Banana Trees For Sale

Paul’s Nursery grows healthy, vigorous banana trees ready for backyard planting in Clermont, FL and across Central Florida neighborhoods.

The Best Banana Trees Nursery in Clermont, FL

Paul’s Nursery has been part of Central Florida growing tradition for more than 125 years, and banana trees stay a favorite for homeowners chasing that tropical backyard feel. The team carries varieties suited to the local climate, which makes a real difference in long-term success. Each banana tree comes from healthy stock raised under careful conditions on the property. Customers in Clermont rely on the team for honest guidance on size, variety, and placement before any tree leaves the lot. Free estimates fold delivery and planting into one transparent quote with no hidden fees. Trees arrive in the same healthy condition they had on the property. Family ownership means the people growing the trees often handle the delivery themselves. Every banana tree comes straight from the state-inspected greenhouse to your home. Honest recommendations shape every conversation, even when that means suggesting a different variety than the one you walked in asking about. The team stays available by phone or text long after the planting day. You get a partner for the long haul, not a one-time transaction. Buying a banana tree here is a decision that pays off across many growing seasons.

John De Vivo
April 29, 2026

I had a great experience working with Paul’s Nursery from start to finish. They helped me select several fruit trees and handled the installation, and the entire process was smooth and professional. The team was knowledgeable, answered all my questions, and clearly cared about doing the job right. The trees were healthy, well-planted, and everything was done with attention to detail. I highly recommend Paul’s Nursery to anyone looking for quality fruit trees and reliable installation.

Dlx3k
December 16, 2023

It saddens me to come to this page and see only 4 stars for this stellar business. It almost makes me wonder if the reviewers left their review on the wrong page. I experienced exactly zero of the negative experiences described in some of these reviews. I responded to their ad on facebook and was pleasantly surprised every step of the way! Communication was prompt, professional, respectful, courteous, and most certainly not aggressive. The staff was extraordinarily accommodating, going out on a limb (See what I did there?) to ensure my satisfaction. I purchased a Persian Lime tree from them. They delivered AND planted it at no additional charge – and I live over FIFTY MILES from their site! Upon delivery, the tree was already laden with fruit! This was a birthday gift for my sister. Growing up in Northern Michigan, she would have never dreamed that one day she would have a lime tree in her backyard. THANK you, Shelsea, Paul & staff for taking my sister’s Florida Dreams to the next level. We will definitely see you again!!!

Kathy Powell
March 8, 2022

For Christmas 2020 I bought my wife 5 citrus trees from Paul's Nursery. He picked out some very good trees, whenever I had a question he would walk me through it. Normally the first year you get very few pieces of fruit. Because of the quality of Paul's trees and his help after sale this is the first years crop.Pictures of our trees as of Christmas 2021.

Iraida lopez-king
October 27, 2020

They have a good variety on citrus plants and others. Already made appointment for them to give us Free estimate and advice. By the way, the business is open today.

Skip Todd
July 9, 2020

They were fast did a GREAT Job and my yard is green again. Thanks

Sharon Hehir
April 5, 2020

They did a great job replacing my front bushes that got cut down by accident from the power lines tree trimmers but now I have beautiful new bushes. Paul was very nice and will return phone calls or text you back he won’t leave you hanging, I definitely recommend them and will tell anyone who asks

Mary Pead
December 17, 2018

This Nursery does not look beautiful from the road however, they have a huge selection and they are willing to get whatever you need from one of their other nurseries throughout the state. At this particular location they carry a lot of cold-hardy plants and many varieties of fruit and citrus. The prices are far below what you would find at other locations in the area. The owners entire family is in the nursery business throughout the state. He was raised doing this he has a large knowledge of plants for this area. I am told they also do pavers, landscaping, and irrigation.

Banana Trees Delivery In Central Florida

Paul’s Nursery proudly sells Banana Trees to homeowners across Clermont, Winter Garden, The Villages, Groveland, and surrounding Central Florida communities. We deliver Banana Trees and include the planting labor with every order. See our delivery locations to learn more about the areas where we help homeowners with their Banana Trees:

Generations in nursery work
Fruit Tree Varieties Available
CLIENT SATISFACTION
Trees Planted

Why Buy Banana Trees

Banana trees give Central Florida homeowners one of the fastest tropical fruit experiences available. Each plant fruits about every two years, but the real advantage is speed of growth. Banana plants shoot up quickly and send out pups, and those pups keep production rolling so the grove stays in a steady cycle. The wide, paddle-shaped leaves bring a striking tropical look to any yard immediately upon planting. Homegrown bananas taste sweeter and develop a richer flavor than anything trucked into a grocery store. The plants spread through pups that produce more bananas year after year, which turns one tree into a small grove over time. Kids love watching the flower spike emerge and slowly transform into a hand of bananas. Property value often climbs when established tropical fruit features become part of the landscape.

Variety choice plays a real role in the success of a banana planting. Cavendish bananas produce the familiar yellow fruit most people recognize from the store. Lady Finger bananas deliver smaller, sweeter fruit that many customers prefer for fresh eating. Ice Cream bananas offer a creamy texture and a vanilla-like flavor that has earned long-term fans. Red bananas bring a reddish-purple peel with a slightly tangy flesh inside. Each variety has its own peak harvest window, and planting two different types can stretch the picking season across more months. The team at Paul’s Nursery walks through each option in plain language. That conversation happens before any tree leaves the property.

Banana plants behave differently from traditional fruit trees in some helpful ways. Each main stem produces fruit once and then sends up new pups from the base, which keeps the cycle going year after year. The pups can be left to grow as a clump or thinned out to focus energy on the strongest shoot. Fruiting time depends on the variety and growing conditions, but most plants bear within nine to fifteen months after planting. That fast timeline rewards homeowners who want results quickly. The grafting question that applies to other fruit trees does not apply here. Bananas reproduce true to type through their pups, which means your harvest stays consistent over the years. Customers know exactly what they are getting.

Delivery service spares you the difficulty of moving banana plants and their root mass on your own. Mature banana plants reach heights that make them awkward to transport in a regular vehicle. The Paul’s Nursery crew handles the transport with the right equipment and steady hands. Plants arrive in the same condition they left the nursery, with no damage along the way. Planting comes included with every order, so the tree goes straight into properly prepared soil. Free estimates cover the full delivery and planting job before the work starts. Customers know the exact cost ahead of time, with no surprises tacked on later. That straightforward approach reflects how the nursery has operated since the beginning.

Stock quality sits at the heart of what Paul’s Nursery offers. Each banana tree comes straight out of the state-inspected greenhouse and into your yard with no middle handoff. That short path keeps every plant in peak condition. The growing team watches the trees daily and catches anything that needs attention well before delivery. Watering, feeding, and inspection follow a steady rhythm throughout the year. Customers receive a plant raised under attentive care from the very beginning. The healthy start makes a real difference in how the banana tree settles into a new yard.

Care after planting stays simpler than many homeowners expect. Banana trees in Central Florida need consistent water during the first growing season and steady watering across hot stretches once established. Light pruning removes spent leaves and keeps the clump looking tidy. Fertilizer goes down several times each year on a schedule the team can outline. Most plants stay between six and fifteen feet tall depending on variety, and dwarf options exist for tighter spaces. First harvests often arrive within nine to fifteen months after planting. From there, production continues from successive pups for many years. The team stays available by phone or text for any follow-up questions along the way.

Working with Paul’s Nursery means working with the people who actually grow the plants they sell. That direct relationship is hard to find at big-box garden centers or generic landscape suppliers. Each banana tree has a known history on the property, including its feeding schedule and health checks. Questions get answered by someone who walked past that exact row earlier in the day. Pricing reflects the quality of the plants and the included services without unnecessary markup. Repeat customers come back because the bananas they bought years ago are still producing through new pups. New customers find a nursery that treats them with respect and patience. The banana tree you choose today becomes a long-term feature of your yard.

See Our Other Fruit Trees For Sale


Paul’s Nursery offers more than just Banana Trees for homeowners throughout Clermont, The Villages, and surrounding Central Florida areas. Explore our additional fruit tree varieties below:

Buy Banana Trees Online By Seeing Our Clermont Stock

The online stock page lets you scroll through current banana tree availability from any device, day or night. Photos show real plants from the property rather than catalog images. Variety names appear clearly so you can compare Cavendish, Lady Finger, Ice Cream, and other tropical options side by side. Size details set expectations for what to expect when the plant arrives. The list updates as plants sell, which keeps the inventory accurate at all times. Homeowners across Apopka, Auburndale, Davenport, Eustis, Groveland, Haines City, Lady Lake, Leesburg, Mascotte, Minneola, Mount Dora, Ocoee, Tavares, The Villages, Wildwood, and Winter Garden use the page regularly. Delivery reaches every community in that service area, and planting is rolled into the same order. A quick phone call or text after browsing usually moves things along faster than email exchanges. The team can confirm sizing, answer variety questions, and lock in a delivery window in one conversation. Free estimates apply to the full delivery and planting service. Central Florida homeowners get an easy path from online browsing to a healthy banana tree in the ground.

Click To View Stock Call (352) 536-4893

Commonly Asked Banana Trees Planting Questions

Paul’s Nursery makes buying a banana tree straightforward by offering healthy stock, honest variety advice, and delivery with planting included throughout Central Florida. The questions below cover what homeowners most often ask before placing an order.

Most banana trees from Paul’s Nursery begin producing fruit within nine to fifteen months after planting. That short timeline is one of the biggest perks of growing bananas in Florida compared to other fruit trees. The size of the plant at purchase plays a role in how quickly the first flower spike appears. Larger plants tend to fruit faster because they already have a developed root system and pseudostem. Smaller pups take a bit longer as they build size before producing. Variety also affects timing, with some types fruiting faster than others. Weather patterns during the growth phase influence the schedule slightly. The team at Paul’s Nursery sets clear expectations during the buying conversation.

Banana plants follow a unique fruiting cycle compared to traditional fruit trees. Each main stem produces one bunch of bananas and then dies back after harvest. Before that happens, the plant sends up pups from the base that take over the next fruiting cycle. Letting a couple of pups grow alongside the original plant keeps the cycle continuous, with new bunches arriving from the new shoots. The cycle repeats year after year as long as the clump stays healthy. Mature clumps can produce multiple bunches over the course of a year. Total production scales as the clump expands with more pups.

Several factors affect how fast the first harvest arrives. Consistent watering during the growth phase keeps the plant developing without setbacks. Regular fertilizer applications support the rapid leaf and pseudostem growth bananas are known for. Warm temperatures and humidity speed the process along, which Central Florida delivers in abundance. Protection from strong winds helps the large leaves stay intact and photosynthesize fully. The team at Paul’s Nursery shares a clear care plan during the buying conversation. Customers can always call or text the team for guidance as the plant grows. That ongoing support helps the banana tree reach its first harvest quickly.

Several banana varieties thrive in the Central Florida climate. Dwarf Cavendish stays compact and produces the classic yellow bananas most familiar to customers. Lady Finger bananas grow taller and produce sweeter, smaller fruit that many prefer for fresh eating. Ice Cream bananas, also known as Blue Java, offer a creamy texture with a vanilla-like flavor that has earned a devoted following. Red bananas bring reddish-purple skin and a slightly tangy, dense flesh that makes them stand out. Each of these varieties handles the local heat, humidity, and rainfall well. The team helps match the variety to your taste, your yard, and your goals. That conversation happens before any plant leaves the property.

Cold hardiness matters when picking a banana variety in Central Florida. Most banana plants handle the mild local winters without issue, though hard freezes can damage the above-ground portion of the plant. The root system usually survives cold events and pushes new growth in spring even if the visible stem dies back. Varieties bred for cooler conditions tend to recover faster from any winter damage. Cavendish types and Lady Fingers both perform reliably across the service area. The grafted rootstock question does not apply to bananas, but variety selection still drives long-term success. Paul’s Nursery focuses on proven options that work well for Central Florida homeowners.

Harvest timing varies by variety, which works to a homeowner’s advantage. Mixed plantings can produce bananas across many months of the year. Some varieties produce smaller bunches more often, while others produce larger bunches less frequently. Total annual yield can be similar between these approaches, just spread out differently. Photos on the online stock page show the current selection. Calling or texting the team helps narrow down the best fit for your goals. The team at Paul’s Nursery has watched dozens of varieties grow across Central Florida yards. That experience informs every recommendation the team makes.

One of the biggest perks of growing in Florida is that banana trees can be planted year-round. The plants at Paul’s Nursery are container-grown, which lets young banana plants develop strong root systems before they reach your yard. Container-grown stock skips the timing concerns that bare-root plants create. Whether you call in February or August, the planting process works smoothly. Florida’s mild climate supports banana growth across every season of the year. The team plants banana trees throughout the calendar for customers across the region. Booking ahead helps secure your preferred delivery date and variety. The nursery adapts the planting approach to the season at hand.

Each season carries its own slight advantages. Spring planting takes advantage of warming temperatures and increasing rainfall, which helps new plants accelerate their growth quickly. Summer planting works well as long as watering stays consistent through the hot stretches. Fall planting gives the plant time to settle in before the mild winter season. Winter planting puts the tree in the ground during the coolest part of the year, with attention to occasional freeze nights. The container-grown root system gives the plant resilience in any window. There is no wrong month to start. That flexibility makes banana ownership accessible all year.

The buying conversation covers timing in detail when you call or text. The team at Paul’s Nursery talks through your yard, your goals, and your schedule before confirming a date. If a cold snap is forecast soon after planting, the crew can share simple protection steps for the first few nights. Sunlight exposure, drainage, and spacing get walked through during the estimate visit. Banana trees have gone into yards across Clermont, Groveland, Winter Garden, and the wider service area in every month of the year. Each season produces healthy, established plants with the right approach. Earlier calls usually mean better variety selection. The nursery keeps fresh stock turning over throughout the year.

Banana trees stay flexible when it comes to spacing in a backyard setting. Paul’s Nursery has planted multiple fruit plants in a single hole to grow as a cluster for customers wanting a fuller tropical look. Spacing apart is nice when the yard allows, but it is not strictly necessary. The team suggests keeping each plant manageable through light pruning of old leaves, which makes harvesting easier. Dwarf varieties stay around six to eight feet tall and fit into very small spaces. Standard varieties reach ten to fifteen feet tall and benefit from a bit more room. Tight spacing works as long as the plants get consistent care. The nursery helps map the right approach during the estimate visit.

Larger yards open up more layout options for banana plantings. Several plants can be grouped into a small grove to create a striking tropical corner. Mixing varieties across the grove stretches the harvest season and adds visual variety. Each plant still benefits from regular feeding and watering regardless of how many neighbors it has. Sunlight exposure on most of the day supports the fastest fruit production. Underground utilities deserve attention before any hole gets dug. The crew checks those details during the planting visit. Planning the layout once saves headaches down the road.

Container growing offers another option for very tight spaces, patios, or pool decks. Dwarf varieties especially do well in large containers. Long-term yields stay lower than ground-planted bananas, but the tropical look comes through beautifully. Watering becomes more frequent because pots dry out faster than ground soil. Fertilizer still applies on a regular schedule. The nursery carries options suited to container growing throughout the year. Talking through your space helps the team recommend the right plant. Every yard finds a workable arrangement.

Banana trees do well with several hours of direct sunlight each day, and partial sun setups can still produce healthy plants and decent fruit. Yards with full sun typically push the fastest growth and the heaviest fruit bunches. Partial sun yards still grow strong banana plants, just at a slightly slower pace. Morning sun is especially helpful because it dries the leaves quickly after dew or rain. A few hours of afternoon sun supports steady leaf and fruit development. Trees in deeper shade can still grow well as ornamental landscape features, even if fruit production drops. The team helps identify the best available spot during the estimate. Shady yards are absolutely welcome to grow banana trees.

The sunlight conversation matters less than many homeowners worry about. Banana plants handle a range of light conditions across the service area. Some yards have partial shade from nearby trees and still produce respectable bunches each year. The container-grown root system supports steady growth even when light is less than ideal. Removing older leaves periodically helps sunlight reach the developing fruit stalk. Keeping the planting tidy also helps the plant focus energy on new growth and fruiting. The team has planted banana trees in yards across the spectrum of sun exposure. Every yard finds a workable layout.

Practical tips help make the most of whatever sun the yard provides. Walking the yard at different times of day before planting reveals the real sun pattern. Buildings, fences, and other trees affect how much sun reaches a particular spot. The crew brings a practiced eye to this assessment during the estimate. Their experience speeds up the decision significantly. The team can recommend a specific spot once they see the yard in person. Customers can call or text with questions as they plan. The right spot makes the rest of the care much easier across the years that follow.

Banana trees handle most Central Florida winters well in their above-ground form. Brief overnight freezes and short cold snaps usually pass with only minor leaf damage on a healthy plant. The pseudostem may suffer when temperatures stay below freezing for many consecutive hours. The good news is that the root system survives most freezes and pushes new growth in spring even if the visible plant dies back. Recovery happens faster than most homeowners expect. Clermont sits in a zone where most years pass without significant freeze damage to banana clumps. The climate suits bananas growing consistently across the long term. The team has watched countless plants thrive through decades of local winters.

Protection during freeze events helps young plants stay safe. Wrapping the trunk with frost cloth or burlap insulates the pseudostem. Draping sheets over smaller plants still works well for short overnight freezes. Outdoor string lights under the cover add modest warmth on the coldest nights. Mounding extra soil or compost around the base before a freeze helps protect the underground rhizome. Removing the wrap during daylight hours after the freeze prevents heat buildup. Most Central Florida winters bring only a handful of nights that require this kind of attention. The team can share simple protection steps when a cold front shows up in the forecast.

Longer freeze events sometimes knock down the above-ground portion of the plant entirely. Cutting back the dead growth in spring lets the rhizome push fresh shoots quickly. New pups often emerge within weeks of warmer weather returning. The fruiting cycle resets when this happens, with new bunches arriving once the new pseudostem reaches mature size. Patience pays off during recovery. Customers can always call or text the team for guidance during the rebuilding phase. Choosing the right variety and spot reduces freeze risk from the start. Decades of local experience inform every recommendation the team makes about cold hardiness.

The first few weeks after planting set the tone for the plant’s long-term health. Water deeply two or three times per week during the establishment phase, adjusting for rainfall. The goal is moist but not soggy soil around the root ball. Banana plants like more water than many other fruit trees, especially during hot stretches. Watch for any wilting or leaf curling, which usually signals a watering issue rather than anything else. The huge leaves lose moisture quickly in the Florida sun. The plant is essentially recovering from transplant during this period. Customers are always welcome to call or text the team with any questions during these early weeks.

Ongoing care follows the rhythms of the Florida growing season. Active fertilization runs from March through September to maximize rapid growth, while the winter months serve as a rest period where the tree should remain dormant with no fertilizing. Summer requires steady watering through dry stretches and ongoing pest monitoring. Fall remains a good time for the removal of any spent leaves. Winter is mostly a rest period, with attention paid to freeze protection on cold nights. Removing yellow or damaged leaves throughout the year keeps the clump looking tidy and reduces pest hiding spots. Thinning excess pups helps focus energy on the strongest shoots. The team at Paul’s Nursery can outline a simple care schedule during the planting visit.

Pest awareness matters across all seasons. Aphids, caterpillars, and occasional scale insects show up on banana plants from time to time. Spotting issues early keeps treatment simple and inexpensive. Yellow leaves can signal nutrient deficiency, overwatering, or natural aging, so context matters when reading the symptoms. The team at Paul’s Nursery stays available by phone or text for follow-up questions long after the plant is in the ground. Customers across Central Florida call back years later for advice or additional plants. Paul’s Nursery treats every sale as the start of a relationship, not the end of one. That ongoing support comes standard with every plant the nursery sells.

Banana plants follow a rhythm that surprises a lot of first-time growers. Each individual stalk fruits about once every two years, then that stalk is done producing. The real advantage is how fast a banana plant grows and how quickly it multiplies. Banana plants send up pups, which are young shoots from the base that grow into the next round of fruiting stalks. Those pups keep the cycle rolling, so the planting as a whole stays productive year after year. One plant becomes a small cluster, and that cluster keeps bananas coming on a staggered schedule. The fast growth means you are never waiting long for the next stalk to size up. Paul’s Nursery explains this cycle during the buying conversation so the timing makes sense from day one.

Managing the pups is the key to steady production over the years. Leaving a few healthy pups in place gives the next stalks a strong start. Removing the spent stalk after it fruits makes room and directs energy to the new growth. This simple maintenance keeps a banana cluster vigorous and well organized. The plants love Central Florida heat and humidity, which speeds the whole cycle along. Consistent water during the early weeks settles a new plant in fast. After that, a couple of deep waterings a week works well outside the rainy season. The team can show you how to manage pups so the harvest stays on a good rotation.

Variety influences both the size of the fruit and the time to harvest. Some bananas are eating types, while others are best cooked, and the flavor varies across the board. The grafted and established stock from Paul’s Nursery gets a banana plant growing quickly after planting. A sunny, sheltered spot protects the large leaves from wind damage and keeps growth strong. Bananas planted in good light and decent soil reward you with a tropical look and a steady supply. Photos on the online stock page show what is currently available. A quick call or text helps you match the right variety to your taste. That conversation happens before any plant leaves the property.

Get the Best Banana Trees Near You

Choose Paul’s Nursery for healthy banana trees backed by generations of growing experience across Central Florida. Call or text (352) 536-4893 or browse the current stock online to start planning your backyard tropical harvest today.