Herb

Stevia

Stevia rebaudiana · Asteraceae

Also called: Sweetleaf, Sweet Herb of Paraguay, Candyleaf, Sugarleaf

Stevia (Stevia rebaudiana) is a moderate-water herb well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a moderate-growing herb. Expect white blooms late summer to fall.

Stevia (Stevia rebaudiana) growing in Tucson
Photo: Ethel Aardvark (CC BY 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Stevia at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun in mild months but provide afternoon shade in Tucson's summer—intense low-desert heat and reflected light scorch the foliage and stress transplants.
Mature size
1–2 ft tall and about 18 in wide.
Growth rate
Moderate
Bloom
White, Late summer to fall (short-day bloomer); small white flowers. Pinch off buds to keep leaves sweet.
Cold hardiness
Frost-tender; tender perennial hardy to USDA 9/10–11. Tucson (9a–9b) is borderline—it is often killed or knocked back by winter freezes and is best grown as a warm-season annual or protected/containerized over winter.
Soil
Well-drained, loamy soil rich in organic matter; prefers slightly acidic to neutral pH (6.5–7.0). Tucson's alkaline, fast-draining native soil should be heavily amended, or grow in containers/raised beds with quality potting mix.
Native range
Subtropical highlands of Paraguay and Brazil.
Best used as
Natural calorie-free sweetener (fresh or dried leaves, tea), Container and raised-bed herb gardens, Edible ornamental
Wildlife
Late-season flowers offer minor nectar for pollinators.
Toxicity
Non-toxic; leaves are a recognized natural sweetener and safe for people and pets.

How to grow Stevia in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Plant transplants in spring after frost danger passes and nights stay above ~50°F; avoid planting in midsummer heat. Has shallow roots and is not very drought-tolerant—keep soil consistently moist (water 2–3 times weekly in summer) but never waterlogged, which causes root rot.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder—too much nitrogen reduces leaf sweetness. Amend with compost and use a low-nitrogen, balanced organic fertilizer sparingly during the growing season.

Pruning & care

Pinch tips early and often to promote bushy growth and more leaves. Harvest leaves before flowering for peak sweetness (flowering reduces sweetness); cut plants back after bloom.

Notes

In the low desert, avoid midsummer planting and give afternoon shade to establish spring transplants. Leaves are 30–40x sweeter than sugar—harvest before flowering. Does best in amended raised beds or pots where soil moisture and pH can be managed.

Sources: Growing In The Garden (Phoenix low-desert) – How to Grow and Use Stevia; Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder – Stevia rebaudiana; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension herb guidance; Wikipedia: Stevia rebaudiana

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library