At a glance
Runner beans produce more food per square metre than almost any other vegetable you can grow in a UK garden. A double row of eight plants will produce enough beans to feed a family of four through the whole summer – and the more you pick the more they produce. They are also one of the most ornamental vegetables in the kitchen garden, with striking red, white or bicoloured flowers that attract pollinators throughout summer.
The challenge with runner beans is not growing them – they are vigorous and straightforward – but keeping up with the harvest. A well-grown row at peak season needs picking every two to three days. Miss a few days and pods become stringy and tough, and crucially the plant slows production significantly once pods are allowed to develop seeds inside them.
Best runner bean varieties for UK gardens
| Variety | Flower colour | Pod length | Special feature | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enorma | Red | Very long | Exceptional yield | Best for maximum crop |
| Scarlet Emperor | Red | Long | Classic variety, reliable | Best all-rounder |
| White Lady | White | Long | Sets pods better in heat | Best for hot summers |
| Painted Lady | Red and white | Medium | Heritage bicoloured flowers | Ornamental and edible |
| Hestia | Red and white | Short | Dwarf – no support needed | Containers and small spaces |
White Lady sets pods better in hot dry summers. Standard red-flowered runner beans can fail to set pods when temperatures exceed 30°C. White Lady has better heat tolerance and continues producing through hot spells that cause red-flowered varieties to stall. Worth growing alongside a standard variety as insurance in variable UK summers.
Building a strong support structure
Runner beans reach 2.4-3 metres and carry a heavy crop – the support structure needs to withstand summer winds without collapsing mid-season. Build it before sowing.
Wigwam of tall canes: Push 6-8 canes 2.4m long into a circle approximately 60cm diameter, angling inward and tying at the top. Sow one bean at the base of each cane. Compact and ornamental.
Double row with cross-braced canes: The traditional allotment method. Two parallel rows 45cm apart, canes pushed in at each plant position angled inward, crossed at the top with a horizontal cane along the apex. Far more stable in wind for a longer row.
- 1Push canes at least 30cm into the groundShallow canes pull out under heavy crops and wind. 30cm minimum depth – more if the soil is loose or sandy.
- 2Brace the structure at each endAdd a diagonal brace cane at each end of the row. This prevents the whole structure leaning in persistent summer wind.
- 3Check and reinforce in JulyBy August plants are at maximum weight. Check and reinforce ties and brace points before the full weight loads onto the structure.
Sowing and planting out
- Indoor sowing – sow in deep pots from late April. Plant out after last frost – typically mid to late May in northern England, early May in the south.
- Direct outdoor sowing – from mid-May once soil temperature consistently exceeds 12°C. Sow 5cm deep, one seed per cane.
- Protect from slugs – young runner bean seedlings are extremely vulnerable. Use nematodes or copper tape until plants are 30cm tall.
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Care through the season
- Train young shoots onto the support – runner beans climb by twining anti-clockwise. If they lose contact with the support, gently wind them back.
- Water heavily and consistently – particularly at the base during flowering. Water stress causes flowers to drop without setting pods.
- Mulch around the base – 5cm of compost or bark chip retains moisture significantly.
- Pinch out tips when plants reach the top of the support – redirects energy into pod production.
- Feed with high-potash liquid fertiliser every two weeks once flowering begins.
Harvesting for maximum yield
Pick every two to three days without fail during cropping season. A single overlooked pod left to develop fully signals the plant to slow new pod production significantly.
- Pick when pods are 15-20cm long – before the beans inside are visible as bumps through the pod
- Check hidden pods at the base – these are easy to miss and quickly become oversize
- Even if you can’t eat them, pick them – freeze surplus or give them away rather than leaving on the plant
Common problems
| Problem | Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Flowers dropping without setting | Heat stress or drought during flowering | Water consistently at base, mist flowers in heat |
| Stringy tough pods | Left too long before picking | Pick every 2-3 days without fail |
| Black bean aphid | Common in UK, worst on soft growth | Pinch out tips, encourage ladybirds |
| Slugs on seedlings | Extremely vulnerable when young | Nematodes or copper tape until 30cm tall |
Runner beans are the most productive crop per square metre you can grow in a UK summer garden. Get the support structure right before you sow, pick every two to three days once cropping starts and they will produce prolifically from July to October. For more on growing climbing vegetables read our guide on how to grow French beans in the UK.
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