10 Best Dark Purple and Black Sempervivums

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Do you want to harness some of the royal beauties of nature? Start with some of the best dark purple and black Sempervivums listed here!

If you are interested in adding some unique and bold hues to your garden then consider some dark purple and black Sempervivums. These succulents are super easy to grow and maintain because they are very adaptable to almost all kinds of weather, and some can even tolerate frosts!


Best Dark Purple and Black Sempervivums

1. Sempervivum Killer

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum ‘Killer’

Are you a fan of color-changing rosettes? Then you must watch the olive-green rosettes change their color to starry pink and purple shades throughout different seasons of the year!

Besides, tall spikes of pink flowers appear on mature rosettes in summer and are replaced by new offsets at the end of their cycle.

2. Purple Live Forever

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum heuffelii ‘Purple Haze’

This one features a lavender-to-pink rosette with a muted green base tone, which deepens its color to a darker tone during winter when exposed to lower temperatures. Additionally, the beautifully pointed leaves are lined with a white margin that highlights the beauty even more.

It is a highly frost-hardy and drought-tolerant Sempervivum cultivar.

3. Sempervivum ‘Jade Rose’

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum ‘Jade Rose’

If you glance at it for just a few seconds, you might mistake it for a rose blossom! The structure and the form of the rosettes are beautifully aligned in a less compact manner than a flower. This is where it gets the name ‘Jade Rose’.

The rosettes are often green in both the center and outer edges and deep-rose to burgundy in the middle. Expose it to more sun in cooler months, and watch it blush like it just heard a compliment!

4. Sempervivum ‘Purple Dazzler’

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum ‘Purple Dazzler’

The Purple Dazzler is so named because of its nice bi-colored foliage in mid-green and dark purple, which darkens in winter. This variegation looks very attractive when the whole mature rosette forms and displays all the features efficiently.

5. Houseleek Reinhard

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum ‘Reinhard’

Well, it’s not all dark, but the tiny compact rosettes that develop a dark purple to black pointed tips are something to fall for. Not only that, it also bears pink flowers on long stalks that complement the whole succulent. This little beauty stays compact, proving that sometimes the best things come in small packages!

6. Sempervivum ‘Engles’

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum ‘Engles’

Now that’s a dark Houseleek beauty for all the contrast lovers out there! It has downy bronze leaves that turn almost dark purple in winter. Such a warm tone is perfect for a succulent bowl setup! Keep it in partial sunlight during summer if you want it to hold onto that deep, mysterious shade—it’s a plant that loves a little mood lighting!

7. Sempervivum ‘Black’

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum ‘Black’

The lovely purplish-bronze color of this variety is a sight to catch in the cooler months. If you want it to produce more baby offsets then feed it once a month during the active growing season (spring-summer) and just after the mature rosette blooms and dies, rewarding you with many tiny ones.

8. Sempervivum ‘Purple beauty’

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum tectorum ‘Purple beauty’

This attractive variety embraces a nice hint of purple. It has a fascinating feature—the deep sea-green hue in the middle of the rosettes that simply looks amazing against the whole set of purple leaves on the outer layers. Purple beauty is an excellent choice for alpine gardens, as it thrives in rocky and well-drained conditions.

9. Bermuda Hens and Chicks

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Botanical Name: Sempervivum heuffelii ‘Bermuda’

One more color-changing succulent on the list! If you play with the sunlight then you’ll get to see that with the intensity of sunlight, the shade of the succulent gets darker! Usually, it remains green but with more direct sun exposure it changes its color to deep purple! Pretty amazing right?

10. Duke of Windsor

Botanical Name: Sempervivum ‘Duke of Windsor’

Wait, that’s not a cactus, even though it does look like one! The Duke of Windsor has the most unique tufted rosette pattern. It is quite dense and compact with purple-green leaves that almost look like they have a perfect geometric layout! On top of that, the foliage is covered with a silky white ciliated layer that looks like hairs.

Let us know whether you have one or want to get one soon to add to your collection!

Hope you got what you’re looking for! Let us know in the comments section if you are getting any of these beautiful Sempervivums for the darker section of your garden.