For most home gardens, plant blueberry bushes about 4–6 feet apart within the row and keep 8–10 feet between rows so they have room to grow, get good sun, and stay healthy.

Quick Scoop

  • Standard rule:
    • Highbush blueberries (common garden type): 4–6 ft between bushes.
* Space rows **8–10 ft apart** so you can walk, prune, and harvest easily.
  • Other types:
    • Lowbush (short, spreading): about 2–4 ft between plants , 6–8 ft between rows.
* Rabbiteye (big, vigorous): about **5–7 ft between plants** , **10–12 ft between rows**.
  • Why spacing matters:
    • Better air flow, less fungal disease, and easier picking.
* Less competition for water and nutrients, which boosts yield over the long term.

Ideal spacing by type (HTML table)

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Blueberry type Spacing between bushes Row spacing Notes
Highbush 4–6 ft8–10 ftMost common garden type; grows tall and wide.
Lowbush 2–4 ft6–8 ftShort, spreading; often used as groundcover.
Rabbiteye 5–7 ft10–12 ftLarger, vigorous plants; needs more room.
Simple home hedge About 4 ft Single row Closer spacing for a solid hedge, but still enough air flow.

Mini tips before you plant

  • Check your plant tag or nursery description for its mature width and stay close to the ranges above.
  • If you want a tight hedge , plant toward the smaller end of the spacing range (around 4 ft for highbush).
  • If you want bigger, more open bushes and easier movement, plant toward the wider end (5–6 ft or more, depending on type).

Think of each bush as needing its own little “blueberry bubble”: enough space to stretch out branches, catch full sun, and breathe without bumping into its neighbors.

Meta description (SEO):
Learn exactly how far apart to plant blueberry bushes, including spacing for highbush, lowbush, and rabbiteye types, plus row distances for healthy growth and big harvests.

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