Seen the show gardens at RHS Chelsea and think you’ve got what it takes to make one? Here’s our guide from application to judging, with top tips from designers

By Stephanie Mahon

Published: Saturday, 27 May 2023 at 12:00 am


The RHS Chelsea Flower Show is almost over, but those sensational show gardens may have inspired you to create your own design for next year’s show – or maybe you just think you could do way better? Either way, here’s our guide with everything you could possibly want to know about applying for and building a Chelsea show garden, with advice from the RHS and those designers who have been there, done that, and won the medals. We’re warning you, it’s a long read – but worth it.

More on Chelsea Flower Show

How do you get a garden at Chelsea Flower Show

In brief

How do you get to design a garden for Chelsea Flower Show?

You don’t need to be invited to apply to create a garden at Chelsea, as it is open to everyone, but it is best you have some professional garden or design experience or are studying in this field. Here’s more:

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How do you apply to create a Chelsea Flower Show garden?

You’ll find the application form on the RHS website, as a starter, but you will also have to provide lots of documents and drawings to support this. Find out everything you’ll need:

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The Yeo Valley Organic Garden. Designed by Tom Massey, supported by Sarah Mead. at RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2021
© RHS

What is the size of a Chelsea Flower Show garden?

Main Avenue Show Gardens are usually either 10m x 20-22m or 15m x 10m. Sanctuary Gardens can range from 5m x 4m to 12m x 10m and All About Plants Gardens are 8m x 6m. There’s a lot more to the design than dimensions though.

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How much does it cost to build a Chelsea Flower Show garden?

You probably can’t afford it. Chelsea show gardens have been known to cost everything from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of pounds, so you’re going to need a sponsor.
We’ve top tips on finding the money to create your show garden

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How long does it take to build a garden at the Chelsea Flower Show?

Main Show Garden designers have three weeks to build their gardens – Sanctuary and All About Plants categories get less time. All work has to be completed by 9pm on the Saturday before the show opens. For more ins and outs on the build and planting

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How do the medals work at Chelsea Flower Show?

There are four levels of medal you can achieve at the Chelsea Flower Show: Gold, Silver-Gilt, Silver and Bronze. The best of the Gold medallists, in the judges’ eyes, is given the Best Show Garden award, and the public vote throughout show week for their favourite garden for the BBC People’s Choice award. There are ways to ensure you get the top medal

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The M&G Garden. Designed by: Andy Sturgeon at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2019
© RHS

Here’s everything you need to know about designing a garden at Chelsea Flower Show

Where to start

Next year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show will take place from Tuesday 21 to Saturday 25 May 2024, but the deadline for show garden applications is Monday 5 June 2023 – so you have probably missed that boat. But as double Chelsea Gold medal winner Joe Perkins explains in our video below, you really will need a year to get your design and application together anyway, so it’s the perfect time to start work on your 2025 application.

There are several categories of show garden, including the large Main Avenue Show Gardens that grab all the eyes, footfall and media coverage; but if this is your first ever show garden, you are better off going for one of the smaller categories first, such as a Balcony or Container Garden, an All About Plants Garden or a Sanctuary Garden.

In fact, it might be best to try out one of the smaller shows first before attempting Chelsea, such as Malvern, Tatton or Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival. Creating a smaller garden at a smaller show will give you the practical, personal, hard-won learnings you need to be able to create a realistic design for Chelsea, and the RHS prefers you and your contractor to both have previous experience of show garden design and build before attempting to do something for the Big One.

Before starting your application, the RHS will also expect you to have read all the bumph they provide to prospective designers, so you will need to become familiar with the General Show Regulations, the Judging Criteria and documents on Environmental Responsibility and Sustainability. The RHS also provides an Example Design Proposal to pore over.

Your design concept

Now for the fun bit – your concept, and what the garden will look like. “I think you need to have a really good idea up your sleeve,” says multi-Chelsea Gold medallist Cleve West. “You have to have something that’s going to capture people’s attention as soon as they walk past it. There will have to be one memorable thing from that garden.”

Hattie Ghaui, CEO of Project Giving Back, which funded 15 show gardens this year, says the best designs “are usually the most simple, without overthinking the symbolism or trying to shoehorn in every message you want the garden to convey. A beautiful planting palette is often what attracts the most attention – and this is especially achievable in the smaller garden categories at Chelsea”.

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The Mind Garden. Designed by Andy Sturgeon at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2022.
© RHS

How to apply

But as well as having a good design, you are going to need to be good at admin, because your design proposal document needs to include everything on this rather scary RHS list: a master plan, to scale and annotated with key elements of the design; a setting-out plan showing the main elements of the garden and key dimensions such as path widths, spot heights, water dimensions; perspective drawings showing key views of the garden including the views into the garden that visitors will see; and section elevations showing excavation depths and key heights, including the RHS regulated depths and heights.

Not turned off yet? Well, as well as this, you will have to prepare a preliminary planting plan with key structural plants, and a separate list of other plants (which doesn’t have to be your final definitive list but should be a good indication of plants you wish to use). Then you’ll also need construction drawings for any buildings, walls and load-bearing construction details (structural engineering drawings will be requested if your application is accepted); a signed letter from the sponsor confirming full funding of the garden, or if self-funded confirmation of how funding will be achieved (see below for more); examples of your previous show garden and design experience; examples of your contractor’s previous show garden experience; and, finally, your first version of the Client’s Brief, which forms the basis upon which your garden is judged.

Lastly, it is essential that you have a new home for your garden to go to after the show, either in its entirety or in parts.

Still with me? Completed applications go to a selection panel, who may get in touch to ask you to present your proposal via phone, before coming back with an acceptance or feedback on why you have not succeeded.

Okay, well done if you made it this far – that’s the admin side all done with. Now we get all the juicy tips from those in the know, below.

Watch: Chelsea Flower Show designers explain what you need to know