32 Companion Plants to Grow With Your Peppers

green pepper plant grows in garden with help of metal trellis

Treehugger / Autumn Wood

Companion planting in the garden can serve several purposes, ranging from maximizing garden space to attracting beneficial insects and pollinators to luring insect pests away from other food crops.

Both sweet and hot peppers benefit from companion planting (much like their fellow nightshade, the tomato). In fact, herbs like basil, chives, and oregano, along with vegetables such as carrots and onions, are excellent choices for companion planting with peppers.

Here are the herbs, flowers, and vegetables that will best complement your pepper patch.

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Basil

Arguably one of the most popular summer herbs, basil is great on its own, but also has a place next to and around pepper plants. It's claimed that growing basil next to peppers boosts their flavor, and may help to repel some common garden pests, such as aphids, spider mites, thrips, mosquitoes, and flies. Plus, pesto!

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Chives

Growing chives near peppers can help to deter aphids and other insects. Chives are also said to add to the flavor and yields of plants nearby. Chives are a handy and flavorful kitchen herb, and because it's a perennial, a single planting can come back year after year.

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Carrots

Growing carrots around peppers can help to shade out some of the weeds, providing a living mulch. These companion plants are also a great way to maximize space in the garden. Plus, who doesn't love a fresh carrot, straight from the soil?

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Onions

Onions don't take up a lot of room above the ground, and they can deter many common insect pests in the garden, such as aphids, slugs, and cabbage worms, making them a good companion plant for peppers. Besides the onion bulb itself, onion greens can be clipped throughout the season as an addition to salads and other fresh vegetable dishes.

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Chard

Swiss chard is another incredibly useful plant in the garden, and interplanting it with peppers can offer partial shade and protection from winds, while also crowding out weeds. Chard also happens to be one of the easier veggies to grow and can add some color to garden beds.

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Lettuce

Growing lettuce as a companion plant to peppers is a great way to get an additional harvest in a small space, due to their lower growth habit, while also crowding out weeds.

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Spinach

Spinach can be a compliment to peppers in the garden, for many of the same reasons that both lettuce and chard are, and because of their shorter stature, they won't shade out peppers and other taller plants.

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Okra

Growing okra near peppers can offer wind protection and partial shade for the peppers in the heat of summer and may offer some protection from pests such as aphids.

What not to plant near peppers?

There are few plants that experienced pepper growers consider absolutely off-limits. But be warned that cabbage and its brassica relatives (like broccoli and kohlrabi) are known to hamper the growth of nightshade family vegetables like peppers due to a soil mismatch. Planting fennel nearby is discouraged as well.

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Leeks

Although not quite as popular to grow as its family members, such as garlic and onions, leeks can be a good companion plant for peppers. They don't take up a lot of room, so growing leeks can help to fill empty spots in the garden, and they are also thought to repel some insects, such as carrot flies.

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Radishes

Radishes are not only easy to grow, but they are also one of the quickest (as little as three or four weeks from seed). Growing radishes around peppers allows you to get a fairly quick food crop in a small amount of space.

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Beets

If you've only ever eaten canned beets, eating fresh beets from your garden is quite a treat. Growing beets near peppers is another method of filling space in the garden and shading out weeds while helping to keep the soil moist.

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Corn

Besides being one of the most popular summer vegetables, corn is also a unique plant to have in the garden, as we don't often grow any other giant grasses in our beds (at least on purpose). Due to its tall growth habit, corn can serve as a windbreak or cast shade on pepper plants during parts of the day. Corn is also said to act as a trap crop for aphids, which may keep them off the pepper plants.

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Beans

Besides fixing nitrogen in the soil and helping to feed other garden plants, beans can provide other benefits for pepper plants, including crowding out weeds and helping to block the winds or cast partial shade.

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Tomatoes

Although it's usually recommended to not plant tomatoes and peppers right after each other in the same bed every year, they can be grown together in the same garden bed (and then rotated to another bed next season). Growing tomatoes near peppers helps to shade the soil and can offer the peppers some protection from the sun in the hottest parts of the day.

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Asparagus

Although asparagus is a perennial and can't be planted for an instant crop in one season, pepper plants can be grown in the asparagus patch to optimize the use of that space during the summer, after the spring asparagus is picked and eaten.

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Garlic

Growing garlic as a companion plant with peppers can help repel or deter aphids and certain beetles from taking over the peppers. Planting garlic around peppers, or peppers among garlic, is another way of maximizing garden space for better yields.

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Squash

Both summer and winter squash can be grown near peppers, where their large leaves can help keep the sun off the bare soil and keep weeds down.

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Oregano

Due to its shorter stature, oregano grows well around peppers without competing for space, covers bare soil, and is a great complement to many dishes that also include peppers.

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Dill

Dill is said to attract beneficial insects and to help repel pests such as aphids. It may also improve the flavors of vegetables grown nearby. Planting dill around peppers is a great use of space, while their feathery leaves offer some contrast and texture to the garden.

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Parsley

Growing parsley around pepper plants not only helps you get a second edible from almost the same amount of space, but it also serves to provide some shade and cover for bare soil.

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Marjoram

Another lower-growing herb that won't compete for space with peppers, marjoram is said to improve the flavor of vegetables and herbs grown near it, while also providing a tasty culinary herb.

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Buckwheat

Growing buckwheat around pepper plants can attract pollinators and other beneficial insects, as well as serve as a green mulch—just cut and chop the buckwheat and lay it on the ground in garden beds.

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Rosemary

Rosemary can be a great addition to your culinary herbs, while also serving as a groundcover plant to minimize bare soil and high evaporation rates.

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Cucumbers

Cucumbers are another summer vegetable favorite, as great to eat fresh as they are pickled, and they go well with many pepper dishes.

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Eggplant

Also a relative of peppers, this member of the nightshade family enjoys the same soil conditions that peppers do and can add some diversity to garden beds while providing another tasty summer vegetable.

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Parsnip

Parsnips aren't usually one of the vegetables people name as their favorite, but growing this root vegetable around peppers can yield another food crop while helping to crowd out weeds and keep the soil shaded.

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Peas

Peas are a tasty treat in the spring and summer, and the pea plants help to fix nitrogen in the soil to benefit other plants growing nearby or afterward.

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Geraniums

Growing geraniums as companion plants for peppers can help repel cabbage worms, Japanese beetles, and other pests. They also provide some wonderfully colorful blossoms in the garden.

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French Marigolds

When grown near other garden crops, French marigolds can stimulate their growth, while also repelling nematodes, aphids, whiteflies, and slugs. Marigolds are a great companion to plant near peppers.

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Petunias

In addition to providing a splash of color in the garden, petunias can be a great companion plant for peppers due to their ability to repel asparagus beetles, leafhoppers, tomato worms, and aphids.

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Lovage

Lovage, as a taller plant, can offer protection from drying winds and sun and is said to improve both the health and the flavor of many garden vegetable plants.

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Nasturtium

This edible flower is not only beautiful; it can benefit the flavor and growth of many other plants and is used to deter aphids, beetles, squash bugs, whiteflies, and other common garden pests.

View Article Sources
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  2. Faires, Nicole. The Ultimate Guide to Natural Farming and Sustainable Living Permaculture for Beginners. Skyhorse Publishing. 2014.

  3. Lewis-Stempel, John. The Wildlife Garden. Little, Brown Book Group. 2014.

  4. Garlic chives.” Heritage Garden University of Illinois.

  5. Garden geranium.” Heritage Garden University of Illinois Chicago.