Plant Database / Cover & Soil Crops / White Clover
Cover & Soil Crops

White Clover

Trifolium repens
Fabaceae (Legume)

A low perennial clover for a 'living mulch' — fixes nitrogen, feeds bees, and tolerates light foot traffic.

Cover cropFixes nitrogenBuilds soilPollinatorPerennial
White Clover (Trifolium repens) illustration — Texas Roots plant database, by Jordan Polasek
Sun
Full sun to part shade
Water
Moderate
Soil
Average
pH
6.0–7.0
Hardiness
Perennial
Height
4–8 in
Spacing
Broadcast
Days to harvest
Living mulch

What it is

White Clover (Trifolium repens) is in the Fabaceae (Legume) family. A low perennial clover for a 'living mulch' — fixes nitrogen, feeds bees, and tolerates light foot traffic.

How to grow it

It wants full sun to part shade, water it moderate, and give it average soil. Target a soil pH around 6.0–7.0. Space plants about Broadcast apart. Expect roughly Living mulch. Perennial.

How it's used

White Clover is used: living mulch; flowers edible.

🔎 How to identify it

  • Three leaflets, pale crescent mark
  • Creeping rooting stems
  • White round flower heads

Edibility

PartsFlowers (tea)
UsesLiving mulch; flowers edible
CautionMostly a soil/pollinator crop.
The grow guide

How to grow & propagate white clover

Everything I've worked out about starting this one, keeping it alive through a Texas year, and turning one plant into many — free.

How to propagate white clover

Legumes resent transplanting — that taproot wants to go straight down — so sow them right where they'll grow once the soil has warmed. Soak hard-coated seed overnight to speed germination. As a bonus, this whole family pulls nitrogen out of the air and banks it in the soil, so wherever you grow them you're feeding next season's crop.

Growing white clover in Texas

Give it full sun to part shade and average soil. Match the spot to the plant and most of the battle is already won.

Because it's a perennial, the work is mostly up front. Get it sited and established and it comes back on its own year after year — one of the best returns on effort in the whole garden.

Keep moisture even, especially while it's young — deep, less-frequent soaks build better roots than a daily sprinkle.

Harvesting

Figure on roughly living mulch before you're harvesting. The part you're after: flowers (tea).

Making more for free

If you want more, let your healthiest plants mature fully and collect the seed once it's dry on the plant — then store it somewhere cool, dark, and dry until next season.

🌤 Before you plant: check the live 7-day garden weather to time it right for frost and heat.

Part of the free Texas Roots plant database, compiled by Jordan Polasek from his greenhouse in El Campo, Texas. Free to read and share. If it helped, the best thanks is to grow something.