likely see Common St. John’s wort around, as it holds up well. Common St. John’s wort thrives in USDA zones 5 – 10.

Creeping Buttercups

Ranunculus repens
Creeping buttecup is one of the most commonly found weeds across many hardiness zones.
Scientific name: Ranunculus repens

Glossy, yellow petals are iconic of the creeping buttercup. Its flowers often have five, although sometimes ten, petals. They emerge from thin stalks, with a single flower on the top of each of these petioles.

Creeping buttercups bloom from March to August. Although they can be an attractive plant to cover ditches on countryside roads, it has a rapid growth rate. A single plant can cover more than a 40 square foot space in one year.

Creeping buttercups love wet areas. Well-irrigated lawns, fields, and swampy areas are some of the common areas where you’ll encounter this plant. To make things worse, it’s toxic to animals that consume it.

One of the iconic features of the creeping buttercup is its ability to live in viable soil. It can remain in acidic or water-saturated conditions for 80 years before germinating. Creeping buttercups grow in USDA zones 3 – 8.

Creeping Speedwell

Veronica filiformis
Creeping speedwell is a weed that some people purposely grow as an ornamental groundcover.
Scientific name: Veronica filiformis

Creeping speedwell is a weed that some people use as an aesthetic groundcover, given the bluish-purple and white flowers that it produces from April to July. It grows especially well between rocks, so this can be a problem plant if you’re trying to keep a clean look.

The creeping speedwell only grows 2 – 3 inches high, but a single plant can spread up to 29 inches. Its leaves vary in color from light green to gray-green, depending on the amount of sun it receives.

Creeping speedwells prefer sandy or loamy soils with a neutral pH and plenty of water. They’re fast-growing, bouncing back quickly after medium foot traffic.

Creeping speedwells grow in USDA zones 4 – 8, with tolerance for zone 9 if it has access to some shade.

Daisy Weeds

Bellis perennis
The common daisy is a weed, despite some gardeners assigning it ornamental value.
Scientific name: Bellis perennis

If you have the daisy weed pictured as having bright white petals and a yellow pom-pom center, you’re spot on. While these flowers are attractive in areas where you want them, daisies are weeds with flowers that spread wildly.

Their flowers range from 1 – 1.5 inches in diameter, and they have broad leaves up to 2.5 inches long. The tops of daisy weed leaves have a series of small, harmless spikes.

Garden walls, cracks in paving, and rock crevices are some of the many places where you’ll encounter wild daisy weeds. They grow well in compacted soil where other plants can’t thrive. Even in more fertile soil, daisy weeds create a thick mat, suffocating other plants.

Daisy weeds spread extra quickly in their preferred growing conditions of moist soil and full sun. They grow in USDA zones 4 – 8.

Dandelions

Taraxacum
Dandelions are one of the most commonly found weeds across many hardiness zones.
Scientific name: Taraxacum

Dandelions are perhaps the most classic example of weeds with flowers on this list. They contain a flower head of bright yellow ray flowers. The outer bracts point down, with the remaining petals facing up.

The dandelion produces flowers from March to September. Then, as fall approaches, its petals drop to reveal spherical seeds that the wind carries.

Perhaps to the surprise of the average gardener, dandelions have many uses, including eating the baby leaves in salads and using the white liquid in their stalks as glue.

Dandelions prefer growing in disturbed (cultivated) ground with access to lots of sunlight. They grow up to 28 inches tall in soils with a pH between 3 – 9 and when they’re out of the path of lawn mowers. Dandelions grow in USDA zones 3 – 9.

Dayflower

Dayflower Weed
The dayflower has a deep periwinkle colored flower and have a short bloom time.
Scientific name: Commelina communis

The dayflower is a weed that produces an intricate periwinkle-colored flower that ranges from .5 – 1-inch wide. It only has three petals—two larger periwinkle ones and one small white one. But it doesn’t end there. The dayflower has three long white sepals and five or six yellow stamens that make it look like an exotic tropical plant.

These flowers stay in blossom for about one to two months during the mid-summer to early fall. When the dayflower isn’t in bloom, it has glossy deep green leaves that have a slightly upward curl.

Despite its beauty, the dayflower is an aggressive grower, which is why people consider it a weed. It likes loamy or somewhat sandy soil and full or partial sun.

Daylilies need moist or semi-most water to thrive. They grow in USDA zones 5b – 8a.

Fleabane

Erigeron Flower
Fleabane is a weed that has white flowers, and is common in hardiness zones 5-9.
Scientific name: Erigeron sp.

Some people call fleabanes the eastern daisy fleabane, given that it looks like a miniature version of a daisy. It has an outer layer of white florets and smaller inner disc florets attached to a yellow center. The flowers emerge in the summer, and they may have an additional bloom in the fall.

The fleabane’s stem usually contains several stalks with a single flower attached to each branch. These stalks have tiny, soft hairs.

Fleabanes grow fibrous roots which can turn into a taproot if you give them enough time. It loves open, sunny areas. However, it usually finds the least amount of competition in poor-quality soil. You’ll encounter fleabanes in soil ranging from acidic to alkaline. They grow in USDA zones 5 – 9.

Giant Hogweed

clustered blooms of giant hogweed have umbeled, white flowers and long stems.
Giant hogweed can grow up to 15 feet tall if left uncontrolled.
Scientific name: Heracleum mantegazzianum

Giant hogweed has a similar appearance to Queen Anne’s lace (which we’ll cover further down), except it grows up to 15 feet tall compared to four feet. It contains a mass of tiny white flowers that form a single, slightly upward-turned flower look.

The giant hogweed produces flowers in June and July, with each flower mass reaching up to 60 centimeters in diameter. In the fall, the flower gives way to flat but oval-shaped seeds.

Although giant hogweed can turn heads, avoid touching it with your bare skin. Its sap can cause burns, scarring, and even blindness if you get it in your eyes.

Giant hogweed can grow in just about any space, from ravines to creekbanks to woods. They take up residence in nearly any soil type they can dig their roots into. Giant hogeweed grows in USDA zones 3a to 9b.

Goldenrod

Solidago Weed
Goldenrods are weeds that can cause an allergic reaction for allergy sufferers.
Scientific name: Solidago sp.

The thought of goldenrods might have you sneezing, but when you have it under control, this weed with fluffy yellow flowers allures bees and butterflies to gardens to pollinate your crops.

A goldenrod’s flowers bloom in the late summer and fall. It has long branches where tiny yellow flowers form with tips of deep orange. Despite their attractive appearance, goldenrods are weeds because of their invasive nature and because they usually don’t have flowers for most of the year.

Goldenrods will take up home in just about any area they can. They don’t have a strong preference for soil type, and they’ll happily lap up water while also being able to handle prolonged droughts.

Perhaps unfortunate for your garden, it’s uncommon for pests or diseases to wipe out a group of goldenrods. They grow in USDA zones 3 – 9.

Groundsel

Senecio vulgaris
Groundsel is a hardy weed that can flower almost the entire year.
Scientific name: Senecio vulgaris

Groundsels have small yellow flowers that stay open for much of the year. As they prepare to seed, they drop their petals and turn fluffy and white, much like a dandelion.

Although the groundsel’s flowers look like single entities from afar, up close, you’ll notice they have a composite head, with many small flowers clustered together.

The groundsel grows up to 18 inches tall with alternating leaves that have coarse but harmless teeth, diving the foliage into lobes. A taproot that grows close to the surface holds it in place with the support of secondary fibrous roots.

It’s common to spot groundsel growing along roads, around landfills, and cracks in your cement. It can grow in just about any soil, although it prefers soil ground. Groundsels grow in USDA zones 3 – 9.

Hairy Bittercress

Cardamine hirsuta
Hairy bittercress have smaller white flowers and belong to the mustard family of plants.
Scientific name: Cardamine hirsuta

Hairy bittercresses are ground weeds that show their faces in April and May when small white flowers pop up around their round green leaves. They belong to the mustard family, and as such, they set out on a fast-growing spree once their seeds germinate.

While we’re on the topic of seeds, the hair bittercress’ flowers change into long seedpods as they near the end of their life cycle. These seedpods then burst when they become dry, using wind to disperse them.

Hairy bittercress enjoys cool and moist soil, making this a weed you’ll likely have to battle in the spring. A deep taproot makes it challenging to uproot this plant permanently.

You may find hairy bittercress growing under and around your garden plants in USDA zones 4 – 8.

Henbit

Henbit is sometimes grown for it’s value as an herb.
Scientific name: Lamium amplexicaule

The henbit is both a weed and an herb, as you can use its flowers, stem, and leaves in tea. Although it belongs to the mint family, this plant tastes closer to kale.

Henbits produce small deep pink elongated flowers in the upper circular parts of their leaf axils. They have an orchid-like appearance, showcasing a white face and red flecks. Nevertheless, this plant is a weed because it spreads quickly, helped by its ability to grow roots from its stems that touch the ground.

Wrinkle-like leaves are a characteristic of henbits because of their recessed upper veins. The plant has a thick stem but doesn’t grow higher than 30 centimeters.

The henbit’s favorite soil is well-tilled and dry. It, therefore, enjoys growing in fields and gardens, but you can also find it in waste areas. Henbits grow in USDA zones 4 – 8.

Herb Bennet

Geum urbanum
Herb Bennet is a weed with five petaled yellow flowers.
Scientific name: Geum urbanum

The herb bennet grows small yellow flowers between the months of May and August. The 5-petal flowers droop shortly after emerging. What follows are spiny seed heads. They have red hooks on their ends, making them cling to passing animals and humans.

Needless to say, herb bennets are one of the weeds with flowers that you really don’t want growing nearby. However, some people use herb bennet leaves and roots as a spice for soup.

These weeds love shady areas, as they often live in woods, hedgebanks, and under scrub. They also require nutrient-rich soil to thrive and a decent amount of water in a well-draining area. Herb bennets are self-fertile and like just about any range of soil pH. These plants live in USDA zones 5 – 9.

Herb Robert

Geranium robertianum
Herb Robert is a weed that’s part of the geranium family.
Scientific name: Geranium robertianum

Herb Robert produces bright pink flowers in wooded areas during the spring and summer. Its leaves and stems are naturally green. But if this plant has too much access to the sun, it turns red and develops dark spots.

As its name implies, Herb Robert is more than a weed; it’s an herb that people use as an antiseptic and insect repellent. Although funguses can sometimes plague this plant, overall, it’s a hardy species that can outlive many other plants around it.

Herb Roberts grow as tall as 20 inches when they’re in moist and darkly lit conditions. They often sprout between cracks in rocks and produce small red fruits.

These herbs thrive in nitrogen-rich soil but die if they’re in a wet area for too long. Herb Robert grows in USDA zones 5 – 9.

Jimsonweed

Datura stramonium
Jimsonweed is easy to spot with its white flowers, and irritating spikes.
Scientific name: Datura stramonium

Jimsonweed is in the nightshade family with a fragrant trumpet-shaped flower on each of its forked branches. The colors of its petals range from white to cream to violet. Perhaps unsurprisingly for those familiar with nightshades, this weed’s flowers open at night.

You can find Jimsonweed growing along roads and in feces-ridden pastures in just about any part of the world with a warm climate. It also goes well growing around landfills.

Jimsonweed contains poisonous properties, although people consume it for its psychoactive properties. It has the greatest amount of toxin before flowering; after that time, it becomes relatively safer.

Sunny and partly shaded areas are ideal for Jimsonweed. It can grow in most soil types, including calcareous and clay loam, but it prefers earth that remains dry. Jimsonweed grows in USDA zones 6 – 9.

Lesser Celandine

Ficaria verna
The lesser celandine is part of the buttercup family of plants.
Scientific name: Ficaria verna

Lesser Celandine is in the buttercup family. So, it has glossy yellow petals and a star-shaped design. Each flower contains 8 – 12 petals. Its leaves also have a shiny appearance with a heart-like shape that sits on long stalks.

The low-growing lesser celandine flowers from January to April, but its leafy greens appear in the fall and winter. You can find it in gardens, woodlands, and grasslands. Damp areas are paramount to this weed. So, it also congregates along stream banks and ditches.

Unlike many weeds, lesser celandine has specific growing requirements. It doesn’t do well in dry areas, requires shade, and needs basic to alkaline soil. 

Lesser celandine is a fast-growing plant, thanks to its underground runners and tubers. Therefore, it’s quick to invade garden edges and the shaded areas your plants provide. Lesser celandine grows in USDA zones 4 – 8.

Marestail

Erigeron canadensis
Marestail is also called horseweed, and grows rather tall with a central stem.
Scientific name: Erigeron canadensis

Marestail, or horseweed, is an annual weed that grows in an erect fashion. It gets its name because it has a single central stem where leaves grow out of, forming a bushy “tail” of up to seven feet high.

Several flowers emerge on the branches at the top of this plant during the late spring. Its small, white flowers house thousands of minuscule seeds that’ll disperse through wind and the end of the season.

Although many horseweed plants die after dispersing their seeds, over half manage to survive the winter. Seeds usually sprout quickly versus having dozens of years of longevity like some other weeds.

Marestail loves coarse and well-draining soil. Preferably, the soil should be loamy or with high organic content. Although it appreciates a decent amount of water, it can withstand drought. Marestail flourishes in USDA zones 3 – 11.    

Meadow Death Camas

Meadow deathcamas
The meadow death camas is a poisonous weed that should be removed.
Scientific name: Zygadenus venenosus

Meadow death camas are among the poisonous weeds with flowers that we’re covering here. They have attractive white flowers with yellow centers, with multiple small flowers forming a triangular-shaped head at the top of its stalks.

The meadow death camas have long stamens that add to their delicate design. They bloom from April to July and have grass-like leaves that grow in an upward v-shape from the ground. So, when they’re not in bloom, it’s easy to mistake them for high-growing grass.

You’ll find meadow death camas growing in mostly dry climates. They do well on hillsides, sagebrush slopes, and in meadows that receive little rain.

Because of its toxins, the mining bee is the only known insect that can pollinate the meadow death camas. It grows in USDA zones 8a – 11a.

Milkweed

Asclepias Milkweed Plant
Milkweed can attract many local pollinators.
Scientific name: Asclepias sp.

Any child who grew up in the countryside where milkweed grows knows that this weed releases a sticky white milk-like liquid when you snap its stem. It’s an extremely fragrant plant, attracting insects of all kinds for feasting and pollination.

Milkweed produces flowers in several colors, including pink, purple, green, and orange. Many tiny flowers cluster together at the top of its 2 – 5-foot stalk, creating a ball-shaped appearance.

Its large, green leaves make it a favorite spot for monarch butterflies to lay their eggs beneath. When the larvae hatch, they feed on the plant’s foliage.

Milkweed loves lots of sunlight and can hold up well in most soil conditions. That said, there are some species, such as swamp milkweed, that need damp, fertile earth to survive. Milkweed grows in USDA zones 3 – 9.

Nettle

Urtica dioica
Nettle may or may not have flowers, but is identified easily with its coarse leaves.
Scientific name: Urtica dioica

You may not look at the nettle and see flowers right away, but this perennial flowering plant contains many small green to brown-colored flowers. The flowers remain in bunches along the length of its stem.

The nettle’s leaves contain lots of small hairs. Although this particular species isn’t poisonous, some species contain toxins in their hairs that can create painful stings if they break off onto your skin. In either case, having a run-in with nettles can be painful.

Nettles require soil with high nitrogen levels. They prefer partial shade and well-aerated soil with a pH ranging from 5.0 – 8.0.

It’s common to encounter nettle on the edges of fields and along pastures, where it can cause issues for livestock. Nettle grows in USDA zones 3 – 10.

Oxalis

Corniculata
Oxalis has five petaled yellow flowers, and can be mistaken for a clover.
Scientific name: Corniculata

The oxalis is a weed with attractive 5-petal flowers. The colors vary from white to pink to red and yellow. Regardless of the base color, oxalises have many stripes running from their center to the tips of their petals.

It contains 3 – 10+ leaflets resembling clover leaves that attach to a woody stem. Oxalises are sensitive to light, so they may adjust their leaf angle to avoid excessive amounts of sunlight.

The leaf color of Oxalises can vary from deep shamrock green to maroon. As such, some people use this weed for decorative purposes, although potting it is best given its fast-spreading nature.

Oxalises prefer partial shade and well-draining, organic soil. If they get too hot during the summer, they’ll drop their leaves. These weeds grow best in USDA zones 7 – 10.

Pokeweed

Phytolacca americana
Pokeweed grows across several hardiness zones, and prefers sunny areas.
Scientific name: Phytolacca americana

Pokeweed is a plant that has some medicinal properties, but its main draw is its red berry that people use to make ink and red food coloring. Nevertheless, it’s not a plant you likely want around your property—it can grow up to ten feet high.

The flowers of pokeweed look different from average. They have pink-colored racemes with usually white to green flowers via their five sepals, although they don’t have true petals. The flowers then turn into purplish-black berries that form this iconic-looking plant.

Pokeweed prefers sunny areas, so it grows in fields and around forest edges. The flowers occur from May to October in cooler climates and year-round in warmer areas.

Unfortunately for those with acidic soil, pokeweed will happily grow in soil with a pH as low as 4.7. It grows in zones 4 – 8, including neutral to slightly alkaline soils.

Queen Anne’s Lace

Daucus carota
Queen Anne’s lace is easily identifiable by its tightly knit white flowers.
Scientific name: Daucus carota

Queen Anne’s lace is a weed with flowers that live up to their name; they have tightly grouped white flowers that come together with small spaces of air between them, resembling lace. If you leave Queen Anne’s lace untouched, they’ll produce these flowers starting in their second year.

Furthermore, Queen Anne’s lace is tall, waving its flat-topped flowers up to four feet in the air. Its leaves also have a pleasant appearance for a weed, as they have the long, narrow leafy appearance of ferns.

When seeded in open areas, Queen Anne’s lace spreads wildly. It enjoys growing in fields and other sunlit spaces.

Although this weed will grow in practically any soil, it prefers well-draining soil with neutral or alkaline soil. Queen Anne’s lace grows in USDA zones 3 – 9.

Quickweed

Galinsoga parviflora
Quickweed is surprisingly part of the sunflower family of plants.
Scientific name: Galinsoga parviflora

You can’t tell that quickweed is part of the sunflower family by looking at its flower, but that’s exactly what it is. It contains a small, round yellow center with five tiny white petals surrounding it. Each petal has space between it, and they seem disproportionately small compared to this weed’s center.

Quickweed appears in gardens early in the summer and has a shallow root system. So, they’re easy to weed. However, they’re excellent seed spreaders, so it’s challenging to combat quickweed once it’s there.

You can eat quickweed’s fuzzy leaves with salad, and some people also use it for medicinal purposes—most notably, nettle stings.

Quickweed enjoys partial sunlight and northward-facing slopes. They prefer moderately dry areas with 400 – 800 mm of annual rain. Quickweed grows best in USDA zone 9.

Rosebay Willowherb

Chamaenerion angustifolium
Rosebay willowherb has very pretty and tall fuchsia colored flowers.
Scientific name: Chamaenerion angustifolium

The rosebay willowherb won’t strike you as resembling a willow, but it does have a tall, wispy nature, with its grassy leaves growing up to 1.5 meters. It produces alluring pinkish-purple flowers from June to September.

Rosebay willowherbs are a weed because of their ability to quickly take over open spaces, rapidly growing tightly together so that they block out other plant competition. You can find them at the edges of forests, grasslands, and wasteland.

To grow their leaves that spiral upwards around their stem, the rosebay willowherb needs a combination of sun and shade with dry or moist soil.

Rosebay willowherbs aren’t picky about soil type; you can find them in sandy, loamy, and clay soils. They also grow well in various soil pH, from mildly acidic to slightly alkaline. They grow in USDA zones 3 – 7.

Silverbush

Convolvulus cneorum
Also known as field bindweed, silverbush has silvery leaves and white colored flowers.
Scientific name: Convolvulus cneorum

Field bindweed has attractive trumpet-shaped white flowers that begin with pink buds. These weeds with flowers bloom from the spring to the summer. Field bindweeds love hot and dry summers, as they’re native to the Mediterranean. It’s also when they maximize their seed production.

Because of their intricate root system, field bindweeds have an excellent tolerance for drought. They can also manage to grow in tightly packed or tilled land.

Nevertheless, their ideal conditions are fertile soil that drains well. It’s common to see these weeds growing along the sides of roads and in pastures.

Field bindweed is an evergreen shrub that grows up to more than three feet high. It thrives in USDA zones 8a – 10b.

Smartweed

Polygonum Smartweed
Smartweed spreads quickly, and can grow quite tall if left uncontrolled.
Scientific name: Polygonum sp.

Smartweed is an attractive weed if you don’t mind where it’s growing, for it has a series of pinkish-white flowers that sit tightly on top of each other, following the topmost 1.5-inch part of its stalk. Instead of petals, these flowers have sepals that give them a petal appearance.

You can expect the smartweed you encounter to grow upwards of six feet tall, although the flowers and leaves might start bending under their own weight as they grow. They differ from knotweeds, which have a similar appearance but with flowers clustered around their leaf axils.

The smartweed produces flowers from June to November. Often, the outer side of the sepal is a deeper pink, and the inner side is whiter once it opens.

Smartweed loves growing in wet areas, including along streambeds, wetlands, and ditches. They prefer rich soil and grow in USDA zones 3a – 10b. 

Wild Clovers

Trifolium repens
Wild clover has white colored flowers that have a puffy appearance.
Scientific name: Trifolium repens

Wild clovers are an iconic weed that flowers with its pom-pom purplish-white flower emerging on single stalks in grassy areas. It grows up to 40 centimeters tall, and you can spot its flower from May to October.

Although most weeds on this list aren’t something you want around your garden, the wild clover may change your mind. It contains a high amount of nitrogen, improving local soil quality where it grows.

It’s common to spot wild clovers in drought-prone areas, as they don’t need much water to survive. Furthermore, they hold up well in both full sun or partial shade, so they’ll sometimes overtake other weeds.

Wild clovers can grow in practically any soil type, and they hold up well even during trampling, to the dismay of a gardener. It grows in USDA zones 3 – 10.

Wild Multiflora Roses

Wild Multiflora Rose
The multiflora rose is a wild rose, and considered invasive due to being imported and spreading unchecked.
Scientific name: Rosa sp.

 Wild roses may not seem appropriate in an article about weeds with flowers, but these roses don’t have the beautiful silky cups that you’d give your partner. Instead, they have five petals that splay out in an almost flat shape.

As a result, you can see this flower’s yellowish-white center. Wild rose petals vary in color, but most have a pink and white mixture. They also have spines on their thick, woody stalks, just like modern-day (grafted) roses. These plants are imports from overseas and are considered quite invasive.

Wild rose bushes grow in sunny areas with well-draining soil, although there’s a variety of this species called the swap rose that does well in wet conditions. When they grow too closely together, diseases can set in since airflow is crucial to keeping them healthy.

Of course, you may not want these plants to stick around, given that their woody bases can be tough to remove. Wild roses grow in USDA zones 3 – 8.

Wild Violets

Viola odorata
Wild violets are usually not offensive, despite being considered a weed. They are commonly used for groundcover.
Scientific name: Viola odorata

Like wild roses, wild violets are the original, non-grafted version of the violet most people grow in their gardens. They’re a fast-growing plant that quickly spreads its seeds, making wild violets a weed in many gardeners’ and homeowners’ eyes.

Most wild violets have purple flowers with a white, hairy interior. However, some of these flowers may have yellow or white exteriors.

Wild violets flourish in woody areas and along stream banks. They like rich organic soil and moisture without being in standing water. If wild violets grow in an area with a lot of sunlight, they’ll drop their flowers to survive. These weeds grow in USDA zones 3 – 9.

Final Thoughts

What’s a weed to one person may be another’s treasure. After all, someone had the foresight to turn wild roses and violets into the refined flowers we enjoy in our gardens today.

The ball is in your court now that you know how to identify common weeds with flowers. If you have a poisonous weed growing on your property, removing it is a no-brainer. But if you enjoy the flowers on harmless weeds in your backyard, you just might want to start calling them a “plant” instead of a “weed.”

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