SKU: 89626125696
queen palm plant

queen palm plant Buy Queen Palm Phoenix, AZ | Syagrus romanzoffiana

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Description

queen palm plant Buy Queen Palm Phoenix, AZ | Syagrus romanzoffianaElegant Tropical Shade for Phoenix Yards Queen Palm The Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) is one of the most graceful and fast growing palms available for Phoenix area landscapes. With long, feathery fronds that arch elegantly from a smooth gray trunk, Queen Palms deliver instant tropical curb appeal to any property. They grow quickly to 3040 feet tall, creating welcome filtered shade in the hottest months. Whether you're framing a Scottsdale

Elegant Tropical Shade for Phoenix Yards — Queen Palm

The Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) is one of the most graceful and fast-growing palms available for Phoenix-area landscapes. With long, feathery fronds that arch elegantly from a smooth gray trunk, Queen Palms deliver instant tropical curb appeal to any property. They grow quickly to 30–40 feet tall, creating welcome filtered shade in the hottest months. Whether you're framing a Scottsdale driveway, lining a Chandler pool deck, or adding vertical drama to a Gilbert backyard — the Queen Palm is one of the most popular choices for Valley homeowners and landscape designers alike.

Queen Palm Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Syagrus romanzoffiana
Common Names Queen Palm, Cocos Palm
Mature Height 30–40 feet
Mature Width 15–20 feet (canopy spread)
Growth Rate Fast — 3–6 feet per year in Phoenix
Sun Full sun (6+ hrs). Handles reflected heat from walls and pavement.
Water Moderate. More water than most desert palms, but manageable on drip.
USDA Zones 9b–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining preferred. Adapts to Arizona caliche soils with proper planting.
Foliage Evergreen — lush feathery fronds year-round
Fruit Produces small orange date-like clusters in summer

Queen Palm Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Driveway & Entry Framing

Queen Palms are a top pick for framing driveways and front entries across Scottsdale, Mesa, and Tempe. Their tall, slender trunks and arching canopies create a stately, resort-style welcome. Plant a pair flanking the driveway entrance or line both sides at 12–15 foot intervals for a dramatic allée effect.

Pool & Patio Shade

The Queen Palm's high canopy provides dappled shade without blocking airflow — ideal for poolside comfort in Chandler and Gilbert yards. Fronds are large but don't create excessive litter compared to many broadleaf trees. Pair with low-growing Desert Spoon or Yellow Bells at the base for a layered tropical look.

Streetscape & HOA-Friendly Plantings

Many Phoenix-area HOAs approve Queen Palms for front yards because of their clean, upright form and tropical aesthetic. They work beautifully in median strips, along property lines, and in shared community spaces throughout Peoria, Glendale, and Surprise.

Best Time to Plant Queen Palm in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is the ideal planting window for Queen Palms in Phoenix. Warm soil promotes fast root establishment while cooler air temperatures reduce transplant stress. The palm gets 6–8 months of root growth before its first full Phoenix summer. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. Avoid planting in June–August if possible — extreme heat puts extra stress on newly transplanted palms.

How to Plant Queen Palm

  1. Dig wide, not deep — excavate a hole 2–3x the width of the root ball, same depth. Queen Palms don't like being planted too deep.
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer to ensure good drainage. Standing water around the root ball will cause root rot.
  3. Backfill with native soil — a light 20% organic amendment is fine, but avoid heavy compost mixes.
  4. Spacing — plant 12–15 feet apart for a grouped planting; 20+ feet for individual specimens.
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch soil ring around the root zone to direct water where it's needed.
  6. Mulch — apply 2–3 inches of bark or gravel mulch to retain moisture and regulate soil temperature.

Watering Queen Palm in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

Queen Palms need consistent moisture during their first year. Water deeply:

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 1–2 days, deep and slow (30–45 min drip cycle)
  • Months 1–2: Every 3–4 days
  • Months 3–6: Every 5–7 days (every 3–4 days during peak summer heat)
  • After Year 1: Every 7–10 days in summer; every 2–3 weeks in winter

Drip Irrigation

Place 2–3 emitters (2 GPH each) in a ring 18–24 inches from the trunk. As the palm matures, move emitters outward to the drip line. Established Queen Palms are moderate water users — not as drought-tolerant as Mexican Fan Palms, but very manageable on a standard drip system.

How fast does Queen Palm grow in Phoenix?
Queen Palms are one of the fastest-growing palms for the Phoenix Valley, adding 3–6 feet of height per year with regular watering. Most homeowners see their palm reach 20+ feet within 4–5 years of planting a 15-gallon size.

Is Queen Palm drought tolerant?
Queen Palms are moderately drought tolerant once established — more water-dependent than Mexican Fan Palms or Mediterranean Fan Palms, but far less thirsty than most tropical trees. On a well-designed drip system, they perform beautifully in the Phoenix climate.

What's the difference between Queen Palm and Pygmy Date Palm?
Queen Palms grow to 30–40 feet and serve as full-size landscape trees, while Pygmy Date Palms max out at 8–10 feet and work best as patio or accent plants. Both are feather palms with an elegant look, but Queen Palms provide much more shade and vertical impact.

Do Queen Palms survive Phoenix summers?
Yes. Queen Palms handle Phoenix summers well as long as they receive regular deep watering. They tolerate reflected heat from walls and pavement and rarely show heat stress when properly irrigated.

Do Queen Palms drop fruit?
Yes — Queen Palms produce small orange fruit clusters in summer. The fruit is not harmful but can create litter on patios and pool decks. Regular cleanup or planting away from high-traffic hardscapes keeps this manageable.

You May Also Like

  • Pygmy Date Palm — a compact feather palm for patios and small spaces, growing just 8–10 feet tall.
  • Mexican Fan Palm — a towering, drought-tough fan palm that reaches 50–70 feet with minimal water.
  • Mediterranean Fan Palm — a slow-growing multi-trunk palm with distinctive fan-shaped fronds, perfect for desert modern landscapes.
  • Pineapple Palm — a showstopper with a unique crown shaft that resembles a pineapple, excellent for entryways.

How Many Queen Palms Do I Need?

Queen Palm is a tall feather palm with a 15 to 20 foot canopy, so it is placed as a specimen, grove, or allee rather than a hedge. Use these layouts:

  • Single specimen: one palm as vertical drama in a lawn or bed, set 20 feet or more from the house and other big trees so the crown spreads freely.
  • Symmetrical pair: flank a driveway or entry with two palms roughly 12 to 15 feet apart.
  • Allee or grove: line a drive or property edge 12 to 15 feet on center for a resort colonnade, staggering heights in informal groves of 3 to 5.

Keep the trunk 8 to 10 feet off pool decks and patios so the summer fruit clusters and frond drop land on planting beds, not paving.

Queen Palm Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb–Apr): a strong flush of new fronds and rapid height gain begin as soil warms; a good second planting window.
  • Summer (May–Sep): the fastest growth of the year, with good heat and reflected-heat tolerance as long as deep water is steady. Orange fruit clusters ripen, and monsoon rain is a bonus. This palm wants more water than desert natives through the heat.
  • Fall (Oct–Nov): the prime low-desert planting season; maximizes root growth before summer while the lush crown holds.
  • Winter (Dec–Jan): evergreen but frost-tender, with frond burn possible below about 25 to 28°F. Most Valley winters are fine, but cover young palms on hard-freeze nights and expect established palms to push out fresh fronds in spring after a cold snap.

At a Glance

✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Shade-Providing   ✔ Low-Maintenance

Plant It With

  • Mexican Fan Palm: a taller, more drought-tough palm for a layered skyline behind the Queen.
  • Pygmy Date Palm: a compact feather palm that echoes the form at ground level.
  • Mediterranean Fan Palm: a low multi-trunk fan palm that contrasts the single smooth trunk.
  • Desert Spoon: a silver, low-water understory accent for the base of the palm.

Is Queen Palm Right for Your Yard?

Queen Palm thrives in full Phoenix sun and reflected heat, grows fast for quick tropical height, and stays manageable on a standard drip system. It is not a fit if you want a low-water, plant-and-forget palm or a hard-freeze-proof one: it wants more water than desert-native palms, drops fruit that litters poolside paving, and can show frond burn in a hard Valley freeze.

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E in Miami
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
Came in excellent condition; my son loves these.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2017
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Sofia Villanueva
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 3
Missing the Busy Hands Papercraft Project page
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
This comic is missing the last page. The Papercraft project cut out page. The Instruction page is included. But not the page to cut-out the figures and base. I think is is a factory defect. It doesn't appear to be damaged or show any signs of the page being cut out. This item is new. So I think this mistake is from the manufacturer. I thought the "Star Drek", was pretty funny. Homer is the captain and he uses an actual wooden log, as his captain's log. I like the comic, the only downside was the missing last page. That was very disappointing.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2024
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The Bird
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Great stories; like the older episodes on paper
Format: Paperback
This is a great set of stories from the Simpsons. Like watching an episode, but it's on paper! I love the homerisms! They always make me laugh. You definitely get a good sense of the old characters and some some new ones too. It is like watching the show around season 9-10.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2026
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mwreview
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
"No time to unwrap, just light the whole pack!"---Selma
Format: Paperback
Another excellent, 174 pages of "The Simpsons." Some of these comics are better than their later episodes. This book includes appearances by some less frequent characters like Doctor Nick, Homer's former psychotic boss Hank Scorpio, Luann Van Houten's boyfriend Pyro, Dr. Colossus, and even Waylon Smithers's favorite 8 1/2-incher...Malibu Stacy! "Judge Marge"--Marge becomes a T.V. judge and her frequent absence causes her household to fall apart. I like the part where Lisa goes on a power trip after she starts wearing a monocle. "Stacy's Busy Day!"--A comic short for Malibu Stacy! I love it! Let's have more of these! Malibu Stacy shows off some of her many careers and identities (my favorites are "KISS Army Stacy" and "Cosmetic Surgery Stacy"). There are also fan letters, one from a fan who Stacy thinks is a "sharp-eyed little girl" with "an unusual and charming name," Waylon Smithers. "Viva Bart"--In a Duff Beer contest, Homer wins two weeks in Bosqueverde--a tropical paradise that has been in a state of perpetual civil war for the past thirty years. "Beauty School Hellcats"--After Selma makes an effort to make DMV customers actually look good in their driver's license photos, she and Patty are given a vacation to beauty school to get rid of her creative impulses. "Cruisin' for a Bruisin'"--After ruining his and Marge's cruise by giving booze to a recovering alcoholic dolphin, Homer takes Mr. Burns's discarded yacht to start his own cruise line, with some familiar Springfield couples as guests. Hank Scorpio appears at the end in a strip unrelated to this story (he's not one of my favorite characters). "Crime Family Practice"--Short comic featuring Dr. Nick who is kidnapped to give medical treatment to the mob. "Growing Pains"--Bart gets involved in a seed-selling scam, so The Simpsons put on a Seed Fair which includes a fashion report by Joan Rivers and her daughter. However, Mr. Burns, who's allergic to growing things (makes sense), may have the last say. "The Abominable Dr. Colossus"--Dr. Colossus fans will like this book because he also appears in "Judge Marge." In this short, despite attempts at being evil and menacing, Dr. Colossus is seen as a lovable buffoon in Springfield. "Merchants of Vengeance"--A wave of shoplifting plagues Springfield and shopkeepers Ned Flanders, Apu, and the comic Book Guy ban together to fight it. Comic Book Guy loves the crime-fighting group so much, he can't let it go even when the shoplifting stops. Comic Book Guy actually shows some emotion tearing up in one box. "In Burns We Trust"--Mr. Burns takes over Rev. Lovejoy's church in his endless quest for more power. Meanwhile, Ned Flanders looks for a new church. "How Marge Got Her Curtains Back"--In this short, Marge's curtains go down the garbage disposal and she's having a hard time finding that classic corncob pattern.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2007
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Carsanna M.Buckley
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Great
Format: Paperback
These comics were fun to read and featured some fun stories with the simpsons characters.
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