What Growth Looks Like in a Real Yard
Bloodgood Japanese Maple typically puts on about 0.2–2 feet per year in decent conditions, which is why the 10-year question matters more than the label alone. In practical terms, that points to roughly 1.7–20 feet of height within a decade.
That is enough to build character and structure, but not enough to count on for quick screening or fast afternoon shade.
Bloodgood Japanese Maple is a better choice on draining sites than on wet, heavy ground, so the planting hole matters more here than the nursery tag will usually admit.
How we built the estimate
For Bloodgood Japanese Maple, we pulled together published growth notes from plant references and gardening sources, then reduced them to a working range of 0.2–2 ft/yr. That range reflects how this tree is typically described in the literature, not a single nursery claim or one idealized number. We currently have 5 growth notes in the mix, including 0 from stronger sources.
Typical yearly growth: 0.2–2 ft/yr (slow).
Our working estimate is based on published growth notes gathered across plant references and gardening sources.
Want to see where this number came from?
Notes we did not use (2)
NC State Extension
“Growth Rate: Slow”
Left out because Qualitative-only evidence.
treegrowthrates.local
“Seeded editorial growth label: slow”
Left out because Qualitative-only evidence, Confidence score below inclusion threshold.
Growing conditions
Quick reference for the basic site fit, followed by the limitation that matters most before you plant.
Watch Out
Bloodgood Japanese Maple is a better choice on draining sites than on wet, heavy ground, so the planting hole matters more here than the nursery tag will usually admit.
Sources
Direct references used to compile the fields shown on this page.






