fig Fignomenal ('PT-DF-14') (PBR)

fig Fignomenal

Eventual height & spread

fig Fignomenal ('PT-DF-14') (PBR)

fig Fignomenal

  • 3 litre pot
  • £49.99
  • available to order from spring
Delivery options
  • Standard £5.99
  • Position: full sun
  • Soil: oderately fertile, moist but well-drained soil, or loam-based potting compost for containers
  • Rate of growth: average
  • Hardiness: frost hardy (may need winter protection)


This compact fig makes it easy to enjoy home-grown fruit, even if space is tight or pruning of more vigorous cultivated varieties feels daunting. With naturally short internodes (the spaces between leaf joints or buds) and a gently spreading habit, it stays neat and manageable without regular cutting back, making it ideal for patios, balconies, and container growing.

The foliage is bold and attractive, while small to medium figs develop early in the season, ripening to rich brown skins with sweet, jammy, pink-red flesh that’s perfect for eating fresh or using in the kitchen.

Fig ‘Fignomenal’ is a reliable and productive choice, typically starting to crop within a couple of years and often producing more than one harvest in a season. It thrives in free-draining, fertile compost in a sunny, sheltered spot, and can be overwintered indoors in colder areas to extend fruiting.

Please note that any pots in the photographs are not supplied with the plants (which are sent out in a simple nursery alternatives), but we have a wide and wonderful range on our website to choose from.


  • Garden care:
    If the roots of a fig are allowed free rein, the plant's energy will usually be focused on producing top growth rather than fruit. Therefore, if you are growing your fig tree for its fruit, or if you want to keep it more compact, it will need to be planted in the ground and the roots should be restricted when planting. There are two ways of doing this. The first is to plant it up into a large pot, and then sink this into the ground. It’s best to use a pot without a base so the roots can grow downwards while still being restricted by the sides. Alternatively, you can dig a 60 x 60 x 60cm pit, line the edges with paving slabs and place a layer of large crocks or rubble at the base. Then, re-fill the pit with the displaced soil (after mixing in some good quality compost) and plant the fig into that.

    Prune in spring when all chances of frost have passed. Remove any frost-damaged or weak branches, and thin out shoots to let light in. Some pruning may be required in summer to encourage bushier growth. If so, trim all new shoots back to five or six leaves.

    Figs are capable of producing three crops of fruit every year, but in our climate it is the tiny little ones that you find tucked into the leaf axils in autumn, that if protected from frosts, will go on to ripen in their second summer. Therefore if you are growing the fig for its fruit rather than its foliage, you should remove any developing fruits that are larger than a pea in autumn, and either cover the crown of the tree with a blanket of frost fleece or try to gently pack it with straw. This will keep them snug and warm throughout winter and push the plants energy into the development of the young fruits, which should grow into fully ripened figs next year.
    • Humans/Pets: Harmful to skin with sunlight