Palm

Mediterranean fan palm

Chamaerops humilis · Arecaceae

Also called: European fan palm, dwarf fan palm

Mediterranean fan palm (Chamaerops humilis) is a low-water palm well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun to partial shade, with a slow growth rate. Expect yellow (flowers) blooms Inconspicuous yellow flower clusters in spring.

Mediterranean fan palm (Chamaerops humilis) growing in Tucson
Photo: tato grasso (CC BY-SA 2.5) · Wikimedia Commons

Mediterranean fan palm at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to partial shade; tolerates reflected heat well and thrives in open Tucson sun.
Mature size
Typically 6-15 ft tall and 6-10 ft wide; slow, often multi-trunked clump
Growth rate
Slow
Bloom
Yellow (flowers), Inconspicuous yellow flower clusters in spring; small brown-yellow date-like fruit (not eaten)
Cold hardiness
One of the most cold-hardy palms; hardy to about 10-15°F, well within Tucson's range; essentially no frost protection needed.
Soil
Adaptable; well-drained sandy, loamy, or rocky soils; tolerates Tucson's alkaline, caliche-prone soils.
Native range
Western Mediterranean basin (Spain, southern France, Italy, North Africa)
Best used as
Accent / specimen palm, Low-water desert landscape, Containers and courtyards, Multi-trunk focal point
Wildlife
Flowers offer minor pollinator value; dense clump provides bird/wildlife cover.
Toxicity
Non-toxic to dogs, cats, and humans; sharp spines on leaf stalks are the main hazard.

How to grow Mediterranean fan palm in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought tolerant once established; deep-water every 2-4 weeks in the hot season and monthly or less in winter to encourage deep roots. Slow, deep irrigation to the dripline outperforms frequent shallow watering.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder; apply a slow-release palm fertilizer with micronutrients (especially manganese and magnesium) once or twice in spring/summer to prevent frizzletop and deficiency in alkaline soil.

Pruning & care

Remove only fully dead, brown fronds and spent fruit stalks; never over-prune green fronds. Suckers can be left for a clumping multi-trunk form or removed for a single trunk. Leaf bases/petioles are sharply spined, so wear protection.

Notes

An excellent, well-behaved, cold-hardy and drought-tolerant palm for Tucson. Compact size suits residential yards, courtyards, and pool areas. Plant in spring once soil warms. Mind the sharp petiole spines when siting near walkways.

Sources: AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum plant references; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension landscape palm guidance

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