TRUiC Business Ideas

How to Start a Plant Nursery

Decision Snapshot

Plant Nursery

Idea Score

44

Startup cost

$30k–$100k

Profit margin

4%

Break-even

9 mo–24 mo

Time to launch

12 wk–36 wk

Demand trend

Stable

5-yr failure rate

Capital intensity

High

Time commitment

Full time

Wholesale b2b Holiday Intermediate skill NAICS 111421 Updated May 2026
Plant Nursery Image

Part 1 - How to start a Plant Nursery business - Background

A plant nursery grows plants from seeds or saplings to the size that most gardeners, landscapers, or larger retail distributors desire for installation into lawns, backyard gardens, floral borders, and other indoor or outdoor areas.

A successful nursery offers a wide variety of young plants to their customers who purchase the plants individually or in bulk quantities. The quality, selection, and size of the products produced by the nursery will be dictated by the demographics of their location. Often, a nursery’s selection is also influenced by business relationships the owner has established with major landscaping businesses. Some nurseries will specialize in trees, decorative growing art such as bonsai, or water features and associated plant life. Additional services often offered by some nurseries include garden design, hardscaping supplies, and mulch/soil delivery.

Our guide is in 3 parts:

What are the costs involved in opening a plant nursery?

Location will significantly affect your start-up costs as you need a decent amount of land, and an urban site will be priced significantly higher than an existing rural farm. Greenhouses can cost anywhere from $30,000 to $100,000 depending on size, whether or not it will be heated, require electricity and how you have it plumbed. Your retail storefront will require another $50,000 investment minimum and your start-up plants, soil, and supplies will run you another $10,000 to $50,000. It is a labor intensive start-up, and payroll should be part of your initial business plan.

What are the ongoing expenses for a plant nursery?

Payroll, water, chemicals, and inventory are your largest expenses. When scouting locations, you may wish to investigate the use of private wells versus municipal water supplies to lower operating costs.

Who is the target market?

Depending on your locale, you may want to target landscapers who maintain elite properties indoors and outdoors for the wealthy homeowner. Municipalities will purchase large amounts of trees and plants on an annual basis. If you are situated in a suburban setting with high foot traffic, you may cater more to the homeowner who wants to develop their own vegetable plot or flowering landscaping.

How does a plant nursery make money?

While specialty plants such as orchids or rare trees and shrubs may be sold for a much higher price than a flat of tomato plants, a profitable nursery makes its money by selling large quantities of familiar, hardy, easy-to-grow plants. Perennials, common trees such as maple and pine, and landscaping hedges require little attention to grow. This means that they will not take many of your resources to care for, and they are more likely to be purchased by your customers. Having enough product and satisfactory customer service will encourage your clients to return.

How much can you charge customers?

Plants are sold from $1 per pot to several hundred dollars for unique and exotic specimens of trees. Prices can be adjusted upward in wealthier neighborhoods.

How much profit can a plant nursery make?

Your profit will depend on scale and location. Successful nurseries can see an annual cash flow anywhere from $40,000 to $625,000.

How can you make your business more profitable?

Determine which plants are in the greatest demand and focus on providing enough of them to fulfill your customers’ needs. Follow that up by introducing species that have a low wholesale purchase price and require the least amount of attention to attain their retail size in order to maximize return on your investment.

Day-to-Day and Growth

What happens during a typical day at a plant nursery?

As the owner/operator of a plant nursery, you need to be prepared to:

  • Care for a wide variety of plants in various stages of growth
  • Work a farmer’s schedule from dawn to dusk
  • Maintain large greenhouses or acres of irrigated growing flats
  • Apply herbicides/pesticides to control disease and pests
  • Determine which and how many plants of each variety should be grown to meet demand without waste
  • Maintain retail storefront for sales to local gardeners
  • Carry out basic accounting/money handling
  • Maintain sufficient staff to care for plants and customers
  • Establish relationships with wholesalers to both buy and sell product
  • Provide information and support for your local customers

What are some skills and experiences that will help you build a successful plant nursery?

You need an excellent understanding of maintaining commercial greenhouses and supporting healthy plants. You should also have solid understanding of accounting and retail business practices that can help you decipher fluctuations in supply and demand in order to maintain profits through changes in the economy and customer base. An ability to build positive business relationships will also aid your growth in the business.

What is the growth potential for a plant nursery?

Through aggressive networking and the building of a large customer base of wealthy commercial clients, a plant nursery can continue to expand its operation as long as there is additional acreage to cultivate or build additional greenhouses on. Popular nurseries often open multiple locations in a region when they’ve achieved positive name recognition among landscaping and construction companies.

What are some insider tips for jump starting a plant nursery?

Do your demographic research before breaking ground on a new nursery. If you don’t know if your potential customers are going to buy a thousand trees or a thousand pots of pansies, you will waste time and money growing plants that nobody is going to buy. Reach out to gardening clubs, growers associations, and commercial clients to develop a plan for your first three harvests. If you live in the north, you need to start planning your growing season right after the New Year in order to grab advanced sales when the planting season begins.

How and when to build a team

You will need your staff as soon as you start receiving seed, soil, and pots. Most of the labor involved in a nursery is in the growing of the plants, not the selling. Emptying your storefront is really the easy part. You will want to hire individuals who are willing to get dirty, do lots of heavy lifting, love working with the earth, and are interested in building relationships with your customers.

Read our plant nursery hiring guide to learn about the different roles a plant nursery typically fills, how much to budget for employee salaries, and how to build your team exactly how you want it.

Part 2 - Is a Plant Nursery business the right fit for you?

Business Evaluation & Strategy Tool

We'll walk you through the four pillars every business needs: Points of Leverage, Marketing Strategy, Financial Model, and Personal Compatibility. At the end you'll see a personalized report and your action plan below will be tailored to your answers.

Step 1 of 4 — Points of Leverage

Every viable business has natural advantages. Below are common leverage points across four categories. Pick the ones that apply to your Plant Nursery business. We've pre-suggested a few based on your idea — review and adjust.

Location

Advantages tied to where and how your business is positioned in physical/digital space.

Scalability

Things that let your business grow without proportionally growing costs.

Knowledge

What you know that competitors don't — or can't easily replicate.

Human Resources

Your people, their skills, and the network that supports them.

How well do you understand your Points of Leverage?

1: very little understanding · 2: neutral · 3: completely understand this component

Step 2 of 4 — Marketing Strategy

Without a way to connect with customers, even great businesses fail. Pick the channels you plan to use to reach your customers.

Digital channels
Traditional channels
Customer acquisition cost (optional)

Do you know what it will cost to acquire each new customer?

How well do you understand your Marketing Strategy?

1: very little · 2: neutral · 3: completely understand

Step 3 of 4 — Financial Model

Enter your monthly baseline costs — the minimum overhead to keep the business running. Then we'll calculate how many sales per month you need to break even.

Monthly baseline costs
Total per month $0
Break-even calculator

How much would a typical customer spend with you per visit / transaction?

Is it realistic to serve that many customers in a month?

How well do you understand your Financial Model?

1: very little · 2: neutral · 3: completely understand

Step 4 of 4 — Personal Compatibility

A business that doesn't fit your life will fail no matter how good the numbers look. Tell us how this business fits you.

How long are you willing to commit?

Pick one. Most businesses need at least 2-3 years to mature.

Daily tasks you're comfortable with

Pick everything you're happy doing day-to-day. We've pre-selected a few based on this business.

How well do you understand the day-to-day reality of this business?

1: very little · 2: neutral · 3: completely understand

Your Plant Nursery Evaluation Report

Complete the four pillars and your personalized summary will appear here.

Points of Leverage

    Marketing Strategy

      Financial Model

      Personal Compatibility

        Part 3 - Action plan to launch your Plant Nursery business in 90 days

        Nine concrete steps to take you from idea to open business, grouped into 30-day phases. Complete the planner above and we'll highlight what's most important for your situation.

        First 30 days — Foundation

        1. Form your legal entity

          An LLC keeps your personal assets separate from business debts and lawsuits — the most common reason small business owners choose this structure. Sole proprietorships and partnerships do not provide this protection.

        2. Get an EIN and register for taxes

          Apply for your free Employer Identification Number through the IRS, then register for any state or local taxes that apply to your business (sales tax, franchise tax).

        3. Open a business bank account and credit card

          A dedicated business account is required to maintain personal asset protection. Mixing personal and business finances ('piercing the corporate veil') can void your LLC's liability shield.

        4. Set up business accounting

          Recording expenses and income from day one makes tax filing easier and lets you see when the business is actually profitable. Use software (QuickBooks, Wave) or a part-time bookkeeper.

        Days 30–60 — Compliance & Risk

        1. Get permits and licenses

          State and local requirements vary widely. Brick-and-mortar businesses typically need a Certificate of Occupancy; service businesses may need specific professional licensing; food businesses need health permits.

        2. Get business insurance

          General Liability Insurance is the most common starting point. If you'll have employees, most states require Workers' Compensation. Specific industries need additional coverage (product liability, professional liability, etc.).

        Days 60–90 — Launch

        1. Define your brand

          Your brand is how customers perceive and remember you. A clear name, logo, and visual identity make every later marketing decision easier and protect you legally as you grow.

        2. Create your business website

          Every legitimate business needs a website. Social media pages are not a substitute — you don't own the platform. Modern website builders mean you can launch a clean site in a weekend without a developer.

        3. Set up your business phone system

          A dedicated business number keeps your personal life private, makes the business look legitimate, and lets you route calls professionally. Cloud phone services start under $20/month.

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