




Scarlet runner bean is often grown as an ornamental just for the colorful flowers. Removing the developing pods will encourage the plant to continue to flower. Use the vining plants as a temporary cover on a chain link fence, as a seasonal privacy barrier, or up a trellis to screen a unattractive view. Grow them on a tuteur or a teepee made of 6-8 poles or long canes tied together at the top as a vertical element in a border or bed, or as a focal point in the garden. Combine them with white morning glories or yellow and orange Thunbergia alata for a variety of colors on the support structure.
For the best results grow scarlet runner beans in full sun in rich soil with plenty of organic matter and average moisture. This species is more cold tolerant than other green beans so seeds can be sown before the soil has warmed completely (but the soil temperature is at least 50ºF), but the foliage cannot tolerate frost so don’t plant too early.

Sow in place, placing the seeds 2 to 3 inches deep and spacing them 4 to 8 inches apart. Unlike regular beans, when the plants germinate, the cotyledons remain in the ground (called hypogeal germination). Germination takes 7 – 14 days. You can start indoors a few weeks before the average last frost and transplant into the garden after hardening off the young plants. Place supports such as poles, strings or netting near the plants at the time of sowing or transplanting. Protect the young plants from rabbits and slugs. Provide abundant water during flowering and pod expansion; mulching around the plants will conserve water. Do not fertilize heavily as this will promote lush foliage instead of flowers and beans.
To save seed, allow pods to remain on the vines as long as possible, preferably until they are completely dry and the seeds rattle inside (but if frost threatens pick the mature pods and bring them indoors to complete drying). Although this plant is normally grown as a warm season annual, the tuberous roots can be dug up and stored in cool, damp sand for replanting in spring. The resulting plants should flower much sooner than plants started from seed.
A number of cultivars have been selected but many are not readily available. Frequently seed packages are offered for just scarlet runner beans.
- ‘Black Runner’ – has intense crimson flowers and jet black seeds
- ‘Butler’ – has string-less pods
- ‘Golden Sunshine’ – has chartreuse green foliage
- ‘Hammond’s Dwarf’ – a bush type that produces earlier and smaller crops than climbing cultivars
- ‘Moonlight’ – has white flowers and string-less pods
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Bicolored flowers of ‘Painted Lady’ scarlet runner bean.
‘Painted Lady’ – an heirloom variety with bicolored red and pink or white flowers on a vigorous vine. The seeds are cream colored streaked with deep brown markings - ‘Pickwick Dwarf’ – a bush type that matures earlier than the species
- ‘Polestar’ – has string-less pods to 12 inches, but best picked when only 6-8 inches long
- ‘Scarlet Emperor’ – produces heavy crops of long, stringy pods and black and purple mottled seeds
- ‘Scarlet Runner’ – produces burgundy and black mottled seeds
- ‘Sunset’ – has pink flowers
- ‘White Dutch Runner’ – has white flowers and seeds