Abies firma
Momi Fir
- Type
- Conifer
- Hardiness
- USDA Zones 6–9
- Sun
- Full Sun, Part Shade
- Soil
- Moist, Well-drained
- Mature size
- Height 40–70 Feet · Spread 30–40 Feet
- Growth rate
- Slow
- Seasonality
- Evergreen
This variety is no actively in production in our propagation house and may not return to our catalogue. We maintain this page purely for reference and archival purposes. If you would like to grow this plant, tell us. Your interest helps guide what we bring back.
For a larger installation or commercial project, write hello@woodlanders.net.
Abies firma, the Momi Fir, is a beautiful evergreen conifer of narrow pyramidal habit, with stiff, sharp-tipped, dark green needles and the capacity in time to become a large tree. It holds a particular distinction in the South: this is about the only true fir that tolerates the heat and humidity of the southeastern United States, where most of its mountain-loving relatives simply melt away.
The species has long been scarce in the trade. In 1968 Edward Horder reported on thirty-five to forty-year-old specimens growing in Mobile, Alabama, and fine old trees can be seen at the Bartlett Arboretum near Charlotte. It has remained almost unavailable to gardeners over the decades, a connoisseur's conifer that we are glad to offer to those building a collection or seeking a fir that will actually thrive below the mountains.
Native to Japan, where its wood is valued for construction, Momi Fir grows slowly, perhaps a foot a year, into a broad pyramid that can reach forty to seventy feet in cultivation and far more in the wild. Plant it in full sun to a little afternoon shade, in average, consistently moist, slightly acidic soil; it tolerates clay and is not fully drought tolerant, appreciating a deep soaking once or twice a month through dry summers.
In the garden it makes a stately specimen or evergreen screen for a larger property, and serves, in the nursery trade, as the heat-tolerant understock onto which choicer firs are grafted for southern gardens. Give it room to become the tree it wants to be.

