Apple Tree Pollination Groups Chart UK

Pollinating your Apple Trees Increases your crop Size 

Most apple trees need to be pollinated in order to bear fruit, and even self-fertile varieties still benefit. 
However, apple and crab apple trees are very common all over the UK, even in the city, so there is a high chance that you have a suitable pollination partner in your area already, in which case you can ignore this article! 

Pollinators on Apple Blossom

What are Pollination Partners?

Cross-pollination happens when:

  • Two apple trees of different varieties are in flower at the same time
  • Insects (mainly bees) are present to move the pollen from one flower to the other

Pollination groups represent flowering periods.
Trees will cross-pollinate with other trees in their own group and adjacent groups, e.g. a tree in Pollination Group C will cross-pollinate with trees in groups B, C, and D (the letters can be replaced with numbers, so Group C is the same as Group 3).

Use our easy pollination checking tool to quickly find partners for a given variety, or browse the chart below.

Crab Apple Trees are Perfect Partners 

Crab apple trees are the best pollinators. They have long flowering periods, therefore covering most pollination groups, and make loads of pollen.
There are plenty of good options, but Malus John Downie or the bright yellow Malus Golden Hornet both make useful fruit for cooking, and are the best for an orchard owner.

Are Apple Trees Self-Fertile?

The holy grail of apple breeding is to produce a variety that pollinates itself and produces its best quality and quantity of fruit: so far, no apple is totally self fertile in the sense of achieving all those things.
A “self-fertile” tree still needs to be pollinated by another variety, although they crop reasonably well without cross-pollination.

Triploid Apple Trees


Triploid trees have totally sterile pollen: they cannot pollinate themselves or other trees. They can only be pollinated by other trees.
This means that a triploid tree needs another tree to pollinate it, and that other tree also needs a pollination partner, since the triploid tree cannot return the favour. 

Bees make Pollination happen

Thousands of insects get involved in pollination, but bees (including all the wild solitary and bumblebees) do about 90% of the work: no bees usually means poor pollination.
Everything that attracts & support your local bees is good for your apple trees.
Avoid neonicotinoid based pesticides, and provide habits for solitary and bumblebees – even better, get a honey bee hive.

A self-fertile tree in a closed greenhouse will need hand pollination to move the pollen around the flower.
By the same token, apple breeders use fabric bags to keep insects off the flowers, so that the breeder decides which varieties to cross-pollinate by hand.

Chart of Apple Tree Pollination Groups

NameUseHarvestPollination
Group
Fertility
Note
BountifulCooker / EaterLate SeptA/BLong flowering period – will cross pollinate with trees in Groups B & C
Ballerina SambaEaterOctoberB 
Bardsey IslandEaterLate SeptB 
Bright FutureEaterOctoberB 
Broadholme BeautyCooker / EaterSeptember – DecB 
Christmas PearmainEaterEarly OctBReliably Self Fertile
Core BlimeyEaterOctB 
Egremont RussetEaterLate Sept – Early OctBPartially Self Fertile
FoxwhelpCiderSeptB 
GreensleevesEaterOctBPartially Self Fertile
Incompatible with: Lord Lambourne
Irish PeachEaterMid AugB 
Keswick CodlinCooker / EaterMid Aug – SeptBPartially Self Fertile
Reverend W WilksCookerLate Aug – Early SeptBReliably Self Fertile
RosetteEaterAugB 
Slack ma GirdleCooker / Eater B 
Tremletts BitterCiderEarly OctB 
Adams PearmainEaterEarly OctC 
Allington PippinEater/CookerOctCPartially Self Fertile
Arthur TurnerCookerLate Aug – NovCPartially Self Fertile
Ballerina FlamencoEatingMid-OctoberC 
Beauty of BathEaterEarly AugC 
CatsheadCookerOctCTriploid
Charles RossEater / CookerMid SeptCPartially Self Fertile
Christmas PippinEaterLate OctC 
CobraEater / CookerSept-OctC 
Coxs Orange PippinEaterLate Sept – Early OctCIncompatible with: Jupiter & Sunset
CrispinEaterMid OctCTriploid
Incompatible with: Golden Delicious
DelcorfEaterLate SeptC 
DiscoveryEaterLate AugC 
Early Victoria/
Emneth Early
CookerAugB / CPartially Self Fertile. Long flowering period.
ElstarEaterLate OctC 
FortuneEaterSeptCPartially Self Fertile
GrenadierCookerMid AugCPartially Self Fertile
Granny SmithCooker / EaterLate OctCSelf-fertile
Herefordshire RussetEaterOctC 
James GrieveCooker / EaterEarly SeptCPartially Self Fertile
Katy / KatyaEaterEarly SeptC 
Lord LambourneEaterMid SeptCPartially Self Fertile
Incompatible with: Greensleeves
Morgan SweetCooker / EaterSeptB / CTriploid. Long flowering period.
Norfolk Royal RussetEaterSeptC 
Paradice GoldEaterOctC 
Peasgood NonsuchEater CookerMid SeptCPartially Self Fertile
Red FalstaffEaterEarly OctCPartially Self Fertile
Red WindsorEaterOctC 
Ribston PippinEaterLate Sept – Early OctCTriploid
Rosemary RussetEaterMid OctoberC 
SantanaEaterLate SeptC 
SaturnEaterLate SeptCReliably Self Fertile
Scotch BridgetCookerEarly OctC 
ScrumptiousEaterSept – OctCReliably Self Fertile
Sops in WineEaterAug-OctC 
SpartanEaterEarly OctCReliably Self Fertile
SunsetEaterLate SeptCReliably Self Fertile
Incompatible with: Coxs Orange Pippin & Jupiter
SurprizeEaterSeptC 
Tickled PinkEater/CookerSeptember – OctoberC 
Tom PuttCookerEarly SeptC 
Worcester PearmainEaterMid SeptCPartially Self Fertile
Yellow IngestrieEaterEarly SeptC 
Ashmeads KernelEater / CiderEarly – Mid OctDTriploid
Black DabinettCiderNovD 
Blenheim OrangeEater / CookerLate Sept – Early OctDTriploid
Bloody PloughmanEaterMid SeptD 
BramleyCookerEarly OctDTriploid
Chivers DelightEaterMid OctD 
Cornish AromaticEaterDecD 
Court of WickEaterLate SeptD 
Dunkerton’s LateCiderEarly NovD 
Ellisons OrangeEaterMid SeptDPartially Self Fertile
Fair Maid of DevonCider D 
FiestaEaterLate SeptDPartially Self Fertile
FillbarrelCiderLate SeptD 
FrederickCiderMid OctD 
GalaEaterOctD 
Golden DeliciousEaterLate OctDIncompatible with: Crispin
Harry Masters JerseyCiderOct – Early NovD 
Hoary MorningEater CookerEarly OctD 
Howgate WonderCookerEarly OctDPartially Self Fertile
JonagoldEaterMid OctDTriploid
JupiterEaterEarly OctDTriploid Incompatible with: Coxs Orange Pippin & Sunset
Kidds Orange RedEaterMid OctD 
King of the PippinsEaterEarly OctDPartially Self Fertile
Kingston BlackCiderEarly NovD 
Lanes Prince AlbertCookerMid OctDPartially Self Fertile
Laxton SuperbEaterEarly OctDPartially Self Fertile
LimelightEaterSeptD 
Lord DerbyCookerLate SeptDPartially Self Fertile
MichelinCiderOct – Early NovD 
Newton WonderCookerMid OctDPartially Self Fertile
Norfolk BeefingEaterMid OctD 
Pitmaston PineappleEaterEarly OctC / D 
Somerset RedstreakCiderOctD 
Sweet AlfordCiderLate Oct – Early NovD 
Sweet CoppinCiderLate Oct – Early NovD 
Taunton CrossEaterMid SeptD 
TopazEaterMid OctD 
Tydemans Late OrangeEaterMid OctD 
Winter BananaEaterEarly OctD 
Winter GemEaterOctD 
Yarlington MillCiderLate OctD 
Annie ElizabethCookerNovEPartially Self Fertile
BraeburnEaterLate OctE 
Browns AppleCiderMid Oct – Early NovE 
Hangy DownCider E 
Hereford RedstreakCider E 
Orleans ReinetteEater / CiderMid OctETriploid
Red PixieEaterMid OctE 
Ashton Brown JerseyCiderNovF 
Isaac Newton’s Tree / Flower of KentCookerMid OctF 
MajorCiderLate Sept – Early OctF 
Court Pendu PlatEaterMid – Late OctG 
Stoke RedCiderLate OctG 
Crawley beautyCookerMid – Late OctH 
Improved Lambrook PippinAll PurposeLate OctH 
Medaille d’OrCiderLate NovH 

Can apple trees pollinate pear trees?

No, only apple trees can pollinate other apple trees, not pears, wild pears, nor any other fruit species.

Some pear hybrids are publicised as “papples” or “pearples”, which sounds like they are apple-pear crosses, but only their shape is similar. They are in fact crosses between different European and Asian pear species.

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