
Iceberg Rose
Bright White Blooms That Keep Coming In Clusters
Iceberg Rose is famous for a reason: it produces crisp, bright white flowers in generous clusters, so the plant looks “in bloom” instead of showing a bloom here and there. The flowers are semi-double with a fresh, clean look that brightens mixed borders, softens evergreen backdrops, and makes the whole garden feel lighter and more polished. It’s one of those roses that reads beautifully from a distance and still looks lovely up close.
Bloom cycles repeat through the season, giving you color from late spring into early fall in most climates. That steady flowering makes Iceberg a top pick for gardeners who want reliable white roses for long stretches of the year. If you’ve been hunting for a white rose that doesn’t disappear after a short flush, Iceberg is a strong, classic choice.
A Light Fragrance And Dark Green, Shiny Foliage
Iceberg brings a pleasant rose fragrance that’s noticeable without being overpowering, especially when planted near paths, patios, or an entry walk where you pass it often. White roses can sometimes feel “quiet,” but Iceberg has presence because the blooms sit nicely against dark green, glossy foliage. That contrast makes the flowers pop and keeps the plant looking attractive even between bloom flushes.
The lightly thorned stems and upright, rounded habit make it easy to integrate into real-world landscapes. It looks equally at home in a cottage-style border with perennials or in a more structured foundation bed where you want repeat color and tidy greenery. When you combine clean foliage, steady bloom clusters, and gentle scent, you get a rose that feels both classic and easy to live with.
Perfect Size For Borders, Foundation Beds, And Flowering Hedges
As a shrub rose, Iceberg typically matures to 3–4 feet tall and 2–3 feet wide, a sweet spot for home landscapes. It’s tall enough to read as a real flowering shrub, but compact enough to fit into beds without taking over. Use it as a repeating plant along a walkway, as a bright accent in a border, or as a simple way to “lift” a darker planting with clean white blooms.
Iceberg is also a standout for hedges because it fills in well and blooms in clusters for months. A row of Iceberg roses gives you that classic white-rose look with a more landscape-friendly shape. If you want a flowering hedge that feels timeless and welcoming, Iceberg is one of the easiest ways to get there.
Train It Taller For A Soft, Climbing Look If You Want
One of the fun advantages of Iceberg is flexibility. While it’s commonly grown as a rounded shrub, it can also be trained upward on a support for a taller, more vertical effect. In ideal conditions and with training, it can reach much taller heights, giving you a softer, bloom-filled look on a trellis, fence, or arbor without switching to a completely different rose type.
If you want to keep it as a shrub, a simple yearly prune maintains a tidy form and encourages vigorous new flowering growth. If you want to train it, focus pruning on guiding strong canes where you want them and removing weak, crowded growth. Either way, you’re choosing a white rose that adapts to your design goals instead of boxing you into one look.
Bright White Blooms That Keep Coming In Clusters
Iceberg Rose is famous for a reason: it produces crisp, bright white flowers in generous clusters, so the plant looks “in bloom” instead of showing a bloom here and there. The flowers are semi-double with a fresh, clean look that brightens mixed borders, softens evergreen backdrops, and makes the whole garden feel lighter and more polished. It’s one of those roses that reads beautifully from a distance and still looks lovely up close.
Bloom cycles repeat through the season, giving you color from late spring into early fall in most climates. That steady flowering makes Iceberg a top pick for gardeners who want reliable white roses for long stretches of the year. If you’ve been hunting for a white rose that doesn’t disappear after a short flush, Iceberg is a strong, classic choice.
A Light Fragrance And Dark Green, Shiny Foliage
Iceberg brings a pleasant rose fragrance that’s noticeable without being overpowering, especially when planted near paths, patios, or an entry walk where you pass it often. White roses can sometimes feel “quiet,” but Iceberg has presence because the blooms sit nicely against dark green, glossy foliage. That contrast makes the flowers pop and keeps the plant looking attractive even between bloom flushes.
The lightly thorned stems and upright, rounded habit make it easy to integrate into real-world landscapes. It looks equally at home in a cottage-style border with perennials or in a more structured foundation bed where you want repeat color and tidy greenery. When you combine clean foliage, steady bloom clusters, and gentle scent, you get a rose that feels both classic and easy to live with.
Perfect Size For Borders, Foundation Beds, And Flowering Hedges
As a shrub rose, Iceberg typically matures to 3–4 feet tall and 2–3 feet wide, a sweet spot for home landscapes. It’s tall enough to read as a real flowering shrub, but compact enough to fit into beds without taking over. Use it as a repeating plant along a walkway, as a bright accent in a border, or as a simple way to “lift” a darker planting with clean white blooms.
Iceberg is also a standout for hedges because it fills in well and blooms in clusters for months. A row of Iceberg roses gives you that classic white-rose look with a more landscape-friendly shape. If you want a flowering hedge that feels timeless and welcoming, Iceberg is one of the easiest ways to get there.
Train It Taller For A Soft, Climbing Look If You Want
One of the fun advantages of Iceberg is flexibility. While it’s commonly grown as a rounded shrub, it can also be trained upward on a support for a taller, more vertical effect. In ideal conditions and with training, it can reach much taller heights, giving you a softer, bloom-filled look on a trellis, fence, or arbor without switching to a completely different rose type.
If you want to keep it as a shrub, a simple yearly prune maintains a tidy form and encourages vigorous new flowering growth. If you want to train it, focus pruning on guiding strong canes where you want them and removing weak, crowded growth. Either way, you’re choosing a white rose that adapts to your design goals instead of boxing you into one look.
Original: $99.95
-70%$99.95
$29.98Description
Bright White Blooms That Keep Coming In Clusters
Iceberg Rose is famous for a reason: it produces crisp, bright white flowers in generous clusters, so the plant looks “in bloom” instead of showing a bloom here and there. The flowers are semi-double with a fresh, clean look that brightens mixed borders, softens evergreen backdrops, and makes the whole garden feel lighter and more polished. It’s one of those roses that reads beautifully from a distance and still looks lovely up close.
Bloom cycles repeat through the season, giving you color from late spring into early fall in most climates. That steady flowering makes Iceberg a top pick for gardeners who want reliable white roses for long stretches of the year. If you’ve been hunting for a white rose that doesn’t disappear after a short flush, Iceberg is a strong, classic choice.
A Light Fragrance And Dark Green, Shiny Foliage
Iceberg brings a pleasant rose fragrance that’s noticeable without being overpowering, especially when planted near paths, patios, or an entry walk where you pass it often. White roses can sometimes feel “quiet,” but Iceberg has presence because the blooms sit nicely against dark green, glossy foliage. That contrast makes the flowers pop and keeps the plant looking attractive even between bloom flushes.
The lightly thorned stems and upright, rounded habit make it easy to integrate into real-world landscapes. It looks equally at home in a cottage-style border with perennials or in a more structured foundation bed where you want repeat color and tidy greenery. When you combine clean foliage, steady bloom clusters, and gentle scent, you get a rose that feels both classic and easy to live with.
Perfect Size For Borders, Foundation Beds, And Flowering Hedges
As a shrub rose, Iceberg typically matures to 3–4 feet tall and 2–3 feet wide, a sweet spot for home landscapes. It’s tall enough to read as a real flowering shrub, but compact enough to fit into beds without taking over. Use it as a repeating plant along a walkway, as a bright accent in a border, or as a simple way to “lift” a darker planting with clean white blooms.
Iceberg is also a standout for hedges because it fills in well and blooms in clusters for months. A row of Iceberg roses gives you that classic white-rose look with a more landscape-friendly shape. If you want a flowering hedge that feels timeless and welcoming, Iceberg is one of the easiest ways to get there.
Train It Taller For A Soft, Climbing Look If You Want
One of the fun advantages of Iceberg is flexibility. While it’s commonly grown as a rounded shrub, it can also be trained upward on a support for a taller, more vertical effect. In ideal conditions and with training, it can reach much taller heights, giving you a softer, bloom-filled look on a trellis, fence, or arbor without switching to a completely different rose type.
If you want to keep it as a shrub, a simple yearly prune maintains a tidy form and encourages vigorous new flowering growth. If you want to train it, focus pruning on guiding strong canes where you want them and removing weak, crowded growth. Either way, you’re choosing a white rose that adapts to your design goals instead of boxing you into one look.
























