When it comes to adding color to your garden, there are two routes you can take: stick with the usual green succulents, or mix it up with stunning pink varieties!
If you’re looking to make a statement, pink succulents are the way to go.
Not only will they add a pop of color, but they’ll also create a unique garden that will wow your neighbors and guests!
1. Aloe Pink Blush
Aloe Pink Blush is a charming small clumping succulent. Its deep green and light-green leaves feature striking pink ridges. In my experience, it’s a real showstopper when placed in a pink pot.
2. Aeonium Kiwi
The Aeonium Kiwi is a tricolor beauty. Its spoon-shaped leaves form rosettes in green and yellow, with pink edges. I’ve found it to be a real conversation starter in my garden.
3. Aeonium Pink Daisy
True to its name, Aeonium Pink Daisy blushes a bright pink in strong light. It’s one of my go-to plants for adding a pop of color to shaded areas.
4. Aeonium Pink Witch
The Aeonium Pink Witch is a variegated variety that changes color throughout the seasons. I love watching it transition from intense pink in summer to a ghostly chalky pink in winter.
5. Anacampseros Telephiastrum
This variegated succulent features pink and green leaves. I’ve successfully used it as a mat in rock gardens and as a trailing plant in container gardens.
6. Callisia Repens Pink Lady
Also known as “Pink Lady” or “Turtle Vine,” this plant is a popular houseplant. Its pink succulent flowers are truly spectacular.
7. Crassula Pellucida
Crassula Pellucida, or “Calico Kitten,” thrives both indoors and outdoors. I keep mine in a bright spot inside, where it adds a cheerful touch to my living room.
8. Crassula Ovata Pink Beauty
The Pink Jade Plant boasts glossy-green leaves with red margins. In late winter, it produces clusters of pale pink star-like flowers that never fail to delight me.
9. Echeveria Afterglow
Resembling a pink rose, Echeveria Afterglow features large rosettes of powdery lavender-pink leaves. It’s a real stunner in my succulent collection.
10. Echeveria Cante
Echeveria Cante is a robust plant that I’ve found thrives in USDA hardiness zones 9-11. Its blue-gray color with pink tinges is truly captivating.
11. Echeveria Elegans
Known as Mexican Snowball, this succulent produces pale silvery-green leaves and pink-red stems with lantern-shaped pink flowers. It’s a favorite in my spring garden.
12. Echeveria Gibbiflora
Echeveria Gibbiflora forms a blue-greenish rosette with wavy foliage. I love how it blushes rosy pink when exposed to direct sunlight.
13. Echeveria Gorgon’s Grotto
This oddly beautiful succulent features green leaves with wrinkled pink edges. It’s always a conversation starter when guests visit my garden.
14. Echeveria Laui
Echeveria Laui’s fleshy, grainy leaves come in shades of blueish-grey to pink. It’s no wonder it’s so popular among breeders!
15. Echeveria Laulensis
With rosettes in blue-green, rosy purple, and pink, Echeveria Laulensis is a visual treat. Its yellow and coral-pink flowers are an added bonus.
16. Sedum Sieboldii
October Daphne Stonecrop is a favorite in my garden, with its beautiful foliage all summer and stunning transformation in fall.
17. Echeveria Mebina
Also known as red edge echeveria, this plant forms near-perfect rosettes with pink-edged leaves. I love using it in small pot combinations.
18. Echeveria Neon Breakers
Echeveria Neon Breakers are vibrant and easy to grow. They’ve become a staple in my garden settings.
19. Echeveria Perle Von Nurnberg
This stunning succulent turns pink and purple under full sun. Its summer-blooming pink flowers with yellow interiors are always a delight.
20. Echeveria Pink Champagne
A cross between Echeveria Laui and Echeveria Agavoides “Romeo,” this plant features thick, fleshy leaves in green to reddish pink. I eagerly await its orange or pink flowers each fall.
21. Echeveria Pinky
Echeveria Pinky boasts delicate pink elongated leaves in a single large offset. Its high flower spike with pink flowers is always a sight to behold.
22. Echeveria Rainbow
Thought to be a variant of “Perle von Nurnberg,” Echeveria Rainbow has stunning yellow outer leaves and purple to brownish inner leaves. It’s a rainbow in my garden!
23. Echeveria Raindrops
I’m fascinated by Echeveria Raindrops’ caruncles – raised areas on the leaves that store water. Its color changes throughout the year, from deep pinks to purples.
24. Echeveria Shaviana Pink Frills
This decorative succulent forms a central rosette about 12 inches in size. I love watching it shift through mauve purple, silvery blue, and green as it ages.
25. Echeveria Taurus
Echeveria Taurus is a striking cultivar with almost triangular, deep red-green leaves. Its red and yellow flowers on tall stems are always a highlight in my garden.
26. Echeveria Tippy
True to its name, Echeveria Tippy has bluish-green leaves with bright pink tips. Despite their appearance, these tips are soft to touch.
27. Euphorbia Abdelkuri Cv Damask
This endangered pink succulent grows in clumps and can reach impressive heights. Its columnar stem branches out like a candlestick, creating a unique silhouette in my garden.
28. Graptopetalum Amethystinum
Resembling moon rocks, this rare species has a powdery finish that gives it an otherworldly appearance. It’s one of my favorite conversation starters.
29. Graptosedum Francesco Baldi
I love how this plant changes color based on sun exposure – from blue-gray in partial shade to pinkish-gray in full sun. In winter, its leaves turn a beautiful brownish-purple.
30. Graptopetalum Mirinae Pink
This rosette-forming succulent, native to Mexico and Arizona, is one of my go-to plants for adding a soft pink touch to arrangements.
31. Graptopetalum Pachyphyllum
Known as the “blue bean” succulent, this plant’s leaves can turn various shades, creating a beautiful display in my garden throughout the year.
32. Graptopetalum Paraguayense
The “Ghost Plant” forms stunning gray-bluish rosettes with a pinkish tint. Its star-shaped flowers are a delightful bonus in my spring garden.
33. Graptopetalum Pentandrum
I’m always amazed by this plant’s large, open rosettes with fleshy, lavender-pink leaves. Its yellow flowers with red stamens are a beautiful contrast.
34. Graptopetalum Rusbyi
This succulent forms lovely pink rosettes with long leaf tips. I enjoy watching its offsets develop, each one a potential new plant.
35. Graptosedum Alpenglow
The dazzling pink leaves of this plant, ranging from light rose to deep coral, never fail to catch the eye. I keep mine compact with regular pruning.
36. Graptoveria Bashful
This hybrid’s fleshy, upright leaves form a beautiful mint-green rosette with pink tips. Cool temperatures bring out its most vibrant red blushing.
37. Graptoveria Debbie
I love how this Echeveria hybrid’s blueish-purple leaves turn pink at the tips when stressed. It’s a stunning addition to my outdoor planters.
38. Graptoveria Douglas Huth
This plant’s thick, gray-green leaves form beautiful rosettes. Its pink flowers on long, arching stems are a highlight of my summer garden.
39. Graptoveria Fred Ives
The large rosettes of fleshy, pointed bronze leaves with pink tones make this plant a standout in my succulent collection.
40. Gymnocalycium Anisitsii
This easy-to-grow, free-flowering pink cactus adds a unique texture to my succulent arrangements. Its tortuous spines are quite eye-catching.
41. Kalanchoe Fedtschenkoi
Also known as lavender scallops, this low-growing succulent with pretty pink flowers and compact foliage is perfect for ground cover in my garden.
42. Kalanchoe Pink Butterflies
This variegated species is a real showstopper with its bright pink pigments shining through. It’s an essential in my succulent collection.
43. Lithops Olivacea Nebrownii
These “living stones” are a fascinating addition to my garden. I love watching the pink flowers emerge from between the two round leaves.
44. Lithops Optica Rubra
The strong color of this living stone variety makes it stand out in my collection. Its slow growth is a lesson in patience for me.
45. Mammillaria Cactus
This “Nipple” or “Pincushion” cactus is native to the southwest US and Mexico. Its stunning pink flowers are always a delight.
46. Pachyphytum Oviferum
Known as Pink Moonstone, this plant’s plump, smooth leaves look like polished stones in beautiful pastel shades. Its spring flowers are an added bonus.
47. Pachyveria Scheideckeri
This hybrid’s thick, chubby leaves form colorful rosettes. It’s one of my toughest plants, thriving in full sun and well-drained soil.
48. Pink Mountain Rose
The tightly packed leaves of this succulent truly resemble rose petals. It’s a must-have for any pink succulent enthusiast like myself.
49. Sedeveria Pink Granite
I love how this plant combines soft pink leaves with a minty green center. It’s a prolific grower, perfect for filling out containers.
50. Sedum Rubrotinctum Aurora
These “pink jelly beans” add a whimsical touch to my garden with their plump leaves in shades of mauve, pink, cream, and lime green.