PLUM TREES FOR SALE

Our plum trees for sale include high quality Japanese and European varieties. Moreover our bareroot plum trees are 1-2 years old, 4′-6′ tall, and have a an average caliper/diameter of ½”.

In fact, all plum trees, except for seedlings, have two parts. The first part is the scion which is above the ground and responsible for the fruit’s characteristics and disease resistance. And secondly, the rootstock, which is under the ground and responsible for the size, cold hardiness, and partly the disease resistance. We grow our plum trees on Myrobalan (or Myro, standard 10-15′ tall), Myrobalan 29C (or Cert Myro, standard), Marianna GF 8-1 (standard), Krymsk 86 (80-90% of standard), and Krymsk 1 (semi-dwarf) rootstocks. Learn more about our rootstocks.

Did you know that plum trees may have been one of the first fruit trees that humans domesticated? In fact its origins trace back to the Caucasus Mountains in the Asia Minor. Our collection of plum trees for sale online offers both European and Japanese plum varieties. While European plums are usually elongated purple/blue and great for cooking and canning, Japanese plums are usually round red and mostly eaten fresh. So when you decide to plant and buy plum trees online, we will be there to help you on your adventure.

If you would like to find the relevant information you need on hardiness zones, pollination, disease resistance, and more, you can see our tree descriptions.

At the start of March, we begin shipping trees based on your chosen shipping date at checkout or if you haven’t selected a date, we ship based on the best time to plant for your region. Learn more about our shipping by visiting our shipping page and for a list of states with restrictions for specific tree types, visit our shipping restrictions page.

If you have selected local pickup, we’ll send you a notification at the end of March to book a pickup date to get your trees. We offer trees for local pickup at our nursery in Ithaca, New York from end of March until May.

We guarantee fruit trees for the first season – learn more here.