Best Walk-In Greenhouses for Small Yards
A walk-in greenhouse extends your growing season by 2-3 months at each end and gives you a frost-free spot for tropical seedlings. For a small backyard you do not need anything fancy — a sturdy aluminium-and-polycarbonate kit will do everything a polytunnel will, with better wind resistance. We have used these in windy Adelaide Hills positions where polytunnels would not last a season.
Our team’s top picks
Palram Mythos 6x4 Greenhouse
- Twin-wall polycarbonate
- Aluminium frame
- Roof vent and lockable door
- Great mid-range build
Quictent 6x4 Walk-In Greenhouse
- PVC cover, steel frame
- Honest entry-level kit
- Roll-up doors and vents
- Good first greenhouse
Sunglo Hobby Greenhouse
- Lifetime aluminium frame
- Heavy polycarbonate
- Built-in seed bench
- Lifetime build
Palram Lean-To Solar Greenhouse
- Attaches to existing wall
- Saves footprint
- Twin-wall polycarbonate
- Easy to integrate
Outsunny 8x6 Walk-In Greenhouse
- Real working size
- Aluminium frame, polycarbonate panels
- Two roof vents
- Good value
What to look for in a walk in greenhouse small yard
- Polycarbonate panels last 10+ years; PE film polytunnels last 3-5.
- Aluminium frames need anchoring — every greenhouse without anchors blows away eventually.
- A 6×4 ft footprint suits most backyards; 8×6 ft is a real working space.
- Roof and side vents matter more than door size for cooling.
- A concrete or paver foundation pays back in stability and cleanliness.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need planning permission for a greenhouse?
In most Australian and US jurisdictions, no — greenhouses under 10 sqm typically fall under exempt development. Always check with your local council, especially for boundary setbacks.
How do I anchor a greenhouse?
Concrete pad with screw-in anchors is best. Pavers with corner anchors work in mild climates. Mass concrete blocks bolted to the frame work for renters. Never skip anchoring — wind is the killer.
Polycarbonate or glass?
Polycarbonate for safety, insulation and impact resistance. Glass for transparency and aesthetics. Most home gardeners go polycarbonate; glass is for gardening enthusiasts who want the traditional look.
How hot will it get in summer?
Without vents, dangerously hot — 50C+ on a 35C day. Always have at least one roof vent, and consider an automatic vent opener that triggers at 21C. Shade cloth on the sun-facing side helps in hot climates.
Bottom line
If you only take one thing from this guide, it is that quality matters more than spec on paper. The picks above have been chosen because our team uses them or trusts them — not because they are the most expensive or have the flashiest marketing. Buy once, garden often.



