how far apart should you plant apple trees
You should usually plant apple trees between about 8 and 25 feet apart, depending mainly on whether they’re dwarf, semi-dwarf, or standard trees.
Quick Scoop
- Dwarf apple trees:
- 8–10 feet (2.5–3 m) between trees in the row.
* 12–15 feet (3.5–4.5 m) between rows if you’re doing an orchard-style layout.
* Good for small yards, easy pruning and picking.
- Semi-dwarf apple trees:
- 12–15 feet (3.5–4.5 m) between trees.
* 15–20 feet (4.5–6 m) between rows.
* Popular “backyard orchard” choice because they balance size and yield.
- Standard (full-size) apple trees:
- 18–25 feet (5.5–7.5 m) between trees.
* 20–30 feet (6–9 m) between rows for big, traditional orchards.
* Best if you’ve got lots of space and want big, long-lived trees.
Rootstock cheat sheet (orchard-style spacing)
Many modern apples are sold on named rootstocks that control how big they get. Typical minimum spacings between trunks include:
| Rootstock / Size | Typical spacing between trees | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| M27 (very dwarf) | ≈ 10 feet (3 m) | Very small, needs support, good for tight spaces. | [3]
| M9 (dwarf) | ≈ 12 feet (3.6 m) | High-yield, compact, often grown in rows with posts/wires. | [3]
| M26 (dwarf–semi-dwarf) | ≈ 15 feet (4.5 m) | Still manageable height, more root spread. | [3]
| MM106 (semi-dwarf) | ≈ 20 feet (6 m) | Good all-round garden tree, needs more room. | [3]
| Semi-dwarf (general) | 12–15 feet | 15–20 feet between rows. | [2]
| Standard (full- size) | 18–25 feet | 20–30 feet between rows. | [5][2]
Why spacing matters (in plain language)
- Apple roots can spread 1.5–2 times beyond the canopy, so crowding makes them compete hard for water and nutrients.
- The canopy of standard trees can reach 20–30 feet across; dwarf trees 10–13 feet, so they need enough room for light and air.
- Too-close trees = shade, poor air flow, more disease risk, smaller crops over time.
Pollination and layout
Most apple varieties need a different variety nearby for cross‑pollination.
- Try to keep compatible pollinator trees within about 50 feet of each other so bees can easily move pollen between them.
- In a small yard, planting two different varieties 10–20 feet apart usually works well for pollination.
Simple rule-of-thumb for your yard
- Find out the tree size or rootstock (dwarf, semi-dwarf, or standard).
- Use this quick spacing guide:
- Dwarf: 8–10 ft
- Semi-dwarf: 12–15 ft
- Standard: 18–25 ft
- If you’re unsure what you bought, assume semi-dwarf and give at least 12–15 ft between trees.
If you tell me your tree type (or what the nursery label says), I can help you pick an exact spacing and layout for your specific spot.
TL;DR: Most home growers plant apple trees about 12–15 feet apart; go closer (8–10 ft) for dwarfs and wider (18–25 ft) for big, standard trees.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.