Verbena urticifolia

A native vervain lifting slender spikes of tiny white flowers

Verbena urticifolia white vervain

Plant grows in the wild/spontaneouslyPlant is native to PA Add to MyPlants View Locations

This native plant is a member of the vervain family. It can be an annual, biennial or short-lived perennial. In general form the plant resembles the related blue vervain. The leaves are opposite, simple, and toothed. The leaf stalks are up to 2 inches long. The leaves resemble those of nettles (genus Urtica) and give the plant its species name. The stem is rigid and green and often covered with long spreading hairs.

The small white flowers bloom along very slender branched spikes. These spikes can be up to 2 feet high, but only a few flowers bloom at any one time. Individual flowers are only ⅛ inch wide. Each consists of a five-lobed corolla and a tubular green calyx with 5 lobes. The white flower color of this species is unusual because most members of the genus have bluish flowers. The plant grows 3-5 feet high and is found in thickets and wood edges in most of the eastern half of North America. It blooms from June to September.  When it grows with proper space, the plant can take the form much like that of blue vervain.

Reproduction of this species is only by seed. Several species of insects feed on the leaves and birds will eat the seeds. The bitter taste deters browsing by deer.

Contributed by: Mark Welchley

Grows in woodland edges, moist fields, meadows, roadsides, and disturbed ground. Prefers full sun to part shade and moist to mesic soils.

Present throughout the state.

Range: Native to the eastern and central United States and southern Canada.

Wetland codes
EMP: FAC
NCNE: FAC



Flowers late June to September. Bloom duration is about 6 weeks.

Inflorescence  slender, elongated terminal spikes, clustered on main stem and upper branches; flowers widely spaced

Flowers  tiny; corolla white, tubular, slightly 2-lipped, with 5 short, slightly spreading lobes, lowest one notched; 4 inserted stamens, 1 pistil; calyx tubular, 5-lobed, nearly as long as corolla; ⅛″

Leaves  simple, opposite, broadly lanceolate to ovate; coarsely and often doubly serrate; surface rough, slightly prickly; petioles up to 2″

Stems  stiff, erect, short-hairy to long-hairy, angled; branched in the upper plant, lower stem unbranched or sparsely branched; light green

Fruit   dry schizocarp; splits into four reddish-brown, oblong nutlets; 1 seed per nutlet

Height  2 to 6 feet

S-rank:  S5 (Secure)
G-rank:  G5 (Secure)

Pollinated by bees, flies, and butterflies. The leaves support several species of insect larvae and birds eat the seeds and small fruits. The foliage is bitter and generally avoided by deer.

By flowering through mid‑summer and thriving in semi‑open, disturbed habitats, white vervain helps sustain pollinators and insect communities in old fields, woodland edges, and other transitional ecosystems.

Janet (Guest)

Posted on 07 August 2025

I cleared an area ofvinvassives a few years ago and some of these have grown in. Happy to know they are not invassive, but want to know what they host.

Posted By Admin: @Janet It hosts larvae of the Verbena Moth and Vervain Leaf Midge, along with flea beetles, aphids, and grasshoppers. Its nectar supports native bees, wasps, and butterflies and songbirds feed on its seeds. Bitter foliage makes it deer-resistant.

Tricia (Guest)

Posted on 19 July 2025

I live south of York Pa and this plant has volunteered in my flowerbed. Lovely 

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Verbena urticifolia white vervain

Plant grows in the wild/spontaneouslyPlant is native to PA
Add to MyPlants View Locations
Verbena urticifolia gallery
Plant Summary
annual to perennial forb native flower color: white
Common Names
white vervain