Animal Crossing: New Horizons Hybrid Flowers Guide - How To Breed Flowers
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Kallie Plagge
2026-01-14
Here's everything you need to know about breeding black, blue, purple, pink, and orange hybrid flowers in Animal Crossing: New Horizons.
In Animal Crossing: New Horizons, gardening is one of the most rewarding things you can do, both from a material perspective and an intangible one. You can buy regular flower seeds and plant them around your island to make it pretty, but this isn't that special. If you really want to take your gardening to the next level, you're going to need to learn how to breed flowers for new colors, much like you'll want to learn other tips via our Animal Crossing: New Horizons guide hub. These hybrid flowers include black, blue, purple, pink, and orange variations of the flowers you can plant normally--plus the extra-special, elusive gold roses.
Hybrid flowers aren't just pretty--they can sometimes attract rare bugs you couldn't get otherwise and can also be used as crafting ingredients, so it's a good idea to have at least a few on your island. The technical details for this guide, including flower genes and the specifics of availability, come from the ACNH Flower Research datamine.
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Like with your native island fruit, there will be one type of flower that grows on your cliffs when you start the game; keep in mind that you'll need a ladder to scale the cliffs. You can buy other varieties of flowers (in seed form) at Nook's Cranny or from Leif when he visits. The flower varieties can be found in the image below.
Each of these flowers comes in standard red, white, and yellow varieties at first aside from windflowers, which come in red, white, and orange initially. (There are no yellow windflowers, and orange windflowers are not hybrids.) These are the only colors you'll find when buying seed bags; all other colors aren't sold at Nook's Cranny and are considered rare.
The flower stock at Nook's Cranny will rotate each day, with three types of flowers available at any given time. As mentioned above, your island will have one type of native flower; this flower is always in stock at Nook's Cranny. You'll also have a sister flower, which will also always be in stock. The third flower in stock on any given day is determined by which month it is and can change each day within that month. For example, in the Northern Hemisphere, roses, tulips, and windflowers are all in season in May. If none of these are your native or sister flower, they'll take turns being in stock at Nook's Cranny each day in May.
According to datamined information, native flowers are determined at random based on which flowers are in season during your starting character's birth month, while your sister flower is one of the flowers that were in season during the month you started your island. If you aren't sure what your sister flower is, visit a few Mystery Tour islands; you can only encounter your native flower or your sister flower on these islands.
The main way to grow new flowers is by crossbreeding (or just "breeding") two others. Flowers can breed only if they're the same species of flower, but there are a few other requirements you need to meet, too. Those are:
If these conditions are met, a new flower has a chance of sprouting on nearby empty spaces the next day. Unlike in Animal Crossing: New Leaf, there is no limit to the number of new flowers that can spawn each day. Note that flowers can spawn on dirt and dark dirt paths but not on any other type of path you can lay down using Island Designer, so be mindful of this when landscaping.
"Breeding" refers to this process of producing new flowers, and it doesn't necessarily mean you'll get a hybrid flower. Sometimes two white flowers next to each other will produce another white flower, for example. This is a good way to produce more flowers without having to buy seeds, and it's also an integral step in obtaining certain ultra-rare hybrids.
There's also a chance that a flower by itself will spawn a new flower of the same color when watered. This is referred to as "cloning," because the new flower will have exactly the same "genes" as the original flower--see the section on genes below. Cloning is useful if you want to multiply your hybrids quickly and easily, or if you want to use a certain breed of flower for further breeding. Note that you can't clone gold roses.
The easiest way to clone flowers is to leave them with nine empty spaces around them (i.e., not touching any other flowers) or only touching flowers of a different species. Flowers can clone themselves if they're touching other flowers of the same species provided they aren't crossbreeding with anything else around them, but it's difficult-to-impossible to track whether the flowers crossbred or just cloned, so this isn't recommended if you're trying to clone something specific.
Try asking your friends to come to your island and water the flowers you're breeding! There's a special benefit to this: If flowers have been watered by a visitor, the chance they'll produce offspring, either by breeding or cloning, goes up. This effect stacks up to five visitors (with the effect steadily increasing) and can drastically increase the production of new flowers, so if you have willing friends, asking them to water your flowers can speed up breeding significantly.
Speaking of gold roses, you're going to need a special tool for those: the golden watering can. It works the same way as other watering cans--though it can water more flowers at once--except when you're watering black roses (details below). To get the golden watering can DIY recipe, you need to get a five-star town evaluation from Isabelle. In order to reach five stars, you'll need to have plenty of fencing, flowers, and furniture decorating your island, and Isabelle will give you hints as to what you're missing when doing her evaluations. When you do achieve five stars, Isabelle will give you the recipe for the golden watering can, which you can then craft at any time so long as you have the materials.
Extensive datamining has confirmed that flowers in Animal Crossing: New Horizons have "genes" that determine both their color and what color offspring they're able to breed. Each type of flower utilizes three genes except for roses, which utilize four (hence why they're so complicated to breed). You can look at Paleh's Advanced Flower Genetics Guide, which uses datamined information, for the technical specifics of genes; for this guide, however, we're sticking to the practical applications for accessible flower breeding.
Basically, flowers in New Horizons utilize Mendelian genetics, the kind you learn in basic biology. That means flowers have recessive and dominant genes--think Punnett squares--and these genes determine what color the flower is. In some cases, two or more different combinations of genes can result in the same color flower, which is where chain breeding--the process by which you breed flowers, then take the flowers you've bred and then breed them to get another color--can get really tricky. Luckily, every flower that comes from a seed bag (whether you bought it from Nook's Cranny or Leif) has the exact same genes, which standardizes things.
For example, you can breed basic red pansies (the kind you plant from a seed bag) with blue pansies to get... more red pansies. However, the red pansies you get from this red-blue combo have different genes than the red pansies you can get from seed bags, even though they look the same--they're often called "hybrid red," while the normal ones are called "seed red." Because of the genetic difference, you can breed two hybrid-red pansies together to get purple, but you can't get purple pansies from seed-red pansies at all. In order to breed purple pansies, you have to keep track of which reds are from seed bags and which are from breeding with blue pansies.
For some flowers--namely lilies, cosmos, tulips, and hyacinths--you won't have to worry about genes too much, because their genotypes are relatively simple and require only minimal, easy-to-track chain breeding. For the others, especially roses, you'll have to pay close attention to the flowers you plant and breed if you want to get the rarest colors. This is also where cloning comes into play, since it's useful to clone the most hard-to-get genetic combinations once you're sure you have one.
Before the 1.2.0 update, you could find hybrid flowers while on a deserted island Mystery Tour. However, that update removed these islands from the Mystery Tour lineup, and they haven't been in the game since. If you were lucky enough to take home some hybrid flowers from one of these islands--or if you haven't downloaded the 1.2.0 update for the game yet--you'll be able to save a lot of time breeding flowers, so we'll include the specifics of these Mystery Island hybrids in this guide for reference.
Hybrids you could find on these Mystery Tours have different genes than the ones you can breed from seed flowers on your own island. In some cases, these hybrids can make chain breeding for ultra-rare colors far easier, so if you somehow get your hands on one, make sure you keep track of which flower it is!
Below are all the key breeding combinations (via Paleh's Advanced Flower Genetics Guide and our own testing) for every species and color of flower in New Horizons. This list assumes you're starting with flowers from seeds, so we've only listed the optimal combinations for each hybrid color. Because of how flower genes work, you may notice that other combinations we haven't listed may produce hybrids--this usually occurs when you have "hybrid" versions of the standard colors, like the hybrid-red pansies in the example above.
Most of the combinations listed only have a chance to produce the hybrid color and might give you a different color some of the time, but we've specified the percentage in the more complicated cases where chain breeding is a concern. (This percentage represents the chance you'll get the desired color/gene combination when the flowers breed.) If you're trying to get more of a particular color of a flower, we recommend cloning it rather than trying to breed it with itself.
Note that "seed" colors refer to the flowers you plant from seed bags you've purchased at Nook's Cranny or from Leif; "island" colors refer to the hybrids you could only get from Mystery Tour islands; and "hybrid" or "special" colors refer to specific genetic combinations of flowers where noted. If it's not specified, assume every red, white, and yellow flower in this list is a seed flower (and that any simple hybrid colors listed came from those seed combinations). It's important to start with seed flowers when breeding for consistency.
Note that it's no longer possible to get island hybrids in-game as of the 1.2.0 update, but we've left them in this guide in case you still have access to a flower from one of these islands or if you haven't downloaded this update.
Cosmos are simple and easy to breed, with only one chain: orange to black.
Best combo for black cosmos:
You can get every color of hyacinths without any complex genetic chains, but purple is incredibly rare this way. The chance of getting purple goes up significantly (to 25%) if you breed blues from oranges and then use those blues to breed; these blues are identical to those you can find on Mystery Tour islands, which also work.
Best methods for purple hyacinths:
Lilies are the simplest flower to breed, and you can get every color without chain breeding at all. None of the colors are all that rare, either!
Mums are the only flower species that can be green, and there are a few ways to get green mums. Because hybrid yellow + hybrid yellow can produce seed yellow, make sure you only get your hybrid yellows from seed red + seed yellow or by cloning a hybrid yellow.
Best method for green mums:
Other combos for green mums:
Like hyacinths, the most difficult pansy is the purple one, and it's very rare; however, the chain is relatively simple. Your chances go up to 25% if you use hybrid pansies from a Mystery Tour island.
Best combos for purple pansies:
Roses are the most complex flower in New Horizons, and blue roses are the rarest flower in the game. There are a few chain-breeding methods to get blue roses, and they are a bit complicated, so bear with it. Keep in mind that you should always be using the standard colors (either the seed colors or the hybrids you get from those seed colors) to ensure the genes are correct unless otherwise noted. Again, this information is from Paleh's Advanced Flower Genetics Guide, simplified for those who don't want to deal with the technical specifics.
Blue rose method 1 (Mystery Island):
If you're lucky enough to have roses as your native or sister flower (or have a friend who does), you can totally circumvent all of the complicated stuff below and just use island hybrid roses for a quick path to blue roses.
Blue rose method 2 (simplest):
This method is bad, mainly because there's no good way to check if your red roses are the right kind of red. You just have to get really lucky, and while possible, it's not very efficient. (Note that this hybrid red has different genes than the island hybrid red above, and it's also different from the hybrid red 2 below. Don't get them mixed up!)
Blue rose method 3 (recommended):
This is the recommended method if you don't want to do an extremely long chain; it's guaranteed to get you the hybrid reds you need to make blue, as opposed to method 2 above, which only gives you a 25% chance of getting them and no real way to tell if you did. If you don't have access to island orange roses, you could do worse than this method.
Blue rose method 4 (highest chance):
This method is the longest of all of them, but by the end of it, you'll have a 25% chance of getting blue roses from two hybrid red ones (these are different from the above hybrid reds and are labeled "hybrid red 2" below for clarity). Because this is so complex, it's recommended that you only breed each of these as pairs, rather than setting up grids or any other breeding pattern of three or more flowers.
At this step, only half the purple offspring will be the right kind. You can either try your luck or test to see if these purples are indeed the purples you need to continue this method.
Give this combination a few tries to see if you get yellow; if you only get white roses, that purple isn't the right kind of purple, so you should get rid of it before continuing. You should also keep any yellow roses from this step, as they can be used later on in the chain.
You can stop here, clone the special orange rose, and breed the two together for a 6.25% chance of a blue rose. Continue the chain for a 25% combination instead.
While this path is much longer than the others, its success rate is also much better. You can speed up the process by breeding the orange, special white 1, and purple roses at the same time. Good luck!
Back to simple flowers. Like with hyacinths, you can get every color of tulip relatively easily, but purple ones are the rarest. You can increase your chances of getting a purple tulip to 25% by breeding hybrids from a Mystery Tour island.
Best combos for purple tulips:
Windflowers are slightly weird in that they don't have a yellow version; instead, orange is a default rather than a hybrid. While not nearly as complex as roses, getting the rare purple windflower does require a bit of effort. Your chances go up to 25% if you use island hybrids or special blues.
Best combos for purple windflowers:
Other combos for purple windflowers:
Flowers have a variety of uses in New Horizons. Aside from planting and watering them, you can pick them using Y--and unlike in previous Animal Crossing games, you can pick flowers without losing the whole plant, and the flowers will grow back in two days. This allows you to use flowers in crafting recipes including various wreaths and furniture items, and you can also place picked flowers in your home or around your island to use as decoration. You can even wear flowers in your hair!
Flowers are especially important to the ecosystem of your island. They improve your island rating (which Isabelle can tell you about), they can attract different species of bugs, and they're just pretty in general. You'll need at least a few flowers planted around your island in order to have plenty of bugs to catch--butterflies, stinkbugs, mantises, ladybugs, and honeybees will only appear on or near flowers. There are also two bugs that will only appear if you have certain flower colors:
You can also sell flowers (either the plant itself or picked flowers). While most don't sell for much, you can make a bit of change selling any you don't need or want. Gold and blue roses sell for 1,000 bells each, though, so you can make a farm out of those roses and harvest them the way you would a fruit tree.
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sleepy_sausage
Jan 14, 11:51 PM
Bad UI. idk man Modern vibe. _Grab it on sale.
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