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Should You Plant Northern Red Oak?

Quercus rubra

Best for homeowners who need canopy and shade relatively quickly and have room to let a larger tree do its job.

Northern Red Oak is most compelling when you have enough room to let its canopy mature into actual summer shade instead of forcing it into a bed that is too tight.

Where It Excels

Northern Red Oak excels in backyards and open side yards where there is enough sun and enough clearance to let the canopy broaden over time.

Think Twice If

I would skip Northern Red Oak for shaded side yards or spots tucked under larger trees, because it is much more likely to disappoint there than in open sun.

Northern Red Oak
Botanical plate illustration for TreeGrowthRates.com.
Growth rate
2–3 ft/yr (fast)
Mature height
50–70 ft
Mature spread
50–75 ft
USDA zones
4–8

Height Timeline

How tall will it be when this yard actually has to live with it?

This table shows the estimated height at a few practical checkpoints, based on the current growth-rate estimate and capped at the tree's mature height.

10-Year Check-In
20 ft–30 ft
Useful if you are planning around resale, sightlines, or future shade.
CheckpointEstimated height
5 years10 ft–15 ft
10 years20 ft–30 ft
20 years40 ft–60 ft
30 years50 ft–70 ft
40 years50 ft–70 ft
At maturity50 ft–70 ft

What Growth Looks Like in a Real Yard

Northern Red Oak typically puts on about 2–3 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 20–30 feet of height within a decade.

That quicker pace is useful when you need visible progress, but it is still only valuable if the planting site can handle the mature tree.

Northern Red Oak is not the tree to tuck into a dim leftover corner; if it needs full sun, treat that as a requirement rather than a suggestion.

How we built the estimate

For Northern Red Oak, we pulled together published growth notes from plant references and gardening sources, then reduced them to a working range of 2–3 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 1 growth note in the mix, including 0 from stronger sources.

Typical yearly growth: 2–3 ft/yr (fast).

Our working estimate is based on published growth notes gathered across plant references and gardening sources.

Want to see where this number came from?

research.fs.usda.gov

2–3 ft/yr

grow rapidly

Open source

Growing conditions

Quick reference for the basic site fit, followed by the limitation that matters most before you plant.

Growth rate
2–3 ft/yr (fast)
Mature height
50–70 ft
Mature spread
50–75 ft
USDA zones
4–8
Sunlight
full sun; partial shade
Soil
Loam (Silt); Sand
Leaf type
deciduous

Watch Out

Northern Red Oak is not the tree to tuck into a dim leftover corner; if it needs full sun, treat that as a requirement rather than a suggestion.

Sources

Direct references used to compile the fields shown on this page.

If You're Considering Northern Red Oak, Also Look At...

These are not just lookalikes. They overlap on climate or growth profile, but each solves a slightly different homeowner problem.

American Elm

American Elm

Ulmus americana

fast

2–3 ft/yr (fast) · 60–80 ft tall · Zones 3–9

Best for: shade

American Elm is a close climate and growth-rate match, so the decision usually comes down to habit, size, and the role you need the tree to play.

Shared zones: 4–8 · Similar growth pace

American Sycamore

American Sycamore

Platanus occidentalis

fast

2–3 ft/yr (fast) · 75–100 ft tall · Zones 4–9

Best for: shade

American Sycamore is worth comparing if you want the same general fit but with more eventual scale and canopy.

Shared zones: 4–8 · Similar growth pace

Autumn Blaze Maple

Autumn Blaze Maple

Acer x freemanii 'Jeffersred'

fast

2–3 ft/yr (fast) · 40–55 ft tall · Zones 3–8

Best for: shade

Autumn Blaze Maple is the more compact alternative if you like this category of tree but need something less imposing at maturity.

Shared zones: 4–8 · Similar growth pace

Black Walnut

Black Walnut

Juglans nigra

fast

2–3 ft/yr (fast) · 50–75 ft tall · Zones 4–9

Best for: edible · shade

Black Walnut is a close climate and growth-rate match, so the decision usually comes down to habit, size, and the role you need the tree to play.

Shared zones: 4–8 · Similar growth pace

Dawn Redwood

Dawn Redwood

Metasequoia glyptostroboides

fast

2–3 ft/yr (fast) · 70–100 ft tall · Zones 4–8

Best for: shade · privacy

Dawn Redwood is the more screening-oriented option if the real priority is separation or enclosure.

Shared zones: 4–8 · Similar growth pace

Hackberry

Hackberry

Celtis occidentalis

fast

2–3 ft/yr (fast) · 40–100 ft tall · Zones 3–9

Best for: shade

Hackberry is worth comparing if you want the same general fit but with more eventual scale and canopy.

Shared zones: 4–8 · Similar growth pace