🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
HomeStore

Golden Dream Boxwood

Product image 1
1 / 4

Golden Dream Boxwood

Bright Gold-Edged Foliage That Stays Neat And Evergreen

Golden Dream Boxwood is the kind of shrub that quietly upgrades everything around it. Those glossy green leaves with golden-yellow edging add instant brightness—like you tucked a soft beam of sunlight into the bed line—and because it’s a boxwood, you get that dependable evergreen structure through every season. It’s especially strong in landscapes that feel “flat” in winter, where a little variegation goes a long way toward keeping borders and foundations looking intentional.

What I love about Golden Dream is that it doesn’t demand a big footprint to make a big difference. The habit is naturally compact and rounded, so it reads tidy even without constant pruning. Use it to repeat color rhythm along a walkway, frame an entry without overpowering it, or break up all-green plantings with a crisp gold accent. If you want a boxwood that feels fresh, modern, and bright—without losing the classic boxwood look—this is a home-run choice.

A Compact Boxwood That’s Made For Low Hedges And Clean Lines

If your goal is a low hedge that looks finished, Golden Dream is built for it. It stays in that “manageable” zone—often around 2–3 feet tall and about as wide—so it’s ideal where you want definition without blocking windows or taking over a bed. Think front-walk borders, driveway edges, small property lines, and foundation plantings that need structure and polish year-round. It’s also a smart substitute when larger boxwood varieties are simply too big for today’s tighter landscapes.

Golden Dream also plays well with both formal and relaxed designs. You can keep it softly mounded for a cottage-style feel, or clip it into a cleaner hedge for that tailored look. The variegation adds dimension, so even a simple hedge feels more elevated. And because it’s compact, it’s easier to access for maintenance—no ladders, no reaching into a giant shrub to fix a mistake. This is the boxwood you choose when you want control, clarity, and color in one plant.

Sun Placement And Simple Care For Strongest Color And Best Health

For the strongest golden edging, give Golden Dream plenty of light—full sun to part shade is the sweet spot. More sun typically means brighter variegation, while some afternoon shade can help reduce stress in hotter areas. Like most boxwoods, it prefers well-drained soil and steady moisture during establishment. The biggest win is watering deeply at the base, then letting the soil breathe—boxwoods dislike soggy conditions, and they also don’t love constant overhead watering that keeps foliage wet.

Mulch is your friend here: a 2–3 inch layer helps regulate soil temperature and moisture, protects shallow roots, and keeps the plant from swinging between “too dry” and “too wet.” Once established, Golden Dream is fairly forgiving, but it will always look its best when it’s not stressed by drought. Good airflow also matters—especially if you’re planting multiple shrubs—because it helps foliage dry quickly and supports long-term durability. In other words, light, drainage, and a consistent watering rhythm are the simple ingredients for a boxwood that stays thick and vibrant.

Spacing And Pruning That Build A Dense Hedge Without Overwork

Spacing determines whether your hedge looks lush or awkward. For a low hedge that fills in, most landscapes do best planting Golden Dream about 18–24 inches apart (center to center). That spacing encourages the shrubs to knit together while still allowing enough airflow to reduce disease pressure and prevent thinning of the interior. If you’re using it as individual accents, give each plant more breathing room—about 3–4 feet apart—so the natural rounded shape can show off, and the variegation reads clearly from every angle.

Pruning is straightforward and light. A gentle shape-up in late winter or early spring keeps it dense and tidy, and you can do minor touch-ups after the spring flush if you want a cleaner line. The big rule is to avoid heavy pruning late in the season, because that can push soft new growth that doesn’t harden off before winter. If you want a boxwood that stays compact without becoming a weekly project, Golden Dream fits the bill: smart spacing, a couple of light trims, and you’ll get that crisp, evergreen structure that makes the whole bed feel “done.”

Bright Gold-Edged Foliage That Stays Neat And Evergreen

Golden Dream Boxwood is the kind of shrub that quietly upgrades everything around it. Those glossy green leaves with golden-yellow edging add instant brightness—like you tucked a soft beam of sunlight into the bed line—and because it’s a boxwood, you get that dependable evergreen structure through every season. It’s especially strong in landscapes that feel “flat” in winter, where a little variegation goes a long way toward keeping borders and foundations looking intentional.

What I love about Golden Dream is that it doesn’t demand a big footprint to make a big difference. The habit is naturally compact and rounded, so it reads tidy even without constant pruning. Use it to repeat color rhythm along a walkway, frame an entry without overpowering it, or break up all-green plantings with a crisp gold accent. If you want a boxwood that feels fresh, modern, and bright—without losing the classic boxwood look—this is a home-run choice.

A Compact Boxwood That’s Made For Low Hedges And Clean Lines

If your goal is a low hedge that looks finished, Golden Dream is built for it. It stays in that “manageable” zone—often around 2–3 feet tall and about as wide—so it’s ideal where you want definition without blocking windows or taking over a bed. Think front-walk borders, driveway edges, small property lines, and foundation plantings that need structure and polish year-round. It’s also a smart substitute when larger boxwood varieties are simply too big for today’s tighter landscapes.

Golden Dream also plays well with both formal and relaxed designs. You can keep it softly mounded for a cottage-style feel, or clip it into a cleaner hedge for that tailored look. The variegation adds dimension, so even a simple hedge feels more elevated. And because it’s compact, it’s easier to access for maintenance—no ladders, no reaching into a giant shrub to fix a mistake. This is the boxwood you choose when you want control, clarity, and color in one plant.

Sun Placement And Simple Care For Strongest Color And Best Health

For the strongest golden edging, give Golden Dream plenty of light—full sun to part shade is the sweet spot. More sun typically means brighter variegation, while some afternoon shade can help reduce stress in hotter areas. Like most boxwoods, it prefers well-drained soil and steady moisture during establishment. The biggest win is watering deeply at the base, then letting the soil breathe—boxwoods dislike soggy conditions, and they also don’t love constant overhead watering that keeps foliage wet.

Mulch is your friend here: a 2–3 inch layer helps regulate soil temperature and moisture, protects shallow roots, and keeps the plant from swinging between “too dry” and “too wet.” Once established, Golden Dream is fairly forgiving, but it will always look its best when it’s not stressed by drought. Good airflow also matters—especially if you’re planting multiple shrubs—because it helps foliage dry quickly and supports long-term durability. In other words, light, drainage, and a consistent watering rhythm are the simple ingredients for a boxwood that stays thick and vibrant.

Spacing And Pruning That Build A Dense Hedge Without Overwork

Spacing determines whether your hedge looks lush or awkward. For a low hedge that fills in, most landscapes do best planting Golden Dream about 18–24 inches apart (center to center). That spacing encourages the shrubs to knit together while still allowing enough airflow to reduce disease pressure and prevent thinning of the interior. If you’re using it as individual accents, give each plant more breathing room—about 3–4 feet apart—so the natural rounded shape can show off, and the variegation reads clearly from every angle.

Pruning is straightforward and light. A gentle shape-up in late winter or early spring keeps it dense and tidy, and you can do minor touch-ups after the spring flush if you want a cleaner line. The big rule is to avoid heavy pruning late in the season, because that can push soft new growth that doesn’t harden off before winter. If you want a boxwood that stays compact without becoming a weekly project, Golden Dream fits the bill: smart spacing, a couple of light trims, and you’ll get that crisp, evergreen structure that makes the whole bed feel “done.”

Select Size
Select Quantity
From $13.49

Original: $44.95

-70%
Golden Dream Boxwood

$44.95

$13.49

Description

Bright Gold-Edged Foliage That Stays Neat And Evergreen

Golden Dream Boxwood is the kind of shrub that quietly upgrades everything around it. Those glossy green leaves with golden-yellow edging add instant brightness—like you tucked a soft beam of sunlight into the bed line—and because it’s a boxwood, you get that dependable evergreen structure through every season. It’s especially strong in landscapes that feel “flat” in winter, where a little variegation goes a long way toward keeping borders and foundations looking intentional.

What I love about Golden Dream is that it doesn’t demand a big footprint to make a big difference. The habit is naturally compact and rounded, so it reads tidy even without constant pruning. Use it to repeat color rhythm along a walkway, frame an entry without overpowering it, or break up all-green plantings with a crisp gold accent. If you want a boxwood that feels fresh, modern, and bright—without losing the classic boxwood look—this is a home-run choice.

A Compact Boxwood That’s Made For Low Hedges And Clean Lines

If your goal is a low hedge that looks finished, Golden Dream is built for it. It stays in that “manageable” zone—often around 2–3 feet tall and about as wide—so it’s ideal where you want definition without blocking windows or taking over a bed. Think front-walk borders, driveway edges, small property lines, and foundation plantings that need structure and polish year-round. It’s also a smart substitute when larger boxwood varieties are simply too big for today’s tighter landscapes.

Golden Dream also plays well with both formal and relaxed designs. You can keep it softly mounded for a cottage-style feel, or clip it into a cleaner hedge for that tailored look. The variegation adds dimension, so even a simple hedge feels more elevated. And because it’s compact, it’s easier to access for maintenance—no ladders, no reaching into a giant shrub to fix a mistake. This is the boxwood you choose when you want control, clarity, and color in one plant.

Sun Placement And Simple Care For Strongest Color And Best Health

For the strongest golden edging, give Golden Dream plenty of light—full sun to part shade is the sweet spot. More sun typically means brighter variegation, while some afternoon shade can help reduce stress in hotter areas. Like most boxwoods, it prefers well-drained soil and steady moisture during establishment. The biggest win is watering deeply at the base, then letting the soil breathe—boxwoods dislike soggy conditions, and they also don’t love constant overhead watering that keeps foliage wet.

Mulch is your friend here: a 2–3 inch layer helps regulate soil temperature and moisture, protects shallow roots, and keeps the plant from swinging between “too dry” and “too wet.” Once established, Golden Dream is fairly forgiving, but it will always look its best when it’s not stressed by drought. Good airflow also matters—especially if you’re planting multiple shrubs—because it helps foliage dry quickly and supports long-term durability. In other words, light, drainage, and a consistent watering rhythm are the simple ingredients for a boxwood that stays thick and vibrant.

Spacing And Pruning That Build A Dense Hedge Without Overwork

Spacing determines whether your hedge looks lush or awkward. For a low hedge that fills in, most landscapes do best planting Golden Dream about 18–24 inches apart (center to center). That spacing encourages the shrubs to knit together while still allowing enough airflow to reduce disease pressure and prevent thinning of the interior. If you’re using it as individual accents, give each plant more breathing room—about 3–4 feet apart—so the natural rounded shape can show off, and the variegation reads clearly from every angle.

Pruning is straightforward and light. A gentle shape-up in late winter or early spring keeps it dense and tidy, and you can do minor touch-ups after the spring flush if you want a cleaner line. The big rule is to avoid heavy pruning late in the season, because that can push soft new growth that doesn’t harden off before winter. If you want a boxwood that stays compact without becoming a weekly project, Golden Dream fits the bill: smart spacing, a couple of light trims, and you’ll get that crisp, evergreen structure that makes the whole bed feel “done.”

You may also like

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Golden Dwarf Hinoki Cypress

$49.95

$14.98

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Color Guard Yucca

$39.95

$11.99

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Gulf Stream Nandina

$69.95

$20.98

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Crimson Pygmy Barberry

$26.95

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Fire Power Nandina

$74.95

$22.48

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Heavenly Bamboo

$79.95

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Steeds Holly

$23.95

$7.18

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Manhattan Euonymus

$36.95

$11.09

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Soft Touch Holly

$69.95

$20.98

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Densa Inkberry Holly

$89.95

$26.98

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Red Sprite Winterberry Holly

$89.95

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Skip Laurel

$28.95

$8.68